In this appeal from his judgment of sentence for third degree murder, appellant claims that the evidence at trial was insufficient to sustain the conviction. He also claims that the trial court improperly admitted prior bad acts evidence relating to his treatment of the victim. We find no merit to appellant’s contentions and, accordingly, affirm.
Appellant was found guilty by a jury of the murder of four year old James Johnson (“James”), the son of his girlfriend, Deborah Johnson (“Mother”). At trial, the Commonwealth established the following. Appellant lived with Mother, James and the couple’s infant daughter in an apartment in Lancaster. One Friday evening in the summer of 1991, appellant punished James for urinating on the curb outside their home. The form
Mother fell asleep that evening while James was still standing on the crate; the next morning she left for work and noticed that James was sleeping in his bed. When she returned from work later that afternoon, she checked on her son, who was still sleeping, and noticed that he was snoring very loudly. James did not awaken at all that evening. Mother was scheduled to work a double shift that evening, starting at 11:00 P.M. Before leaving the apartment at 10:50 P.M., she took her infant to a neighbor because she knew that appellant would be going out later that night. She did not check on her son.
During the night and early morning hours, appellant drove to Coatesville to pick up a friend, Vincent Robinson (“Robinson”), who was to lend him money. When appellant arrived to pick up Robinson, James was lying in the back seat of the car and appeared to be sleeping. Robinson accompanied appellant to Mother’s place of work and then to the Lancaster apartment. Robinson testified that he saw James open his eyes at some point before he entered or was carried into the house. However, in all the time Robinson was in the presence of James, he never saw the boy stand, walk or talk. Others who visited the apartment that night, including a female friend of appellant and a pizza delivery person, did not see or hear James at all. Robinson and appellant went to sleep at 2:00 or 3:00 A.M. At approximately 7:00 A.M., while appellant was still sleeping, Robinson left the apartment. Before leaving, he saw James on the living room couch but could not tell whether the child was breathing.
At approximately 7:40 A.M., appellant telephoned Mother at work and asked if she would like him to buy her some food for lunch. Mother replied that she did not want him to buy her food. Despite this fact, appellant claimed, he took both children to the supermarket at 8:00 A.M. in order to purchase food for Mother. Once there, claimed appellant, he entered the store with his infant daughter in his arms and left James
Several witnesses were in the parking lot at the time appellant was there. A fireman, who was sitting in his fire truck at the time, did not see a child wandering around in the lot, nor did he see an adult with a four year old child. An employee of the store, who was sweeping out front, testified that she saw appellant enter the store with an infant in his arms, that less than five (5) minutes later appellant exited the store, approached her, and asked if she had seen a young boy. A Commonwealth re-creation of the events established that from his vantage point at the front of the store, appellant could not see into his car to know whether or not James was in the car. Appellant was interviewed on several occasions by police regarding the disappearance of James. His statements to police contained factual inconsistencies as well as denials, then admissions, about disciplining James that weekend. Ultimately, he was arrested and charged with the child’s murder.
The Commonwealth’s theory of the case was that appellant hit James in the head on Friday night, causing a subdural hematoma which resulted in his death. Appellant then disposed of the body and claimed that James was either taken or wandered off froni the supermarket parking lot. To prove its case, the Commonwealth offered the testimony of a neurosurgeon who explained that the sleeping patterns exhibited by James were consistent with those of a person suffering from a subdural hematoma. In particular, the surgeon testified that the victim would lapse into a coma over the period of a few days and that the loud snoring heard by Mother was likely the result of a blocked air passage caused by the comatose state.
Because James’s body never was found, the Commonwealth offered circumstantial proof of his death, including his age, the fact that no one saw him at the supermarket parking lot, the peculiar circumstances of the preceding two days wherein James was not seen conscious or awake by anyone, the inconsistent nature of appellant’s statements to police after James’s “disappearance,” and the failure of hundreds of search volunteers to turn up any evidence of James’s whereabouts.
We first address appellant’s claim that the evidence against him was insufficient to convict him of third degree murder. We will consider all of the testimony presented to the jury in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth as verdict winner.
