226 Pa. 114 | Pa. | 1910
Opinion by
The appellant stands convicted of the crime of murder in the first degree. The only defense attempted on the trial was intoxication and general mental unsoundness; and these only by way of mitigation or reduction of degree of guilt; for it was not pretended that appellant was so mentally disturbed or enfeebled as to be irresponsible for his conduct. Depending upon its acceptance by the jury, the evidence of the commonwealth established every element necessary to convict of the highest degree. On the morning of December 31, 1908, the defendant, a single man, went to the home of Steve Horvath with murderous intent which he had a few moments before expressed to another, and there finding Horvath’s wife alone with her small children, pursued her from the house out upon the street with a revolver in his hands. He there shot her in the back of the head while she was running from him; and approaching her as she lay upon the ground he again shot her in the head. In a very short time the life of his victim was extinct. The defendant a few moments after the tragedy, hav
A hypothetical case predicated on such facts as had been testified to with respect to the conduct of defendant immediately before and immediately after the commission of the crime, was submitted to Dr. Longstreet, an alienist, who was asked to express an opinion with respect to the sanity of a person so behaving. The question was objected to not because it was directed to a hypothetical case, but solely on the ground that it was predicated in part upon a fact not testified to, namely, that a threat to shoot somebody had been made by the party in a saloon. The testimony was that the threat had been made elsewhere than in a saloon, and the question being amended to accord with the testimony, was allowed. The amendment removed the only objection made to the question.
John Kelly, another witness for the commonwealth, was called to testify to the defendant’s mental condition immediately following the occurrence. He was a policeman on duty in the hospital where defendant was confined for several weeks after the tragedy. He was allowed to testify against objection that he observed nothing in defendant’s conduct during this period that indicated unsoundness of mind. The testimony was competent; its value depended on the witness’ intelligence and his opportunities for observing. These were for the jury to appraise. The last assignment charges error in refusing a new trial on the ground of after-discovered evidence. This calls for no consideration.
The defendant had a fair trial. Not a single exception is taken to the court’s instructions as to the law, whether in the general charge or in answer to points. The one issue in the case was whether the defendant at the time he killed his victim was capable of forming in his mind a specific intent to take life. The widest latitude was allowed the defendant to show