Opinion by
The defendant, Fred Butler, a guard in Montgomery County Prison, was indicted for assault and battery and aggravated assault and battery of Dennis Keyser, and assault and battery of Joseph Rock, both complainants being prisoners in the institution which employed the defendant. A jury returned a verdict of not guilty of the charges involving Dennis Keyser and guilty of those involving Joseph Rock. Defendant appeals citing a number of alleged trial errors and an excessive sentence. We find these contentions to be without merit for the reasons set forth below and therefore affirm the lower court.
The incident giving rise to this appeal occurred on February 13, 1972, while defendant was performing his duties as a guard in Montgomery County Prison. In this capacity, he addressed some taunting remarks to a prisoner, Dennis Keyser, who had been having difficulty exercising the shower privileges allowed him for assisting in the prison work. The exchange readily flared up into a physical encounter between the two, other guards arrived and the prisoner was forcibly taken to a maximum security confinement cell. In the process of undressing to put on the regulation coveralls, the prisoner received further physical abuse from the defendant in the nature of kicks and blows which was explained as being required to subdue the prisoner. After this was accomplished and the guards were departing, the defendant turned to the other inmates present in the cell and challenged them to say something Joseph Rock responded from a corner, “Freddie, I’m surprised at you.” This statement was answered by the defendant with at least one blow, to Joseph Rock. Defendant maintains that he struck Rock because the prisoner had his hands in the air and defendant feared for his own safety. Rock denies raising his hands.
The crucial determination that a trial judge must make in ruling on the admissibility of evidence of a witness’s mental instability is whether it is related to the subject of the litigation or whether it affects the testimonial ability of the witness so as to impeach him.
In the present case there is no indication on the record what, if anything, defense counsel hoped to elicit from the victim Joseph Rock by his allusion to mental problems. Appellant’s brief indicates that the testimony was expected to reveal that Joseph Rock had been committed to a hospital for mental treatment for 60 days five months after the episode in question and was discharged one and one-half years before the trial. The lower court’s opinion states that he was committed for treatment of a drug problem and depression. Such a difficulty, existing after the incident and significantly before trial, is not of the type that would ordinarily affect the witness’s ability to observe, remember, or relate the events which are the subject of this litigation. Counsel has made no attempt to prove that the disorder for which the witness was treated was already in existence on the date in question or that it lingered past his discharge. Since not every indication of mental abnormality is admissible to discredit a witness, these circumstances demonstrate that the trial judge acted properly in excluding this testimony. Commonwealth v. Kosh, supra.
Furthermore, the effort to impeach the witness through his psychiatric history was only brought up on recross examination. Although cross-examination is a matter of right, it is within the sound discretion of the trial judge to limit the bounds of proper cross-examination. A fortiori, in the case of recross examination, counsel can be prohibited from introducing unexplained areas of questionable validity which he had ample opportunity to bring up before. Commonwealth v. Romano,
Appellant next contends that the refusal of the lower court judge to allow testimony establishing a fifteen month delay between the date of the offense and the date of the arrest constituted prejudicial error.
The Supreme Court of the United States and the courts of this Commonwealth have recognized that a significant delay between the occurrence of the criminal
In the present case this remedy was not sought. The appellant failed to raise his objection to the delay in pre-trial motions to quash the indictment which would he the procedure ordinarily followed in such a case. See Commonwealth v. Murray,
It is further contended by the appellant that prior written statements of the appellant and his witnesses were allowed into evidence without the cautionary instruction of the trial judge that they were to be used for impeachment purposes alone. Initially we note that the statements were admitted a,t trial with the approval of appellant’s counsel and no qualifying instructions were requested either at the time of their introduction or in the charge to the jury. Failure to object to the admission of evidence at trial forecloses our consideration of the issue on appeal. Commonwealth v. Williams,
The final issue appellant presents for our consideration is the alleged excessiveness of the sentence. Appel
Judgment of sentence affirmed.
Notes
Pennsylvania’s position on tlie introduction of evidence of mental imbalance to discredit a witness who is admittedly competent to testify was first stated in dicta in Commonwealth v. Kosh,
Appellant also maintains that his case was prejudiced by a number of objectionable questions propounded by the Commonwealth throughout the trial. These questions were objected to and the objections were immediately sustained. We find- appellant’s argument that the cumulative effect of these questions nevertheless constituted reversible error giving grounds for a new trial entirely without merit. Harrington v. California,
In United States v. Marion,
Act of June 24, 1939, P.L. 872, §708, repealed: Act of December 6, 1972, P.L. 1482, §5.
