85 Pa. Super. 253 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1925
Argued March 9, 1925. These defendants were all charged, in a single information, with having committed the crime of felonious rape upon Agnes Wasko and with having committed a like offense upon Nellie Madera and were, after a hearing, held to answer the charge. Two indictments, based on the same information, were found by the grand jury, in one of which all the defendants were charged, in proper form, with the rape of Agnes Wasko; and the *255 other indictment charged a like offense to have been committed upon Nellie Madera. The indictments were tried together and the trial resulted in a conviction of Kritvitski, Petrovich and Stavinski upon the indictment charging the ravishing of Agnes Wasko; and Danaleczk, Pollack and Stavinski were found guilty upon the indictment charging the ravishing of Nellie Madera. The defendants having been severally sentenced, save that sentence was suspended as to Stavinski in the case in which the indictment charged the rape of Agnes Wasko and he was sentenced only upon the indictment charging the rape of Nellie Madera, have taken these several appeals.
The court overruled an objection interposed by the defendants to the trial of the indictments at the same time, to which ruling the defendants excepted and here assigned it for error. We have thus presented the question, Can two indictments charging separate felonies, rape upon different girls, be tried before one jury against defendants' objection? We cannot regard the question, as thus broadly stated, to be an open one in Pennsylvania. Two indictments, which upon the face of the pleadings charge separate and distinct felonies may be tried before one jury: Com. v. Valotta,
The principal witness for the Commonwealth in this case was Anna Wasko, the sister of one of the victims of the outrage. The contention of the defendants was that Agnes Wasko and Nellie Madera had consented to the unlawful sexual intercourse, that no force was used. One of the defendants, Stavinski, for the purpose of probably discrediting Anna Wasko as a witness, testified, in his direct examination, that he had been having sexual intercourse with her for three or four months. Another of the defendants, Kritvitski, testified that Stavinski had been criminally intimate with Anna Wasko, and a third defendant, Petrovich, testified that he had seen Stavinski have intercourse with Anna Wasko, in the presence of the witness and Kritvitski. This, of course, was not the proper way to impeach the reputation of Anna Wasko for truth and veracity, but the defendants saw fit to resort to this indirect means of discrediting the witness, and must be held to take the consequences. Having volunteered the statements, in their direct examination by their own counsel, it was undoubtedly the right of the Commonwealth to disprove them if it could, or as far as it could. The manifest tendency of this testimony of the defendants, was to establish that Anna Wasko was an immoral woman, degraded in the extreme and a harlot. "If a witness fabricate a story with circumstances, the disproof of the circumstances is generally the only possible way of disproving the material facts. The plaintiff thought proper to prove by Mrs. Sallada, that she lent money to her brothers, amounting to several thousand dollars, and that she bought and paid for a house in Reading out of her own means. At this distance from the scene of controversy we are not able to see the relevancy of these facts, but we are to presume that the plaintiff did, and called them out from this witness. When, therefore, the defendant proposed to prove that some of these things stated by the *258
witness as facts were untrue, had no existence, with a view to contradict her, it was not the plaintiff's privilege to claim its exclusion on the ground of immateriality. He gave the fact in evidence and opened the way for its disproof in order to discredit the witness": Batdorff v. Farmers' National Bank of Reading,
The several judgments are affirmed and it is ordered that each of the defendants appear in the court below at such time as they may be there called and that they, individually, be committed until they have complied with the sentence or any part of it which had not been performed at the time the appeals in these cases, respectively, were made a supersedeas.