64 A.2d 522 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1948
Argued October 8, 1948. John Dougherty, appellant, who was thrice convicted of assault and battery on separate trials on three indictments,1 relies for reversals on the refusal of the trial judge to grant continuances in cases No. 47 and No. 53, February Sessions, 1948, on trial errors in the reception of testimony offered by the Commonwealth in rebuttal in No. 48 February Sessions, 1948, the case first tried, and in reception at trial of No. 47 of admissions made by certain defendants in a former trial. We are all of the opinion that there was ample evidence to support the verdicts, that the appellant had fair trials and that the verdicts should not be disturbed.
A recital of the essential facts will avoid later repetition and will clarify the legal questions raised. Dougherty, Robert Krolak and Donald Klemm travelled about the City of Erie in a borrowed car on the night of November 16, 1947, seeking victims to satiate their ruffianism. Between nine and nine-thirty p.m., their cruel, brutal and wicked dispositions found ready exercise, and in quick succession, on William Wotochek, Edward Burns and John Rickrode. At 10:20 p.m., same night, James Floros was assaulted, and twenty-five minutes later Alfred Walsh, their last victim, felt the fury of their attack. It is unnecessary to describe the nature of the various assaults as all were of a similar pattern. They were unprovoked and utterly devoid of a modicum of decency or fair play and were the offspring of thugs cowardly exercising care to spot victims who were unaccompanied and who were therefore unable to *290 cope with the terrific odds posed by the three ruffians.
Dougherty, Klemm and Krolak were jointly tried and convicted of assault and battery on Alfred Walsh on indictment No. 48, which was the first action called for trial. The appellant, Dougherty, testifying in his own behalf, stated that he acted in self-defense and that he did not touch Walsh at any time. The Commonwealth called four witnesses, — Floros, Burns, Rickrode and Wotochek, victims of the three defendants, — to testify about the unprovoked assaults upon them for the purpose of rebutting Dougherty's testimony that he acted in self-defense and that Walsh was the aggressor. The trial judge properly admitted that testimony as it was calculated to negative the plea of self-defense by establishing a wilful commission of a series of unprovoked assaults, immediately preceding the one for which appellant was being tried, according to plan, scheme or design of the appellant and his co-defendants. As stated in Commonwealth v.Strantz,
Evidence of a crime distinct from that for which appellant is being tried is not generally admissible. However, such evidence is competent when it tends to establish a common scheme, design, motive or intention: Cf. Commonwealth v. Strantz, supra;Commonwealth v. Chalfa,
Dougherty, appellant, and Krolak were convicted of assault and battery on the second trial, No. 47 February Sessions, 1948. Appellant complains that the court below erred in permitting the court stenographer to recite from her notes certain admissions of Krolak and appellant during the first trial tending to show that both were present at the scene when Wotochek was assaulted. These admissions were restricted solely to corroboration of Wotochek's positive identification of appellant as one of his assailants. The jury was not acquainted with other testimony adduced at the previous trial. As the appellant later admitted that he was at the scene of the assault, although denying any participation in the crime, it is difficult to understand, considering the limited scope of the challenged admissions, how he was prejudiced by the testimony of the court stenographer. Moreover, the appellant received more than he was entitled to when the admissions were received subject to the limitation. "An admission voluntarily made by a witness in a judicial proceeding, is competent on a subsequent trial of any issue in a criminal case to which it is pertinent. . . . . A prior admission or declaration is evidence against one on trial in a criminal proceeding. With more reason, prior testimony, voluntarily given under oath, is admissible for the same purpose": Commonwealth v. Cavanaugh,
All three defendants, Dougherty, Krolak and Klemm, were convicted on the third trial, No. 53 February Sessions, 1948. The only assignment of error2 in this *292
case, — also assigned in No. 47 February Sessions, 1948 — is the refusal of appellant's motion for continuance on the grounds that (1) newspaper publicity was highly prejudicial and (2) that many of the jurors in the second and third trials were in the court room when other indictments were being tried and therefore had knowledge of facts developed at the prior trial or trials. Appellant apparently recognizes the weakness of his contentions, for nowhere, either in his brief or in the record, has he detailed or described the nature of the publicity or suggested the manner in which he could have been prejudiced. The court below did not err when it concluded that the defendants had a fair trial and the grant of a new trial would perpetrate an injustice. Cf. Commonwealth v. Schurtz,
With regard to the motion for continuance on the ground that the panel of jurors may have heard the evidence in other cases against the same defendants, reference need only be made to what was said in Commonwealth v. Celli,
The evidence amply supports the verdicts and the judgments will be affirmed.
The assignments of error are overruled, the judgments of the court below are affirmed and defendant is directed to appear in the court below at such time as he may be there called, that he may by that court be committed until he has complied with its sentence or any part of it that had not been performed at the time the appeal was made a supersedeas.