On December 8, 1990, appellant, Kim Lee McMullen, was found guilty of second degree murder 1 and burglary 2 and was immediately sentenced on the murder conviction to mandatory life imprisonment. Appellant’s post-trial motions were denied and on December 31, 1991 he was sentenced to eleven (11) months to five (5) years imprisonment on the burglary conviction. McMullen filed separate appeals from the December §, 1990 and December 31, 1991 judgments of sentence and, sua sponte, this Court consolidated the matters for purposes of this appeal by Order dated March 18, 1992. The facts pertinent to this appeal follow.
During the early morning hours of February 24,1985 a food store known as the Grocery Box was burglarized. The perpetrator of the crime was not caught. Eight days later, on March 4, 1985, the body of Dominic Barcelona, a 30-year old man who suffered from schizophrenia, was recovered from Black Log Creek, not far from the Grocery Box. Barcelona’s death was ruled an accidental drowning. More than five years *133 later, in January of 1991, upon hearing rumors the burglary and drowning were somehow related, the Pennsylvania State Police reopened both investigations. Appellant, who at the time the investigations were reopened was incarcerated on unrelated charges, gave a statement averring he and another man, Adam Wiser, burglarized the Grocery Box and, upon fleeing the scene, encountered Barcelona on a nearby bridge. Appellant stated he heard a noise, turned, saw Barcelona lying on the ground and then watched as Wiser threw Barcelona into the creek. Appellant was then charged, via two separate informations, with burglary and criminal homicide. A jury found him guilty on both counts, he was sentenced and this appeal followed.
Appellant presents six issues for our consideration, beginning with the contention the court erred by failing to quash or dismiss, on the basis of a defective information, the charge of criminal homicide. The information filed relative to Barcelona’s death charged appellant with violating 18 Pa.C.S. 2501, Criminal homicide, and averred appellant did “unlawfully, intentionally, knowingly, recklessly or negligently cause the death of another human being.” Appellant argues the Commonwealth’s failure to specifically charge him with degree(s) of murder and/or grade(s) of manslaughter, as opposed to the general charge of criminal homicide, constituted reversible error. In the alternative, appellant submits the mere recitation of the language of the criminal homicide statute, without more, did not provide him with sufficient notice of the crime against which he must defend.
A criminal information must inform the defendant of the crime with which he is charged and must be read in a common sense manner.
Commonwealth v. Badman,
Next, appellant argues the court erred by consolidating for trial the burglary and homicide charges. Appellant avers the. Commonwealth failed to follow the procedural requirements for consolidation as set forth in Pa.R.Crim.P. 1127, Joinder-Trial of Separate Indictments or Informations, and also did not meet the substantive requirements for consolidation.
The Commonwealth concedes it failed to file a written motion for consolidation in compliance with Pa.R.Crim.P. 1127B, but argues that procedural defect cannot be the basis for a new trial since, substantively, joinder was mandated. We agree.
This Court has found the absence of a pretrial motion to consolidate does not preclude joinder provided the court has reasoned, in its discretion, all charges arose from the same criminal episode. See
Commonwealth v. Griffin,
Appellant next argues because there was no indication Barcelona’s death was anything other than an accident, the
*135
Commonwealth failed to establish a corpus delicti and the court erred by admitting appellant’s inculpatory statements into evidence. Although appellant agrees it is the law in this state in order to establish the corpus delicti necessary to levy criminal homicide charges the Commonwealth must present independent evidence consistent with homicide, appellant contends corpus delicti will be found only if the circumstances surrounding the death are
more
consistent with a homicide than an accident or other unlawful cause and cites
Commonwealth v. Byrd,
In ruling appellant’s inculpatory statement admissible the trial court followed
Commonwealth v. Boykin,
Prior to
Boykin,
independent corroborative evidence was insufficient to establish corpus delicti if it was merely equally as consistent with accident as with crime.
Commonwealth v. Leslie,
The coroner in this case ruled Barcelona’s cause of death was drowning. Although an autopsy revealed the decedent had a large bruise and laceration on his forehead, it is reasonable to conclude this injury could have been sustained accidentally or, as the Commonwealth avers, by criminal means. There is no convincing evidence to indicate Barcelona’s unfortunate death was more consistent with a homicide than with an accident. See Byrd and Forman, supra. Accordingly, we find the court erred by admitting appellant’s statement into evidence. We hereby vacate the convictions and judgments of sentence and remand for a new trial in accordance with this Opinion. 3
Jurisdiction relinquished.
