194 A. 646 | Pa. | 1937
Argued June 9, 1937. The appellant, Joe Senauskas, was indicted for the murder of Metro Seminuk. Seminuk and his wife Mary lived in Warren County, Pa. He operated a filling station called the "Air Port Inn" on United States Highway Route No. 6, between Youngsville and Pittsfield and he also conducted there a small grocery store, and sold tobacco and beverages and maintained a room for dancing. About 12:15 a. m. on March 27, 1936, Seminuk, while standing on the driveway beside his gasoline pump, was shot through the heart, dying almost instantly. He was shot four times. On March 31, 1936, *543 Senauskas was arrested by the State Police. At the barracks he admitted complicity in the shooting and showed the officers where the revolver was hidden. On April 5, 1936, he made a complete confession in writing. His fingerprints were found on glasses and beer bottles used by him shortly before the shooting at the Air Port Inn. At the time of the homicide his age was 18 years, four months and six days.
In his confession he stated that late in the evening of December 31, 1935, he met at a dance in Corry a man named John Polens who asked him if he knew any "racket people," and specifically, "any killers" in Cleveland. A little later Polens told him whom he wanted killed and why. Polens said he wanted the man killed because he, Polens, had lost possession of a farm through this man, and also because he had "defamed him and put the needles to him," as a result of which Polens, so he claimed, was unable to get a job.1 A few days later Polens came to see appellant and the latter told him that he had already gotten in touch with the men in Cleveland and that "they would come and do it" but that they wanted part payment first. Polens then gave appellant $50, but, before doing so, he took him to the Air Port Inn and pointed out Seminuk. On March 26, 1936, Polens drove the defendant to Corry to take an automobile operator's test for a license. Polens then suggested to Senauskas that they get a car for the latter "to do the job." They went to Buffalo and rented an automobile. On their return they stopped near Youngsville and Polens produced a revolver and they each "shot into the woods just to see how the gun worked." They then went to Youngsville where Polens bought a half pint of whiskey *544 and gave it to Senauskas. He also gave appellant seventeen dollars "to take the car back with and pay for the use of the car" after the designated victim at the Air Port Inn had been killed. Senauskas said that Polens told him "to give him about an hour's time" to get far enough away so that he could have an alibi. Senauskas states that he finished his half pint. of whiskey and then went to the Air Port Inn and asked for "John" which was the name by which Polens had designated Seminuk. He was told that "John" was not there. He then left and went to Corry where he drank whiskey and beer. Defendant later went to the Garland Inn and reported to Polens that he had been to the Air Port Inn and that the fellow was not there. Polens told him to "hang around" as the man would be there. He said he drove past the Air Port Inn and then turned around. He stated that the next thing he remembered was when he awoke about 9 a. m., on March 27, 1936. He got into the automobile and went to Garland and made inquiries at Garland as to where Polens lived. The man to whom he made inquiries asked if he, the defendant, was from Warren, remarking that he thought perhaps he had come down to tell Polens "about the shooting they had at the Air Port Inn." This man said that someone had shot a man by the name of Metro. Then defendant stated in his confession: "I got scared and figured I shot the wrong man as the man I was to shoot I knew him as John." He later met Polens, who gave him $30, and assured him that "Metro and John were the same." Polens later handed Senauskas $120 and told him to leave this part of the country.
Senauskas was called for trial on June 2, 1936. He entered a plea of "not guilty." He was represented by Attorney Earle V. MacDonald, now deceased, who had been appointed counsel by the court. On June 2 five jurors had been selected and on the following morning the defendant in open court asked leave to withdraw his plea of "not guilty" and enter a plea of "guilty." This *545 was granted and the plea entered. The case was continued until June 10, 1936, for the purpose of taking testimony to determine the degree and the sentence.
