79 Pa. Super. 162 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1922
Opinion by
The defendant was indicted for participation in the robbery of the Union National Bank at New Castle, on the afternoon of May 24,1921. The indictment contained nine counts charging various offenses, all of which were involved in the entering of the bank and the attack on its employees. An automobile containing five men was driven to the front door of the bank about one o’clock in the afternoon, and at least three of the occupants of the car entered the bank and by violence and threats put the employees of the institution in fear and obtained $58,-282.95 in currency. At about the time they came out of the bank, one of the men assaulted a policeman of the city who was approaching and forced him into the doorway of a building adjoining the bank. The policeman was compelled to surrender a revolver which he had been carrying, and this was taken away when the men engaged in the robbery fled in the automobile. The automobile was afterward found abandoned in Youngstown, Ohio, and was the property of a resident of Canton, Ohio, from whose premises it had been stolen on the night preceding the attack on the bank. About eight o’clock on the next Thursday morning, some members of the police force of Toledo, Ohio, went to a house in that city in search of one or more persons suspected of having committed a crime in that city. In a room in the house they found the defendant in bed with one William Fisher, and under the sheet where the men were sleeping two revolvers were found, bne of which was shown by the Commonwealth to be the revolver taken from the police officer at the time the bank was robbed. The defendant had in his possession when examined about $487, and Fisher a little more than $407. Three hundred and seventy-five dollars of the money found in Fisher’s possession was in new bills of the Union National Bank of New Castle. The men arrested were held for action of the Pennsylvania authorities and were subsequently taken to New Castle for trial. Fisher pleaded guilty to an indictment for robbing
Complaint is now made that the court erred in four respects: First, in refusing to quash the 3d, áth, 5th, 6th and 7th counts in the indictment; Second, in permitting the Commonwealth to introduce the record showing a former conviction of the defendant of burglary; Third, in delivering an inadequate charge; Fourth, in omitting to give further instructions to the jury. With respect to the first objection, it is sufficient to say that the defendant was not sentenced on any of the counts alleged to be objectionable by the appellant. The court overruled the motion to quash these counts, and also the motion in arrest of judgment with respect to them, but the defendant has suffered no harm because of this action. It is not asserted that the 1st, 2d and 8th counts on which the sentence was imposed are not good, and as
The second objection, 6th assignment, is based on the Act of March 15, 1911, P. L. 20, which provides “that hereafter any person charged with any crime and called as a witness in his own behalf, shall not be asked, and, if asked, shall not be required to answer, any question tending to show that he has committed, or been charged with, or been convicted of any offense other than the one wherewith he shall then be charged, or tending to show that he has been of bad character or reputation; unless, he shall have at such trial, personally or by his advocate, asked questions of the witñess for the prosecution with a view to establish his own good reputation or character, or has given evidence tending to prove his own good character or reputation; or, he shall have testified at such trial against a codefendant, charged with the same offense.” This it is contended renders incompetent any evidence of participation in another crime to affect the credibility of the defendant where he has taken the stand as a witness in his own behalf. It is not claimed that the statute in terms forbids such testimony. An inspection of it shows that its words do not have that import. The argument of the learned counsel for the appellant is that such is the spirit of the act or of the law to be deduced from this legislation. We may consider, therefore, the attitude of a defendant as a witness in a criminal proceeding in connection with this subject. At common law one convicted of a felony or other infamous crime was by that fact disqualified as a witness — the assumption of the law being that a person of such depravity of nature as permitted him to be guilty of a serious crime was not worthy of credit and was incapable of making such contribution to the truth in any judicial inquiry as was em
The fourth objection is covered by the 8th assignment from which it appears that the defendant’s counsel understood that there had been some communication of the