Opinion by
Appellant was found guilty by a jury of involuntary manslaughter 1 and failing to stop and render assistance 2 *591 in connection with a fatal automobile accident. Appellant contends that the lower court erred in denying his motion for a demurrer to the manslaughter charge because the Commonwealth failed to produce sufficient evidence to convict. In regard to the charge of failing to stop and render assistance, appellant argues that testimonial reference by the Commonwealth to his silence during custodial interrogation requires that a new trial be granted.
At approximately 12:15 a.m. on January 6, 1973, a hit and run accident occurred on Lancaster Avenue in Columbia Borough. The evidence produced at trial indicates that Maria Santiago, who died as a result of the injuries she sustained in the accident, and Donna Haug were walking on the north side of Lancaster Avenue. The highway does not have sidewalks but there is- a gravel berm approximately three feet wide. The investigating officers determined the point of impact from the location of the victim’s pocketbook and apron. The victim’s body came to rest 122 feet away from the point of impact. Although she was unable to witness the accident because she was walking slightly ahead of the victim, Donna Haug testified that the deceased was walking entirely on the berm. The point of impact is located at a slight curve with little illumination. There was no evidence of skid marks at the scene, and the Commonwealth offered no testimony concerning the speed of the automobile which struck Maria Santiago.
Several people at the spot where the deceased’s body came to rest informed the police that the car was a dark-colored, late model with possible damage to its right front fender and a missing headlight. The police immediately issued a county-wide call for assistance in locating the car. The police gathered small pieces of glass and paint chips from the area around the point of impact and from *592 the deceased’s body. On the afternoon of January 6, 1973, Officers Roberts and Landis of the Columbia Police Department were notified by a third policeman that an automobile answering the description given by the witnesses was located at the Grinnell parking lot in Columbia. The two officers brought the paint samples with them when they went to investigate the lead. Upon observing that the automobile fit the general description and that the paint on the vehicle seemed to match the paint samples, the officers believed that probable cause to remove paint samples from the automobile existed. Officer Landis remained at the parking lot while Officer Roberts obtained a search warrant. Upon returning, Officer Roberts took paint samples from the car and sent them to the police laboratory along with the paint samples obtained from the scene of the accident and from the deceased’s body.
The officers determined that the car was registered to appellant. At approximately 3:30 p.m., appellant came out of the Grinnell plant and approached his car. The officers read the search warrant to him, infomed him of his constitutional rights, and asked him to accompany them to the police station. At the station, appellant was again given "Miranda” warnings. 3 Officer Roberts testi- *593 fled that during the interrogation appellant asked if he could contact an attorney. The following colloquy took place at trial:
“Q. Did the Defendant say when this damage occurred to his vehicle?
“A. No, he just said he was in Ely’s the night before.
“Q. This would have been Friday night?
“A. Friday evening. And that the damage occurred then, but he didn’t elaborate on how it happened. At this point he asked for a lawyer. He asked if he could call a lawyer and Officer Smith gave him the telephone and he contacted Mr. Donald Nikolaus. At which time Mr. Nikolaus advised him over the phone to not say anything and made an appointment with Mr. Gochenaur to come to his office the next day.
“THE COURT: Not say anything?
“THE WITNESS: Correct. Mr. Nikolaus instructed Mr. Gochenaur to say nothing.
“[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I must object to this testimony at this point. I don’t think, first of all, what an attorney tells a client over the telephone is proper evidence.
“THE COURT: Did you hear — did the Defendant say he was told that?
“THE WITNESS: Yes, Mr. Gochenaur said the attorney told him not to say anything.
“THE COURT: I’ll admit — he said the lawyer said he was not to talk to anybody. You’ll disregard what might have been hearsay when the lawyer talked to the Defendant, but not the testimony of the Defendant that he told the officer that his lawyer told him not to say anything.
“Exception noted.”
*594 After Officer Roberts answered several more questions, defense counsel moved for a mistrial, which was denied. Appellant was arrested on January 10, 1973, after the police received verbal confirmation from the laboratory that the paint obtained at the scene and the paint taken from appellant’s car matched.
Appellant first contends that the evidence was insufficient to convict him beyond a reasonable doubt of involuntary manslaughter. When an appeal follows a judgment of sentence, and a ruling on a demurrer is questioned, “the defendant will be discharged only if all evidence in the case, including that introduced as a defense, after the entry of the demurrer is insufficient to support the jury verdict.”
Commonwealth v. Fuchs,
Involuntary manslaughter has been defined as “the killing of another without malice and unintentionally, but in doing some unlawful act not amounting t'o a felony nor naturally tending to cause death or great bodily harm, or in negligently doing some act lawful in itself, or by the negligent omission to perform a legal duty.”