Commonwealth v. Smith,
The fact that James’s body never was recovered does not preclude the government from proving that he is dead; proof of death may be established by circumstantial evidence.
Smith,
James’s disappearance occurred under suspicious circumstances. No one saw him in the parking lot or in the car and appellant appeared to claim he was missing even before he checked the car to see if the child was inside. Appellant went to the supermarket at an early hour despite the fact that Mother did not want him to purchase food for her. Appellant spent a very brief amount of time in the store before leaving without any groceries. He then approached the store employee. All of these rather curious circumstances allow an infer
We conclude that the evidence presented by the Commonwealth was sufficient to prove the death of James.
See Commonwealth v. Burns,
The final requirement is malice. To establish malice, the Commonwealth must show a “wickedness of disposition, hardness of the heart, cruelty, recklessness of consequences and a mind regardless of social duty.”
Commonwealth v. Fierst,
Specifically, the jury heard that appellant beat James on many occasions with various instruments including a crutch;
In addition, a nurse testified that appellant threatened to “throw James in the trash” when he could not find someone to care for the boy while Johnson was giving birth to appellant’s daughter. James’s nursery school teacher testified that appellant came to school and gave her explicit permission to spank James.
Evidence of prior bad acts or the relationship between the accused and the victim is admissible to show malice.
See Commonwealth v. Albrecht,
We decline appellant’s invitation to view the evidence set out above as mere disciplinary actions on the part of appellant. The behavior of appellant toward this child crossed the line of discipline and clearly exhibited the malice necessary for third degree murder. Appellant’s attempts to distinguish
Our careful review of the record leads to the conclusion that the testimony regarding prior acts of abuse by appellant on the victim were admissible to prove malice, and further, that the evidence presented by the Commonwealth was sufficient to support appellant’s conviction for third degree murder.
Appellant also claims that the trial court erred in allowing Mother to testify about appellant’s abusive conduct toward her. This was the subject of a defense motion in limine wherein appellant asked the court to disallow any mention of the abuse in the Commonwealth’s case-in-chief. The trial court granted the motion and the Commonwealth did not pursue the matter on direct examination of Mother. On cross-examination however, appellant questioned Mother about whether she ever abused James, attempting to raise an inference that she was the cause of the boy’s death. In response, the Commonwealth elicited from Mother her reasons for hitting James, namely, that appellant would inflict abuse upon her if she did not punish James at his command. Appellant opened the door to such proper re-direct examination when he cross-examined Mother.
Finally, appellant claims that the admission of evidence of blood spots on the ceiling in the apartment was error. The testimony was that when Mother returned from the hospital after giving birth to her daughter, Mother noticed red
We agree with the trial court that the blood spots were admissible to establish the Commonwealth’s case of a continuing pattern of violence by appellant against James. The presence of the blood, and appellant’s lie about its origin, make it more likely than not that appellant abused James. The spots corroborated Mother’s testimony that appellant often beat James until he bled and, therefore, support the Commonwealth’s proof of malice.
Judgment of sentence affirmed.
Notes
. Appellant claimed that the reason he did not bring James into the store was because he was punishing the child for spilling milk and wetting the bed. Another time he told police that he did not bring the child into the store because James had no shoes on and appellant already had to carry his infant daughter.
. At some point during the many searches for James, a volunteer told appellant that they planned to search the local dump. Appellant told the volunteer that he had already attempted to search the dump but that its owners would not give him permission to do so. Testimony from the dump’s manager revealed that no requests to search were made by any party.
. Our conclusion here also resolves another issue raised by appellant. At trial the Commonwealth introduced a statement made by appellant while in prison. Another inmate overheard appellant on the telephone saying: “[T]hey will never find the body. They haven’t looked in the right place, down at the dump.” Appellant claims that the Commonwealth did not establish James was dead or that appellant caused his death and, therefore, the corpus delicti was not established independent of appellant’s admission. Our finding that the evidence was sufficient to prove James's death and that appellant caused the death disposes of this argument.
