Pietro Balbo: Murder

 Pietro Balba was born in 1836 in Sala Consilina, Provincia, di, Salerno, Salerno, Campania, Italy. His mother was Rosa Spinelli.

Pietro Balbo was the stepson of Salvatore Focarile. He was a cement worker on the Brooklyn Bridge.


He came to America on the ship HMS Ballona on 29 Nov 1869 arriving in New York City.

He was married to Maria Dichaco. This is their story.



He was executed for murdering his wife, Maria Dichaco Balbo, on September 30, 1879. He maintained his innocence saying he was trying to prevent her from hurting him and didn't mean to kill her.


Here is a link to his Supreme Court Hearing





















Here are his Pardon papers he asked for before his execution.





Here are some newspaper articles I found, click the links to read the articles, they will take you to newspapers.com 







Balbo v. the People

Summary

In Balbo v. People (80 N.Y. 484) it was held that when a confession of a prisoner to an officer is voluntarily made, evidence thereof cannot be rejected because of the fact that the officer held the prisoner in custody at the time upon an invalid process, or without any process or lawful right.


Summary of this case from Matter of Schmidt v. Dist. Attorney of Monroe Co.

See 1 Summary

Opinion

Argued March 1, 1880


Decided April 6, 1880 


William F. Kintzing, for plaintiff in error.  Benjamin K. Phelps, district-attorney, for defendant in error.



ANDREWS, J.


The plaintiff in error was convicted at the New York Oyer and Terminer held in December, 1879, of  murder in the first degree in killing Maria Dichaco Balbo, his wife, by stabbing her in the neck with a knife on the night of September 30, 1879. The prisoner alleges two grounds of error, first that the court improperly overruled his challenge of Edward H. Betts one of the jurors in the case, and second, in admitting in evidence the prisoner's confession made to a police officer while the latter held him in custody, under the circumstances which will be stated hereafter.


1. The juror Betts was challenged by the prisoner for principal cause, and was examined in support of the challenge which was overruled, and the juror was thereupon challenged by the prisoner for favor. The juror was further examined on the challenge for favor, which was also overruled by the court and the prisoner excepted. The juror on his examination in chief testified in substance, that he read at the time in a newspaper an account of the murder and that he was of impression that the account he read was the report of the testimony taken before the coroner's inquest and that he had not talked the matter over with any person. In answer to a leading question put to him by the prisoner's counsel he said that he formed at the time a positive and clearly marked opinion in respect to the guilt or innocence of the accused which opinion was still in his mind, and that it would require strong evidence to remove the opinion he then entertained. The prisoner was an Italian, and the juror in answer to a question whether he had any prejudice in favor of or against the Italians as a race said: "that it was a race that he was not particularly fond of, and did not think much of, judging from those we have here." On his cross-examination by the district-attorney the juror said that he read the newspapers every day and read the account of this murder in the same way he read other items; that he took no particular interest in the case; that he did not know any of the parties connected with the transaction, and had no knowledge of the circumstances except as he had read them at the time; that if a statement in the papers was contradicted in the next day's papers he believed the contradiction; that his impression in the case was based on  the assumption that things reported are probably true; that he did not make a great deal of distinction between an opinion and an impression; that he should call an opinion of the truth or falsity of a statement he saw in a newspaper an impression, if he read it casually and it slipped out of his mind, and is afterwards revived; that he did not know that he had anything more than that in his mind about this case; that he did not know what the defense was, and that all he remembered was that a man killed his wife in Rose street. The juror on his examination on the challenge for principal cause said that he was not conscious of having any impression which would prevent his acting fairly and impartially in the case, and that he had no doubt that he could give a verdict upon the evidence without being influenced or biased by any opinion he had. At the conclusion of his examination by counsel on the challenge to the favor, the juror in response to questions of the court said that he did not suppose that any opinion he had would bias influence or prejudice him in any manner in the consideration of the evidence; that he believed it would not, and that he could give full weight and effect to the evidence the same as though he had no opinion. The record states that the court thereupon "from observation of the appearance of the juror, his age, intelligence, his manner on the stand, and his answers to questions, found that he was fair, impartial and unprejudiced and held the challenge not true," and he was there upon sworn as a juror.


