62 A.2d 91 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1948
Argued September 27, 1948.
For reasons stated in Commonwealth v. Balles,
Defendant has assigned as prejudicial error the criticism of his counsel by the trial judge during the cross-examination of the young girl, whom we will refer to as Joyce (Record, page 147). In that instance counsel was criticized by the court for attempting to read into the record the testimony of this Commonwealth witness as given at a former trial when there was no variance in her testimony and none was alleged. The trial judge reminded counsel that the time of an alleged prior intercourse of defendant with Joyce, which was then the subject of cross-examination, in relation to the date of the first trial, was not disputed. After the discussion, the court stated: "It is agreed that [the first trial was] two months after the occurrence". Thereupon defendant's counsel stated: "It was a matter of record and I apologize to the court; I accept your Honor's remarks at this point". Defendant counsel then clearly did not consider the incident prejudicial and no exception was taken to the remarks of the court. The trial judge, later, correctly instructed defendant's counsel as to the proper method of contradicting a witness by the record of prior testimony. But notwithstanding counsel's apparent acquiescence in the ruling of the court, he persisted in his attempts to read into the record other portions of Joyce's testimony given in a former trial, without any offer to show that it in any way contradicted her testimony given at the pending trial. Counsel's persistence in this respect invited other criticisms of his conduct by the trial judge. Even where exception was taken to these remarks of the trial judge there was no motion to withdraw a juror. Defendant was not harmed. Under the circumstances the criticisms were justified and the court cannot be charged with prejudicial error because of them. Cf. Fischer v. Commercial Nat. Bank,
Similarly there is no merit in defendant's contention that he was prejudiced by statements of the District Attorney in two instances in closing to the jury. The remarks are not made the subject of assignments of error nor are they referred to in the statement of questions involved. Nevertheless we have examined them and agree that the remarks were not improper under the circumstances and did not in fact, nor were they intended to, inflame the jury. The trial judge in his charge refers to these remarks (pp. 422-424; 449-450, of the record) in their proper light and from an excess of caution, asked the jury to disregard them.
Defendant testified that Joyce, the young girl involved, had been punished for misconduct and that she, in retaliation, had threatened "to get even" with the defendant. It was argued that this punishment supplied a motive for Joyce to give, what was alleged to be, perjured testimony on the trial of this case. Defendant in this connection contends that there is reversible error in the rulings of the trial judge limiting his counsel's cross-examination of Joyce. She had testified that defendant had intercourse with her on prior occasions and always in his living quarters in the school building. The court sustained the Commonwealth's objection to her testimony that Mrs. Balles was present on one occasion when intercourse occurred. The court also sustained an objection by the Commonwealth to a question put to Joyce as to whether she had ever been punished for masturbation. Since the credibility of Joyce, an important witness for the Commonwealth, was directly in issue, the court well might have allowed defendant's counsel far greater latitude in cross-examining her to impeach her credibility, than is shown by the record. However, under the circumstances we feel that no reversible error was committed inasmuch as the answers sought to be elicited by the defendant from Joyce did actually come from her elsewhere in the course of her examination or were testified *472 to positively by the defendant. Joyce elsewhere in her testimony stated that Mrs. Balles was present when the defendant had intercourse with her and there was no motion to strike out this testimony. The defendant testified positively that Joyce had been punished for masturbation; and that statement was not stricken from the record and it was not denied.
In Montgomery County, at the first trial in March 1946, the defendant was tried on the present charge and also for adultery with Joyce on Bill 188-9, and on Bill 188-3 for indecent assault. The jury found the defendant guilty of the adultery and of indecent assault on the identical facts offered to convict him of statutory rape of the child on January 12, 1946. As to the adultery verdict sentence was "suspended" on August 6, 1946. In reality this order was not a suspension of sentence, for no sentence had been imposed. The order was one merely deferring sentence. As to indecent assault, defendant's motion for a new trial was treated as a motion in arrest of judgment and on the same date the trial court directed a verdict of "not guilty be entered" on that Bill. It is conceded by the Commonwealth that on or about May 1, 1947, defendant filed a special plea in bar — not to Bill 180 charging statutory rape, but to a retrial of the charge of adultery on Bill 188-9 because of his prior conviction, and on September 15, 1947, a plea of autrefois acquit, in bar of a retrial of the charge of indecent assault on Bill 188-3, because of the order in arrest of judgment after a conviction on that charge.
Neither a plea of autrefois convict, nor of defendant's former acquittal of the charge of indecent assault (even if that be regarded as the effect of the Court's order) can invalidate the present conviction of defendant on the indictment charging statutory rape. The test is whether the evidence necessary to support the conviction of attempt to commit statutory rape would have been sufficient to sustain a conviction of indecent assault. *473 Commonwealth v. Moon,
As to defendant's prior conviction of adultery, the refusal of the lower court to arrest judgment on that ground was not made the subject of any assignment of error nor is it referred to in the statement of questions involved. The legal question, therefore, is not properly raised on this appeal. Moreover, no special plea of any nature was entered during the present trial as a bar on any ground to a conviction of the defendant on the charge of statutory rape on Bill 180. And, since a plea of autrefois convict of adultery was not interposed as a bar to a conviction on the present charge, the right to take advantage of such plea may be regarded as waived. 14 Am. Jur., Criminal Law, § 280; Commonwealth v. Greevy,
Sentence had been deferred on the verdict of guilty on the adultery charge. Such order is not a final judgment. Com. ex rel.Paige v. Smith, Warden,
Moreover the plea of autrefois convict as to the adultery, could not be interposed as a plea in bar even if it had been properly presented in the court below. The plea of autrefois convict, in our considered opinion, although there are cases to the contrary in some other *475
states, applies only to the conviction followed by a judgment. And a verdict of guilty upon which sentence is deferred, though a conviction in a popular sense is not a conviction in law. "When the law speaks of conviction, it means a judgment, and not merely a verdict, which in common parlance is called a conviction":Commonwealth v. Miller,
Assignments of error numbered 5, 6, 8 and 9 were not argued orally. However, we have considered the questions raised by all of the defendant's assignments and find no merit in any of them.
Judgment of sentence affirmed. *476