Commonwealth v. Mayberry,
In the present case, the Commonwealth produced no evidence to prove that appellant committed an unlawful act. Thus, unlike
Commonwealth v. Morris,
The Commonwealth did prove that the deceased’s severely bruised and battered body was found 122 feet from the point of impact. The Commonwealth, however, never introduced the lawful rate of speed for Lancaster Avenue, and produced no testimony at all concerning the speed at which appellant’s automobile was travelling at the time of the accident. Considering that the accident occurred around midnight, at a point immediately after a curve on a poorly-lit road with no sidewalks, it is difficult, if not impossible, to state that appellant’s conduct amounted to anything more than ordinary negligence. The cases cited by the Commonwealth involved far more substantial evidence of recklessness than was presented below. For example, in
Commonwealth v. Rosenberger,
Appellant did not demur to the charge of failing to stop and render assistance, and there is no question that the Commonwealth presented sufficient evidence to support the conviction. Appellant contends, however, that the lower court committed reversible error in allowing Officer Roberts’s testimony concerning appellant’s request to contact an attorney and the lawyer’s instruction to appellant not to say anything. In
Miranda v. Arizona,
Appellant’s interrogation began on the afternoon of January 6, 1973. Athough appellant was not formally arrested until January 10, our Supreme Court has held that “[c]ustodial interrogation is not limited to police station questioning or that occurring after a formal arrest.”
Commonwealth v. Jefferson,
In
Commonwealth v. Haideman,
In its brief, the Commonwealth advances two arguments in opposition to appellant’s request for a new trial. First, the Commonwealth contends that the objectionable testimony was not prejudicial because Officer Roberts did *599 not state that appellant remained silent, but only that appellant’s lawyer instructed him to remain silent. It is highly questionable whether a jury would consider an attorney’s instruction any less indicative of guilt than the accused’s own decision. Moreover, the argument overlooks the fact that Officer Roberts also commented on appellant’s request to contact an attorney. Reference to this fact at trial is within the proscription of Haideman. Secondly, the Commonwealth states that defense counsel did not immediately move for a mistrial. The Commonwealth apparently is arguing that appellant has waived his objection to the admission of Officer Roberts’s testimony. Defense counsel objected immediately because he felt that “what an attorney tells a client over the telephone is [not] proper evidence.” After further testimony consumed two pages of the record, defense counsel moved for a mistrial. The following colloquy occurred at trial:
“[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Judge, in the officer’s direct testimony he stated that after they had been questioning Mr. Gochenaur in the Police Station that he asked to contact any attorney.
“THE COURT: He said after certain statements. I think the only thing he said, I don’t know, and made no — the next response he said he wanted a lawyer and they stopped asking him questions.
“[DEFENSE COUNSEL] : He called an attorney and the attorney told him not to say anything. Now, Your Honor, there is a decision in the Supreme Court that can’t be more than six months old, that kind of testimony requires a mis-trial because they are putting exercise of the Defendant’s Fifth Amendment right in jeopardy, because if the jury hears about it— ...
“THE COURT: I’ll look at that case later, I am not going to hear what that is now. You could be quoting it out of context.
“You make a motion for a mistrial on the grounds that the Defendant—
*600 “[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Exercise of the Fifth Amendment—
“THE COURT: Overruled, exception noted.”
It is clear that the defense attorney afforded the trial court an opportunity to correct its error. There was an immediate objection to the testimony; the fact that appellant’s lawyer delayed a few minutes, until direct examination of the witness was complete, before requesting a mistrial, does not constitute a waiver.
Judgment of sentence on the charge of involuntary manslaughter is arrested. Judgment of sentence of failing to stop and render assistance is reversed, and a new trial ordered.
Notes
. Act of June 24, 1939, P.L. 872, §703, former 18 P.S. §4703. Under the 1939 Penal Code, involuntary manslaughter is a misdemeanor, carrying a maximum penalty of three years’ imprisonment or a $2000 fine, or both.
. Act of April 29, 1959, P.L. 58, §1027, 75 P.S. §1027. A failure to stop and render assistance is a misdemeanor punishable *591 by a maximum of three years’ imprisonment or a fine of $200, or both.
. Appellant’s pre-trial motion to suppress evidence focused mainly on the validity of the search warrant authorizing the taking of paint samples from appellant’s automobile. However, the motion to suppress did request the suppression of all statements appellant made during custodial interrogation. At the suppression hearing, the Commonwealth offered no evidence in regard to whether appellant had been given proper “Miranda” warnings. At trial, Officer Roberts testified that he asked appellant whether he had hit Maria Santiago, and that appellant replied “I don’t know.” Defense counsel immediately objected because the Commonwealth had failed to prove at the suppression hearing that the statement was admissible. The trial judge, implying that appellant’s contention was well-taken, offered to recess the jury and hold an additional suppression hearing. Defense counsel stated that he did not want the jury dismissed, but maintained his objection to the *593 admission of the statement. The court concluded: “Not an objection. Exception noted.” In its opinion, the lower court states that appellant waived his objection. In view of our disposition of appellant’s other contentions, this issue need not be reached.
