242 Pa. 416 | Pa. | 1913
Opinion by
On Saturday evening, September 14,1912, the defendant, John O. Keeler, sl ot and killed Joseph W. Roesner, at the latter’s brewery in Clearfield, Pa. The defendant had worked at the brewery about two years, but on September 13, 1912, after some dispute between Roesner and Keeler as to the latter’s compensation for overtime, the employment was terminated. It appears that Keeler had been dissatisfied with his treatment at the brewery for some time, and that he declared on several occasions shortly before the shooting, “they need a good cleaning up” and “when I start I will be dirty”; that only the day before the killing he said to Roesner, “well, I am going to have those two hours or there will be hell around here to-morrow”; that about one o’clock on the day of the shooting he purchased a revolver in. DuBois; that shortly thereafter he asserted that he was going over to Clearfield “to raise hell,” in one instance accompanying the declaration with an exhibition of the pistol; that on the train from
On trial, the accused did not dispute the killing but contended that at the time he was in such a state of intoxication from the excessive use of alcoholic liquors
The first assignment complains that the trial judge refused to permit certain cross-examination of the witness who testified that the defendant had remarked that his railroad ticket would take him to “Clearfield or to jail.” Counsel for the defendant stated, “We propose
The next assignment covers the charge as a whole, and thereunder it is asserted that the trial judge failed to point out clearly the distinction between “the grades of proof required on the part of the Commonwealth to convict of murder of the first degree and the grade or quality of proof required by the defendant to establish the defense of intoxication.” We have read the charge and are not convinced of error in this respect; when the general instructions are considered in connection with the affirmance of the defendant’s points, the few mistakes which appear were all made against the Commonwealth and favored the defendant.
The six succeeding assignments attack the charge as inadequate in several particulars and complain of certain specific excerpts therefrom. After considering all the matters here called to our attention, we are not convinced of reversible error; when the excerpts are read in connection with their context, and when the charge is taken as a whole, it is clear that the evidence was fairly reviewed and that the jury were sufficiently instructed properly to understand the relevant rules of law. Finally, a thorough review of the testimony satisfies us that the verdict was fully justified.
The assignments are all overruled, the judgment is affirmed, and the record is remitted to the court below; for the purpose of execution.