251 Pa. 329 | Pa. | 1916
Opinion by
The appellant has for a second time been convicted of the murder of one G-uisseppe Visalli. His appeal from the judgment following the first conviction, reported in
That Guisseppe Visalli was slain by the . hand of a murderer was too evident to be disputed. Though no human eye witnessed the tragedy the wounds found upon his dead body, by their number and character, furnished irrefragable proof that he fell the victim of a felonious assault. Was it the hand of the appellant that inflicted these wounds? This was the only question in the case. The evidence pointing to his guilt was wholly circumstantial. On the morning of July 22, 1912, the dead body was found covered with wounds, any one of a half a dozen of which would have been sufficient to cause death, while either of three of them would have been sufficient to cause death almost instantly. It was found in a secluded spot at a point nearly midway between the Borough of Huntingdon and the Village of Ardenheim, at the foot of a steep embankment along the Juniata river, about 65 feet from the line of the Pennsylvania Railroad, and about 30 feet from the public road on the same side of the river leading from Huntingdon to Ardenheim. Expert testimony was to the effect that death had occurred from 24 to 36 hours before discovery. The victim was last seen alive on Saturday night preceding
What we have said applies as well to the instruction given the jury with respect to the knife found some two months after the murder in the bed of the river. What the Commonwealth sought to establish was that this was the same knife that had been seen in the possession of the accused the afternoon of the day of the murder. We are not to be understood as questioning the sufficiency of the identification; that again was a question for the jury; but in the absence of all instruction from the court as to what is identification, upon what it rests, and the degree of certainty the evidence must reach to warrant a conclusion of identity, it must follow that if here a proper conclusion was reached it was accidental, and not because the processes of investigation which the law contemplates and which it is the duty of the judge to expound, were observed.
We feel compelled for the reasons stated to sustain the assignments of error which complain of the court’s charge in- the matter we have discussed.
Since the result must be another trial of the defendant, an expression of view with respect to several remaining assignments of error becomes necessary. The assignments number forty-eight in all and the consideration of them here separately would be altogether impracticable. Several of them point to unmistakable error which would call for a reversal of the judgment did the record disclose no more. To these we shall briefly refer. We pass by such as complain that the charge
The defense had offered testimony of the defendant’s good reputation. The instruction with reference to it was as follows: “A large number of witnesses have been called who testified to the good character of the defendant prior to the time of the commission of this act. Evidence of good character is substantive and positive proof in the prisoner’s behalf by making it improbable that a man of such character would commit the offense charged. Where the jury is satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt under all the evidence that the defendant is guilty, evidence of previous good character is not to overcome the conclusion which follows from that view of the case.” Under our authorities this was reversible error. It is only necessary to refer to the rather recent case of Com. v. Cate, 220 Pa. 138, where the language of the 'charge was identical with that used here. The trial judge strangely enough in adopting the language employed by the trial judge in that case, overlooked the fact of its condemnation as error by this court, and the reversal of the judgment in consequence,
The prosecuting officer of the Commonwealth in his closing address to the jury, not only once but repeatedly, in most vigorous language asserted his personal belief that the defendant was guilty of the murder of Visalli.
The evidence in support of a motion for a new trial disclosed the fact that the jurors after having been empaneled and sworn had been allowed to separate. Repeated instances of such separation were shown to have occurred during the trial. This, using the language of the court in Com. v. Gearhardt, 205 Pa. 387, was in palpable violation of the unbroken practice of the Courts of Oyer and Terminer, especially in capital cases and meets without condemnation. “The mere fact of separation further than is necessarily required to enable the jurors to perform their duty as such, and under the care of a sworn officer, creates a presumption of improper influence which the Commonwealth must rebut or remove by clear and satisfactory evidence.” Peiffer v. Com., 15 Pa. 468. The motion to withdraw a juror was refused on the ground that “the evidence did not show that anything improper was said or done to influence any juror,
The sentence of the court was under the Act of June 19, 1913, P. L. 528, which changes the method of inflicting the death penalty from hanging to electrocution. The trial judge in so sentencing the prisoner overlooked the fact that it is provided in the eleventh section of this act that its provisions shall not apply to any case in which it shall appear that the crime was committed prior to the date of the approval of the act.
We have thus referred to these manifest errors appearing in the record, not that they are likely to be repeated on the next trial, but to put beyond possibility their recurrence on the third trial of this defendant.
The judgment is reversed and a venire de novo is awarded.