In determining the question whether the court erred in overruling the challenges, it is important to bear in mind the changes which have been wrought by the acts chapter 475, of the Laws of 1872, and chapter 427, of the Laws of 1873, in respect to the legal sufficiency of certain causes of challenge to jurors, and in respect to the power of the court on appeal to review the decision of the trial court in allowing or overruling challenges. Prior to these statutes it was the established rule that a fixed and settled opinion of the guilt or innocence of a prisoner was a good cause of principal challenge  and operated in law as a disqualification of a juror, and it was held not to be material how or upon what evidence the opinion was formed, provided it was fixed and definite, nor was the disqualification removed, although the juror should state upon his oath that he believed he could decide the case fairly and impartially upon the evidence without bias or prejudice from the opinion he had previously formed. ( Ex parte Vermilyea, 6 Cow., 555; People v, Mather, 4 Wend., 232; Freeman v. People, 4 Denio, 9; Cancemi v. People, 16 N.Y., 501.) The law, said MARCY, J., in People v. Mather, "attaches the disqualification to the fact of forming and expressing an opinion, and does not look beyond to examine the occasion or weigh the evidence on which the opinion is founded." The rule that an opinion formed by a juror upon the guilt or innocence of a prisoner operated as a disqualification, was based upon the theory that such a prepossession of the mind was inconsistent with the exercise by the juror of a free and impartial judgment of the case upon the evidence, and the declaration of the juror that he believed he could decide the case uninfluenced by his previous opinion, was held not to remove the objection, for the reason assigned by Ch. J. MARSHALL (1 Burr's Trial, 416), that "the law will not trust him." But it was held in many cases before the recent statutes, that a hypothetical opinion or an impression simply of the guilt or innocence of the prisoner derived from rumor or from reading newspaper accounts of the transaction was not a cause of principal challenge, but the fact might be considered by the triers on a challenge to the favor, and their decision on the question of indifferency was final and not the subject of review. ( Bodine v. People, 1 Denio, 281; People v. Honeyman, 3 id., 121; Freeman v. People, 4 id., 9; O'Brien v. People, 36 N.Y., 279; People v. Thompson, 41 id., 1.)


The act of 1872 was a clear departure from the law governing challenges for cause as it had been previously declared by the courts. It abrogates the rule that the  formation or expression by a proposed juror of an opinion of the guilt or innocence of the accused is per se a disqualification, and sufficient in law to sustain a challenge for principal cause. The act declares that "the previous formation or expression of an opinion or impression in reference to the circumstances upon which any criminal action at law is based, or in reference to the guilt or innocence of the prisoner, or a present opinion or impression in reference thereto, shall not be a sufficient ground of challenge for principal cause, to any person who is otherwise legally qualified to serve as a juror upon the trial of such action, provided the person proposed as a juror, who may have formed or expressed, or has such opinion or impression as aforesaid, shall declare on oath that he verily believes that he can render an impartial verdict according to the evidence submitted to the jury on such trial, and that such previously formed opinion or impression will not bias or influence his verdict; and provided the court shall be satisfied that the person so proposed as a juror does not entertain such a present opinion as would influence his verdict as a juror." The act of 1873, passed the following year makes a further change in the previous law, by making all challenges triable by the court, and confers, as was held in The People v. Thomas ( 67 N.Y., 218) upon an appellate tribunal the right to review upon the facts the determination of the trial court.


It cannot be denied that the act of 1872 proceeds upon a different theory from that upon which courts and judges have acted in the decisions to which we have referred. It does not deny the principle which has its foundation in natural justice that jurors upon whose verdict may depend the lives or liberty of individuals accused of crime, should be impartial and free from any existing bias which may influence their judgment. The language of Lord COKE, often quoted, "that the juror must stand indifferent as he stands unsworn," expresses a rule of justice, as well as a rule of law. But the statute of 1872 assumes that a man may be a fair and impartial  juror although he has an opinion of the guilt or innocence of the accused and that it is possible that he may notwithstanding be able to set aside and disregard such opinion, and weigh the evidence and determine the question of guilt or innocence independently thereof, and uninfluenced thereby. It is not for the court to pass upon the correctness of this assumption. But I am not prepared to say that it is contrary to human experience or the principles of mental philosophy or that it may not frequently happen that persons who have formed opinions of the guilt of an accused person from reports or statements verbal or written, may not as jurors lay aside their prepossessions, and not only honestly and conscientiously endeavor to hear and decide the case upon the evidence alone, but be able in fact to divest themselves of the influence of their previous opinions. It may I think be safely affirmed that the consciousness of such prepossessions would in many cases, induce on the part of jurors a more cautious consideration and a more charitable construction of the evidence against the prisoner. The act of 1872 however, makes the court the ultimate judge upon this question. If the juror, on being challenged for principal cause, discloses on his examination that he has a fixed and definite opinion in the case on the merits, and nothing further is shown, then the rule of law which existed prior to the statute of 1872 applies, and the court would be bound as matter of law to reject him as incompetent. But if in addition he states upon oath that he believes he can render an impartial verdict on the evidence, and that such previously formed opinion will not bias or influence him as a juror, the question of his competency is then to be determined by the court as a question of fact. In determining the question the declaration of the juror is to be considered, but it is not controlling. But the decision of the trial judge is subject to the supervisory jurisdiction of the court upon appeal, and the appellate tribunal in reviewing it, is bound to say on its own responsibility upon a fresh examination of the evidence, giving due weight to the circumstance that the trial judge  had the juror before him, whether in its judgment the question of fact was properly decided. In reviewing the decision of the trial judge no certain rule can be laid down by which the appellate court is to be guided. The determination of the question presented must depend in a great measure upon the circumstances of the particular case. The cardinal rule, that the accused is entitled to be tried by a fair and impartial jury, is always to be borne in mind. There may be cases where the opinion of the juror has been formed under circumstances which, in the judgment of all reasonable men, will prevent him however conscientious he may be, from judging and deciding the case irrespective of his prepossessions. The case of a juror who was an eyewitness to the transaction, or whose opinion was formed upon his personal knowledge of the criminating facts, are examples. The circumstances under which the opinion was formed, its strength, the fact whether the juror has any personal feeling against the prisoner, or exhibits any pride of opinion which may lead him to give too little or too much weight to evidence in favor of or against the accused, these and many other considerations will enter into the judgment of the court in passing upon the question of the juror's competency. In short, under the statute of 1872, the competency of a juror who has formed an opinion is in all cases a question of fact and not of law when he makes the declaration specified in that statute. This fact is to be determined, in the first instance by the trial judge, and afterwards in case of appeal, by the court of review.


