People v. Cooke

Decision Date02 March 1944
CourtNew York Court of Appeals Court of Appeals
PartiesPEOPLE v. COOKE et al.

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Appeal from Kings County Court; Peter J. Brancato, Judge.

Gordon Cooke and another were convicted of murder in the first degree, and from the judgment of conviction rendered April 7, 1943, by the Kings County Court, Brancato, J., as to each defendant on the verdict of a jury, defendants appeal.

Affirmed.

See, also, 290 N.Y. 477, 49 N.E.2d 785.

LEHMAN, C. J., and LOUGHRAN and RIPPEY, JJ., dissenting. Harry G. Anderson, of New York City, for appellant Gordon cooke.

Walter R. Hart and C. Joseph Danahy, both of Brooklyn, for appellant Winston A. Sealy.

Thomas Cradock Hughes, Acting Dist. Atty., of Brooklyn (Henry J. Walsh, of Brooklyn, of counsel), for respondent.

DESMOND, Judge.

About midnight on July 25, 1942, McKinley Kettles, seventeen years old, was stabbed to death by two young men on the stoop of Kettles' home on Gates Avenue in Brooklyn. On the stoop with Kettles when he received the two knife wounds were his mother, pleading for his life, and his sweetheart. Viewing the affray from a window were two visitors at the Kettles home. All four identified these two defendants as the stabbers. On the question of identify it was for the jury to decide whether to believe the assertions of those four witnesses or the denials of the defendants. There was another question of fact as to intent to kill. The knifing came as the climax of a long, confused gang fight, or series of gang fights, which had raged through the neighboring streets for about two hours. The feud began when two youths quarreled over a girl. Fighting broke out between those youths and their adhernents. Defendant Sealy, a partisan of one of the quarreling youths, was at that time cut in the face, perhaps accidentally, by Kettles, who had espoused the cause of the other. Sealy, who was about twenty years old at the time, then went with some of his friends to a nearby drugstore where his cuts were bandaged. Sealy testified that he was not with the crowd of youths who later pursued Kettles and the latter's young woman friend to the Kettles home, and that he had nothing to do with Kettles' death. He admitted having a knife in his possession at some time during the evening but said he had given it to his (Sealy's) brother to take home. Defendant Cooke, about eighteen years old on the night of the killing testified that he had been at the scene of the first encounter when Sealy was cut by Kettles' knife. Cooke told the jury that he had met Kettles again that evening, after the cutting of Sealy, ahd chided Kettles for fighting, had warned him of danger from a pursuing crowed that was even then in sight, and had urged Kettles to go home. When the pursuing crowd came close to Kettles, Kettles ran into a nearby police station for help and police officers dispersed the crowd. Defendant Cooke, according to his testimony, stood in a hallway until the police had sent the troublemakers away. The police station was on Gates Avenue about a quarter-mile from the Kettles home. Defendant Cooke testified that he then took a walk through nearby streets, finally arriving at the corner of Summer Street and Gates Avenue, some 500 feet from the scene of the killing. He insisted at the trial that he came no nearer than that to the Kettles home. However, he, like defendant Sealy, was positively identified, by the four eyewitnesses above mentioned, as one of the killers. Two of those witnesses swore that defendant Sealy, when Kettles' mother sought to protect her son, announced that he was going to kill Kettles. All four witnesses heard defendant Cooke, as he lunged at Kettles, tell Mrs. Kettles to get out of the way. We conclude that there was enough before the jury to justify affirmative answers to the two important questions of fact submitted to them, that is, as to whether these defendants were the slayers and as to whether their intent was homicidal.

The principal question of law presented by this record arises from the County Judge's answer to, or failure to answer, a question from the jury. The jury's communication was handed up to the Judge after the jury had been deliberating for several hours. It read as follows:

‘Your Honor: In your charge, did you state it was a point of law, that if a premeditated act to cause serious injury but not necessarily to cause, actual death, but which, however, results in actual death, that this premeditated act is the intent to kill?

We would appreciate your reading the parts of your charge dealing with ‘intent’ relative to the act.'

The Trial Judge, after reading it, told the jury that he did not understand the first part of the question but that the second part, or second paragraph, was so clear that he thought that if he should answer that second part, his answer would contain also the information asked for in the first part. We think the first paragraph or first question was clear enough, and that it plainly showed a desire on the part of the jurors, or some of them, to be further informed as to whether they were bound as matter of law to presume an intent to kill from the fact of an intentional stabbing, or whether the use of such a presumption was a matter of choice and judgment with the jury. Section 427 of the Code of Criminal Procedure requires that when, after jurors have begun their deliberations, they ‘desire to be informedof a point of law arising in the cause’, the trial court must give ‘the information required.’ In People v. Flynn, 290 N.Y. 220, 48 N.E.2d 495, we reversed a conviction because the court refused, on due application by the jury and despite the urging of defense counsel, to give a categorical answer to a question not unlike the question propounded by the first part of the jury's query in the present case. It is not the law, however, that any failure by a court categorically to answer any question propounded by a jury must needs be reversible error. In each case we must decide whether there was serious prejudice to the defendant's rights. Our inquiry in the present case, therefore, is as to the effect and meaning of the further instructions given by the Trial Judge when, though declining to answer the first question, he proceeded to answer the second, after expressing his belief that his answer to the second would give the jury all the desired information.

In his main charge the County Judge had charged, with fullness and clarity, as to deliberation, premeditation and intent. Discussing intent, he had told the jury that intent was ‘a mental function whereby a person aims or purports to attain the natural consequences of his act and like any other mental function it is a secret and silent operation of the mind, not visible to the human eye but which can be ascertained, however, from the actions and conduct of the individual whose intent is the subject of inquiry.’ Paraphrasing somewhat the language of Chief Judge Ruger in People v. Conroy, 97 N.Y. 62, 77, the Trial Judge in his main charge had told this jury that a man is presumed to intend the natural and necessary consequences of his act and that, unless the act has been done under circumstances precluding the existence of such an intent, a jury has the right to find from the results produced an intention to effect it. He had told the jurors that in deciding as to intent they might consider the circumstances leading up to the alleged assault, the motive, if any, and the nature, number and location of the wounds inflicted on the body of the victim.

After that original charge and before the jury tendered the question above quoted, the jury had come in to use courtroom to have repeated to them the charge as to murder first degree and manslaughter first degree, ‘with particular emphasis', requested the jury, on the word ‘intent’. In response the court redefined those crimes, repeating his earlier instructions as to intent.

When the Trial Judge, in response to the jury's double-barreled question, above quoted, again, and now for the third time, defined intent, he substantially repeated what he had said in his main charge and recharge, but made certain additions. Striking his desk with his gavel, the Court told the jury that the resulting noise was a natural consequence of the blow on the wooden desk and that there is a ‘presumption’ that a person striking such a blow intends the noise. Then, elaborating on the idea that a man's actions may ‘belie his words', the court suggested, as an example thereof, a suppositious case of a man...

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