259 Pa. 272 | Pa. | 1918
Opinion by
This is an appeal by defendant from the judgment on conviction of murder of the first degree.
On the evening of April 25, 1916, Daimetro Morobito was shot and killed at the subway where Wayne street passes under the tracks of the Delaware and' Hudson Railroad, in Archbald? Laekawannst County. The assassin apparently stepped from behind an abutment and fired two shots, one taking effect in Morobito’s breast and the other in his neck. He made an outcry and ran back along the street a short distance where he fell and was carried into a barber shop, and later to a hospital where he died early the next morning. The shooting occurred at 8:15 p. m., and the defendant was arrested about one-half hour thereafter on statements of Morobito charging him with the crime. The arrest was made in Pitea’s store about 950 feet from the subway.
We have carefully examined each of the thirteen assignments of error and in our opinion none of them can be sustained. On the allegation that One of the Commonwealth’s witnesses testified at variance to his previous statement to the district attorney, that officer was permitted to cross-examine the witness as to such statements. This was a matter largely in the.discretion of the trial judge and his allowance of such examination was not error: Gantt v. Cox & Sons Co., 199 Pa. 208; Commonwealth v. Deitrick, 221 Pa. 7. That the defendant, on the afternoon of the day of the homicide, withdrew from the local bank his entire deposit amounting to $200, which with other money he had on his person when arrested, was a circumstance tending to show preparation for flight and as such was properly admitted. It was competent for the Commonwealth to show that defendant had formerly boarded with the deceased at when there had been trouble between them, by reason of which the deceased had ordered the defendant from his home, although such occurrence was two and a half years previous to the homicide. The remoteness
Mr. Mellow, a witness called by the Commonwealth, testified that the two men were at his hotel early that evening and that Morobito left first. The district attorney alleged surprise at this answer, and to neutralize the same was permitted to offer testimony to the effect that Mr. Mellow had previously stated that he thought the defendant left first. This was within the trial court’s discretion: Commonwealth v. Wickett, 20 Pa. Superior Ct. 350. And see Roscoe’s Criminal Evidence (8th Ed.), page 162. In any event, it became unimportant for defendant expressly testified that he left Mellow’s place before Morobito did. Defendant having testified in chief that he had no motive or reason to kill Morobito, it was competent for the district attorney to ask him such questions as might tend to prove motive, and in that connection to try to show that he blamed the deceased for a wound which had been inflicted upon defendant by a third party a short time before the homicide. The cross-examination failed of its purpose, but it does not appear that the district attorney asked the questions in bad faith or that defendant was prejudiced thereby. Great latitude is permissible in the cross-examination of a defendant: Commonwealth v. Racco, 225 Pa. 113; Commonwealth v. Bubnis, 197 Pa. 542; Commonwealth v. Fitzpatrick, 1 Pa. Superior Ct. 518; Commonwealth v. Williams, 41 Pa. Superior Ct. 326. Dur: ing this examination the district attorney stated that “We believe now if this man [the defendant], would am swer- the questions truthfully, we could show that that was' the motive for this homicide.” This was an iim
The sixth and seventh assignments of error are based upon certain statements in the charge of the court, wherein reference is made to the contention and theory of the Commonwealth. But that was not error, as such contention and theory found some support in the evidence. The fact that -the defendant saw the deceased shortly before the latter started down Wayne street in the direction of his home, to reach which he would pass the subway, and where according to his declarations the defendant stepped from behind the abutment and shot him, tends to support the contention that the murder was perpetrated by lying in wait. And the evidence that defendant was seen shortly before the homicide near the. west end of the foot bridge at Salem street, above Wayne street, and said he was going home,- which would take him over that bridge, tends to support the theory that he crossed the river there, and, in connection with the evidence that he was at the subway, tends to support the theory that he came there by walking down the railroad track.
In addition to his general denial, defendant set up an alibi and submitted his own evidence and that of four other witnesses to the effect that he had been continuously in the store where arrested since before seven o’clock, except at one time not exceeding five minutes when he was called to the door by the chief of .police. To go and commit the crime and return in the manner .the Commonwealth contends he- did would take under' ordinary circumstances about fifteen minutes, as he would travel some four-fifths of a mile. However,- the witnesses to the, alibi were busy waiting upon customers
On the next morning after the shooting, a revolver, containing three 38-calibre cartridges and two empty shells, was found on a box over the wheel of a car standing on a switch about sixty rods up the track from the subway. And two days after the crime was committed an empty cartridge box was found in the defendant’s room in his boarding house, with name and number corresponding to that on the cartridge found in the revolver. The court in commenting upon this circumstance said that “The Commonwealth has shown that this cartridge box was found in the room of the defendant.” Several witnesses had so testified; but it is urged for defendant that the use of the word “shown” treated the fact as established, while the credibility of the testimony was for the jury. We see no merit in such contention. A proper definition of “shown” as used in the charge would be “pointed out or made known by evidence,” and that accords with the dictionaries. The court did not say it had been conclusively shown, and the jury knew that
•The so-called after-discovered evidence, as exhibited in the depositions, was largely cumulative, and with due diligence might have been discovered before the trial. There was no abuse of discretion in refusing to grant a new trial on that ground. Such refusal was so clearly a matter within the discretion of the court below that its action in this respect will not be reviewed in the absence of clear error: Knickerbocker Ice Co. v. Pa. R. R. Co., 253 Pa. 54, 66. And see Commonwealth v. Garrito, 222 Pa. 304. That the trial judge in passing upon the motion for a new trial considered the affidavit of a witness in explanation of his deposition affords no ground for reversing the judgment. The case depended to a considerable extent upon dying declarations, the weight of which was for the jury. “All the authorities agree that after the declarations have been admitted as dying-declarations their weight and credibility are purely for the determination of the jury”: 1 Ruling Case Law, page 547.. Where such declarations are contradictory tO' each other, it is the duty of the jury to weigh them and to determine which if either is to be believed: Wharton’s Criminal Evidence (10th Ed.), page 585. The question of guilt or innocence was for the jury to decide, subject to the approval of the trial judge.' If guilty the case' presents all the elements of -first degree murder. Having considered and passed upon the alleged errors, our duty is performed.