The cases of The People v. Thomas ( 67 N.Y., 218), and The People v. Greenfield (74 id., 277), illustrate the function of this court in reviewing the decision of the trial judge upon challenges to jurors under the acts of 1872 and 1873. In the Thomas Case the decision of the trial judge was affirmed, and in the Greenfield Case his decision was reversed. The opinion of the juror in the Thomas Case, was not fixed and absolute, but was hypothetical, and no circumstances were shown which created  any doubt upon the part of the court of his ability to decide the case upon the evidence impartially, without bias from his previous impression. In the Greenfield Case there was as is stated in the opinion no question of law involved, but merely a question of fact, viz.: whether, upon the evidence and surrounding circumstances the jurors Betts and Jennings were fair and impartial jurors. The case had been once tried and the jury had disagreed. It had excited great interest in the community where the crime charged was committed. The fact that there had been a felonious homicide was admitted. The question to be tried was whether it was committed by the prisoner, and this depended upon circumstantial evidence. The jurors challenged lived near the scene of the murder. They had heard the circumstances of the crime talked about and had read parts of the published testimony on the first trial and each had an impression or opinion of the guilt of the accused which it would require evidence to remove. This court, upon a review and consideration of the facts disclosed in that case were of opinion that the challenges should in the exercise of a discreet and careful judgment have been sustained, and the conviction was for this reason reversed. In the Thomas Case this court was of opinion that the decision of the trial judge on the challenge was justified by the facts, and in the Greenfield Case that there was at least so much doubt in respect to the competency of the jurors challenged, that the challenges should have been sustained. The cases are entirely harmonious and consistent, the court upon different facts reaching different conclusions in the respective cases.


In the case now before us, we are of opinion that the challenges to the juror Betts were properly overruled. Such opinion as he had, was formed without reflection, upon a casual reading of a newspaper report of the testimony before the coroner some months before the trial. He evidently had no personal prejudice against the prisoner, and had taken no particular interest in the case. The opinion, if it was anything more than an impression,  was a hastily formed judgment upon statements which he assumed to be true from seeing them in a newspaper, but there was apparently no such pre-judgment as would prevent him as a juror from deciding the case fairly and impartially upon the evidence. The statutes of 1872 and 1873 were passed to facilitate the selection of jurors which, in some cases was attended with great difficulty and delay by reason of the stringent rule which had obtained as to the disqualifying effect of an opinion formed in the case. But the Legislature did not intend to interfere with the fundamental right of an accused person to be tried by a fair and impartial jury. And if in exercising the jurisdiction and powers conferred by these statutes, courts and judges proceed on the humane principle of the common-law, giving to the prisoner the benefit of a reasonable doubt, there will be little difficulty in so administering the law that the purpose of the statute will be attained without subjecting accused persons to the peril and injustice of being tried by prejudiced jurors.


The fact that the juror may have had some prejudice against the Italian race was not we think, a disqualifying circumstance. An opinion that the prisoner's character was bad is not a ground of principal challenge. ( People v. Lohman, 1 N.Y., 379; People v. Allen, 43 id., 28.) The fact that the juror did not like the race to which the prisoner belonged was quite too inconclusive to justify a finding that he was incompetent.


