100 Pa. Super. 125 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1930
Argued September 30, 1930. Defendant appeals from five sentences of imprisonment imposed on bills of indictment charging him with entering with intent to steal, and larceny. The cases were tried together in the court below and were argued together in this court. They raise but a single question which will be answered in one opinion. After defendant was arrested he confessed to the various burglaries that he had committed. His confession was taken and recorded by a talking motion picture machine and the record thus made, which was offered in evidence and admitted over the objection of defendant, was exhibited to the jury upon a screen. The question presented to us is whether it was proper to admit this evidence. This is the same and the only *127 question which was raised in the court below on the motion for a new trial. It was answered in the affirmative by the learned trial judge in a well considered opinion which so fully justifies the conclusion reached as to warrant our adopting considerable portions thereof. The question, which is a new one in this state, involves two subordinate questions, first, the general relevancy and admissibility of such evidence; and second, the adequacy of the authentication of the evidence offered.
As to the general relevancy and admissibility of such evidence it is a matter of common knowledge that motion pictures are no longer a novelty. They are constantly used for commercial and scientific purposes. The talking motion picture, or movietone, as it is technically known, results merely from an adaptation of the scientific processes used in producing phonographic records in order that words spoken, or sounds produced at the time of the taking of the picture, may be reproduced with the picture. The Commonwealth presented the testimony of expert witnesses respecting the method by which the talking motion pictures are made and produced and their reproductive accuracy upon the screen. From this evidence it appears that the movietone is, in the language of the court below, "in basic characteristics, no different, on the one hand, from ordinary photography, in regard to the visual picture reproduced, and, on the other hand, from phonographic records, in regard to the auditory recording of sound. The principles that underlie their admissibility into evidence, therefore, differ in no way from those governing the admissibility of still pictures and phonographic records." It would seem, therefore, that objections to the introduction of sound pictures to supplement, clarify and authenticate verbal testimony of witnesses must be based upon lack of authenticity of the particular picture which is offered in evidence, *128
rather than on the ground of the general unreliability of the process by which such pictures are produced. From time to time the courts have recognized new agencies for presenting evidential matters. The novelty of the talking motion picture is no reason for rejecting it if its accuracy and reliability, as aids in the determination of the truth, are established. In the words of the learned trial judge, "all knowledge purveys to the law, and from the domains of every art and science it draws the weapons by which it discovers truth and confounds error. The still photograph, X-ray, the dictograph, the finger print, the phonograph, the microscope, and even the bloodhound, have all been used and received by judicial tribunals in the proof of matters depending upon evidence; and, in all such cases, the preliminary investigation was directed to the proper authentication of the evidence, and not merely to the question whether imposture might be successful." In Moncur v. Western Life Indemnity Co.,
Upon the question whether the movietone which was offered in evidence was a true portrayal of the actions and words of defendant at the time it was taken, the Commonwealth offered abundant evidence to authenticate it, and there was no countervailing proof. It was made in the presence and under the direction of an expert who also saw the film projected before and during the trial. When asked, "Q. Does that or not actually represented what occurred?" he answered, "Yes, in every way." "Q. And the production that you saw, and the tones you heard here — did they correspond with your recollection of what took place when the picture was taken? A. Yes, sir." The operator of the camera and the sound man took the photograph synchronously and both agreed that the projected movietone comported exactly and truthfully with the scene and the voices actually taken. Defendant's expert, who testified that talking motion pictures are readily susceptible to fabrication, conceded, after making a thorough examination of the film, that there had been no elimination or insertions in the record, and that the projected film, in his judgment, accurately reproduced the scene taken. We conclude, therefore, *131 that the film was sufficiently authenticated to make it admissible in evidence.
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.