Opinion by
This is an appeal from the judgment of sentence of five to twelve years imposed on appellant following conviction by a jury of second degree murder and denial of post-trial motions.
At approximately 8:15 p.m. on January 7, 1965, at 52nd and Girard Avenue, in Philadelphia, a scuffle occurred among three people. David Nutter was shot in the buttocks and fell to the ground in the middle of the intersection. An eyewitness bystander, Charles J. Wilson, identified appellant as one of the persons who attacked David Nutter, and also saw appellant pistol-whip David Nutter as he was lying in the street. Wilson heard David Nutter say “Howard, I’m going to get you,” as appellant stood over Nutter with a pistol. A Philadelphia police officer, Michael Pisa *47 nelli, approached the intersection in response to alarmed citizens’ cries. He observed two persons running south on 52nd St., and briefly but unsuccessfully gave chase. Officer Pisanelli returned to the intersection and observed David Nutter, bleeding profusely, lying in the street. Iiis brother, Edward Nutter, also came over. Edward heard his stricken brother say, while lying on the street, “Howard from downtown shot me,” or “Howard from downtown got me.” Asked who “Howard” was the deceased said, “Ronald Camp and LeVay would know him.” Camp and LeVay were police officers. Camp testified at trial that appellant and deceased exchanged hostile words about one hour before the shooting.
Edward drove his soon-to-be-dead brother to Misc.icordia Hospital. Shortly after 9:00 p.m. another Philadelphia Police officer, Herbert Quarterman, had a conversation with David Nutter in which Nutter stated seven or eight times, “Howard shot me . . . Camp knows him.”
Officer Quarterman testified as to David Nutter’s condition at the hospital: “. . . prone on his back. His eyes were closed. He was breathing quite heavily. He screamed several times and he had blood at his hair line and forehead. He had a protrusion of the skin below his navel as though he had a double navel. Blood was coming from both sides of him on the litter.” At 9:30 p.m., David Nutter was pronounced dead of a gunshot wound.
Appellant claims that the court below erred in several respects in admitting in evidence certain statements of the decedent under exceptions to the hearsay rule, and in charging the jury.
The court admitted the deceased’s statement heard by Wilson under the res gestae (spontaneous declaration) exception to the hearsay rule. It did likewise for the statement to the brother, Edward Nutter, and *48 the statement to Officer Quarterman at the hospital. Moreover, the statement at the hospital was also admitted under the exception for dying declarations. Appellant contends that none of these statements should have been admitted.
It was perfectly proper for the trial court to admit the disputed statements into evidence. This aspect of this case is controlled by the recent case of
Commonwealth v. Cheeks,
In addition to being spontaneous, a declaration in order to qualify under the res gestae exception must be “made in reference to some phase of [the] occurrence which [the declarant] perceived.”
Carney v. Pennsylvania R. R. Co.,
Nor does the statement “Howard, I’m going to get you” fail to elucidate the event in question. The logical interpretation of such a statement is that the deceased was describing his assailant.
We also agree with the court below that the statement in the hospital qualified as a dying declaration as well as a spontaneous declaration.
1
Appellant’s contention that the evidence does not establish that Nutter knew he was dying is not well taken. “It is well-settled that the sense of impending death which the dying person must have had in order to render a dying declaration made by him admissible in evidence may be inferred from the nature of the wound or the state of his illness without any express declaration to show that he was sensible of impending death.”
Commonwealth v. Plubell,
Appellant argues further, that even if the statements were properly admitted, the court below committed reversible error in failing to instruct the jury adequately. Appellant urges that the court should *51 have instructed the jury on how to determine whether the statements were in fact res gestae or dying declarations. Appellant relies on this point on a series of cases pertaining to dying declarations, but we agree with him that the same principles would apply to res gestae statements. In the cases relied upon by appellant, the following passage appears: “Whether the attendant facts and circumstances of the case warrant the admission of a statement as a dying declaration is in the first instance for the court, but, when admitted, the declarant’s state of mind and the credibility, interpretation and weight to be given his statement are for the jury wider proper instructions.” (Emphasis added). Commonwealth v. Brown, supra, at page 616; Commonwealth v. Knable, supra, at page 175; and cases cited therein. The question is what are proper instructions. In our opinion, a general charge on credibility of witnesses and weight of evidence is what this Court meant by “proper instructions.” It would run counter to the basic tenet of the common law— that questions of law are for the court, and questions of fact for the jury — to hold otherwise. Appellant would have the court instruct the jury that in order for a statement to be acceptable as a dying declaration, the declarant must have knowledge of impending death. Although he does not spell it out so clearly, he obviously would apply the same principle to res gestae statements and require the jury to find that they were spontaneous utterances emanating from the event and so near in time as to exclude the possibility of premeditation or design. Clearly, if we were to follow appellant’s suggestion, we would allow the jury to become usurpers of the judge’s function to decide the law. That such a result was not intended by this Court is evident from the citation in Knable, supra, of Wigmore on Evidence, 3d Ed., Vol. 5, §1451 (b). That subsection states: “After a dying declaration, or any other *52 evidence, lias been admitted, the weight to be given to it is a matter exclusively for the jury. They may believe it or may not believe it; but, so far as they do or do not, their judgment is not controlled by rules of law. Therefore, though they themselves do not suppose the declarant to have been conscious of death, they may still believe the statement; conversely, though they do suppose him to have been thus conscious, they may still not believe the statement to be true. In other words, their canons of ultimate belief are not necessarily the same as the preliminary legal conditions of Admissibility, whose purpose is an entirely different one {ante, §29).
“It is therefore erroneous for the judge, after once admitting the declaration, to instruct the jury that they must reject the declaration, or exclude it from consideration, if the legal requirement as to consciousness of death does not in their opinion exist. No doubt they may reject it, on this ground or on any other; [footnote omitted] but they are not to be expected to follow a definition of law intended only for the judge. . . .” (Emphasis in original) We thus hold that the trial judge did not err in failing to instruct the jury on conditions of admissibility of dying declarations and res gestae statements.
Finally, we hold that the court below properly refused to charge on involuntary manslaughter where there was no indictment therefor.
Commonwealth v. Hardy,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Of course, tlie statement’s admissibility under the res gestae exception suffices: “When an unsworn statement is made as part of the res gestae, properly so called, or under such other circumstances as to make it a spontaneous one, this in itself is sufficient ground of admissibility and it need not be further shown that the assertion is also a dying declaration because made under a fixed sense of impending dissolution.”
Commonwealth v. Puntario,