2. The prisoner on the night of the murder left the city of New York, where he resided and where the murder was committed and went to Wheeling, West Virginia, and was followed there by police officers who arrested him at that place on the second day after the homicide without warrant and started with him by rail for New York. While upon the cars and before reaching this State the prisoner made a confession to one of the officers having him in charge to the effect that he killed his wife, "that she did not like him, and that he gave her only one stab." The officer to whom the confession was made was called for the People  to prove the confession, and the evidence was objected to by the prisoner on the ground that at the time it was made he was under illegal arrest, and that the confession was for this reason inadmissible. The objection was we think properly overruled. It was affirmatively shown that no promises were made, or threats or menaces used to induce the confession. If the prisoner was in legal custody at the time the confession was made it is not denied that it would have been admissible. It has been held in several cases in this court, that a confession by a prisoner is not to be deemed involuntary, or made under duress, because made when he was in custody, or to the officer who has him in charge. ( People v. Rogers, 18 N.Y., 9; People v. Wentz, 37 id., 303.) We perceive no principle upon which it can be held that the confession if otherwise admissible can be rejected for the reason that the officer to whom it was made held the prisoner in custody upon an invalid process, or without any process or lawful right. The confession if voluntary is admissible whether made to an officer or private person. The fact that the arrest was illegal has no relevancy, if the confession was voluntary. The People are not precluded from availing themselves of a voluntary confession because the officer or person to whom it was made was exercising an illegal restraint over the prisoner at the time.


We have assumed in considering this question that the arrest of the prisoner under the circumstances disclosed was technically illegal, but we do not decide this question. Conceding that the removal of the prisoner from West Virginia was an act in violation of the sovereignty of that State the consideration would still remain that a felon may be arrested without warrant, either by an officer or private person, for the purpose of bringing him to justice. ( Holley v. Mix, 3 Wend., 350; Burns v. Erben, 40 N.Y., 463.) And it has been held in several cases that a prisoner charged with crime is not entitled to be discharged on the ground that he was improperly apprehended in a foreign jurisdiction and brought into the jurisdiction where the crime was  committed and where the application for his discharge was made. ( Parker v. Rowe, 4 Parker Cr. R., 253; Ex parte Scott, 9 B. C., 446; Dow's Case, 18 Penn. St., 37; Brewster's Case, 7 Vt., 118.)


The points considered are the only ones urged by the prisoner's counsel. The case was presented to the jury in all its aspects in a careful charge by the learned judge who presided at the trial. The evidence of deliberation although not perhaps conclusive, was we think sufficient to justify the conviction. There is no error disclosed by the record, and the judgment should therefore be affirmed.


All concur. CHURCH, Ch. J., and FOLGER, J., say that as there are some expressions in the opinion with which they do not agree, while concurring in the main argument, they concur in the result.


Judgment affirmed.



Despite his murder conviction he was given a very large and well attended funeral by the Italian community who felt that his execution should have been commuted by the governor.

A sad heartfelt letter of goodbye to his beloved mother.



Dearest and Beloved Mother:

 I pray you my dear mother, not to be so anxious, and I pray God to give me grace in the other world.  My dear mother,  I inform you that I am sentenced to die on the sixth day of August,  And I hope that we shall meet in the next world,  because in this world we find ourselves in the midst of afflictions. I pray that God will pardon my sins: I yield myself to his commands. Dear mother I am prepared to die, and I hope I will be with my wife. 

 Mother,  I received the two rings that you spoke of in four last letter. Dear Mother,

 I beseech you not to have so much anxiety for me,  but cease not in your prayers to me to St. Donato, St Michael Arcangelo and all the saints in paradise, with my  prayers and sacraments that I have received from our good fathers here, who have so well prepared my soul that I pray God may give them credit for it hereafter.

 Dear Mother,

 write no longer to me,  because when you receive this I shall be in the next world.  I send my regards to all my relatives.  Remember me to Uncle Pasqualo,  Aunt Carmela and our family and give my regards to all my friends and enemies and forgive all as I hope God will forgive me.

 My dear mother I send you five livre as a last memento from me. Keep them for all eternity.  It is the last affectionate token that comes from my heart.  Salute my father,  and pray him not to reproach you with my fate and to forgive me if I have given him displeasure.

 Dear Mother,  this is a  terribly sad remembrance of me but I hope that God will save me Dear j mother there is nothing else tor me but my hope in God Renew my respects to my friends and enemies and all others who ask for me. 

 Dear Mother,  give my regards to sister Oarmela and brother Giovani and I pray for you my dear mother and father your holy blessing. Kissing your right hand from my whole heart. I subscribe my name in my own handwriting. I have learned to write in English since I have been in prison Addio. Addio. Addio. Pietro Balbo.




Comments