278 Pa. 59 | Pa. | 1923
Opinion by
The question which appellant’s counsel raises on this appeal is whether on an indictment charging murder and manslaughter there can be a conviction of the latter crime, where the evidence establishes the offense was murder of the first degree in the perpetration of a robbery.
The Commonwealth claimed and all its evidence went to support the charge that the deceased was killed in the perpetration of the crime of robbery. The indictment contained two counts, one for murder and the other for manslaughter. The court defined the latter felony to the jury and then said to them: “I have defined to you manslaughter because we find the charge in this indictment. But we say to you that there is no evidence in this case of any sudden quarrel or provocation, or any circumstances from which proof of manslaughter would arise. There seems to be no dispute that the shooting which resulted in the death of George Johns was not committed in a sudden heat, but was a wilful, malicious, deliberate, and premeditated killing. And while the court does not withdraw from your consideration the count
The defendant had accompanied the deceased on an automobile ride. The theory of the prosecution is that it had been planned beween her and confederates who followed the motor in which she and deceased rode, that he should be robbed. There was evidence that he had been. He was shot to death but his body also showed abrasions, lacerations and scratches. In addition to this, there were pieces of silk tassel corresponding to the trimming of the defendant’s dress found in the vicinity of the murder and near the body of the deceased. Commenting on these circumstances in connection with the jury’s action, the learned trial judge in his opinion disposing of the motion for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, said: “They may have believed that defendant did not lure the deceased to the boulevard for the purpose of robbery, but went there for an immoral purpose, as suggested by defendant’s own testimony, and a quarrel ensued between the deceased and defendant, as the result of which he was shot.” On this hypothesis, there was at least some evidence which might logically sustain the verdict, but, aside from the surmise as to what brought it about, the jury had the power, even though the evidence established murder, to find a voluntary manslaughter verdict.
At common law, on a trial of an indictment for murder, there might be a conviction of manslaughter, on proving
The jury has the power to find a defendant guilty of any offense which is less than and included in that charged in the indictment. That was true at common law and is sanctioned by a majority of the states. In Sadler’s Criminal & Penal Procedure, 436, section 504, the rule is thus stated: “There may be a verdict of guilty of a constituent offense included within the one charged.
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.