A hearing was held on June 10th. Defendant's confession and other evidence were received. The presence of Senauskas at the place of the homicide on March 26, 1936, was established by a witness who had talked with him at that place and had left at about 12 o'clock p. m. When the witness reached a point about 150 feet from the Inn, he saw the deceased and Senauskas come out of the door and walk around back of the car. He said the defendant got into the car and that he heard the deceased say, "She is full now," and then he saw him take the gasoline hose, walk behind the car, and hang it up on the pump. The deceased then walked to the left-hand side of the car, and immediately the witness heard "three or four shots in rapid succession and a scream at the same time." Immediately "the car started out very fast, traveling west without any lights." The witness ran back to the Inn and saw Seminuk lying alongside the driveway. He said: "He looked as though he was dead." Another witness also saw the defendant at the Air Port Inn.
The evidence conclusively proved the guilt of Senauskas of murder in the first degree, and on June 23, 1936, in the presence of defendant and his counsel, the court so fixed the degree of murder and imposed the death penalty.
On June 27, 1936, Attorney MacDonald presented to the court a paper entitled, "Motion for New Trial and Arrest of Judgment." Permission was asked to withdraw the plea of guilty. No reason of any kind was assigned to support this request. On June 26, 1936, the day before this motion was presented to Judge ARIRD, Attorney MacDonald presented a petition in the Supreme Court asking leave to withdraw the plea of guilty and for the appointment of another judge to hear the motion for a "new trial." This petition was supported *546 by affidavits to the effect that the guilty plea had been "coerced" in that it was made in response to a promise by Judge ARIRD that the death penalty would not be imposed. The filing of this petition and the allegations it contained were not made known to Judge ARIRD, but he learned of it later from the public press.
On September 28, 1936, this Court directed JAMES I. BROWNSON, President Judge of the 27th Judicial District, to proceed to Warren County and dispose of the motion filed in the lower court for a new trial, arrest of judgment and permission to withdraw the plea of guilty, and a little later Judge BROWNSON was directed to report to this Court with respect to the allegations in the petition filed here to the effect that the defendant had changed his plea to guilty upon assurances from Judge ARIRD that the death penalty would not be imposed. On August 28, 1936, Attorney MacDonald died, and, on October 6 next, Judge BROWNSON appointed Attorney Harold S. Hampson counsel for Senauskas.
On October 27, 1936, Judge BROWNSON began a hearing which lasted five days. He then reported to the Supreme Court that the allegations in the petition had not been established and that, on the contrary, the evidence clearly "negatived the allegations" of any promises made. The Supreme Court on April 12, 1937, dismissed the petition. On May 7, 1937, an appeal to this court was taken.
There are nine assignments of error. The first assignment is based upon the court's refusal of defendant's motion for a new trial. This assignment is overruled.
The second assignment is as follows: "The court below erred in talking privately with the State Troopers, Deputy Sheriff, Sheriff, and Warden, and in using the information so obtained in determining the degree of guilt of the accused, without affording the accused the right to meet these parties and to be present when they talked concerning him and to cross-examine them regarding their statements." This assignment is based on *547 the following excerpt from the opinion of the court finding the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree: "Now I have talked with the State Troopers, and also the Deputy Sheriff, the ones that arrested Senauskas, and there was no question in their minds but that Senauskas was acting perfectly natural. I have also talked with the Sheriff and the Warden. Nothing wrong with Senauskas except he was a little nervous." It is important to note that the conversations the judge had with these men related to the mental condition of Senauskas, a matter not then nor theretofore raised by appellant or his counsel. The judge's talk with these officers was on a fact not in issue. Therefore, the judgment of guilty of murder in the first degree could not have been based in any measure on any such conversations. The second assignment of error is therefore without merit and is overruled.
The third assignment of error is that "the court below erred in its opinion and finding that the plea of guilty entered by the defendant included the wilful, deliberate and premeditated killing of Metro Seminuk."
While it is not true that a plea of guilty of murder means a plea of guilty to a wilful, deliberate and premeditated murder, for such a plea leaves open for judicial determination the degree of guilt, all murder being presumed to be of the second degree, it is obvious in reading the opinion of Judge ARIRD in this case that he was familiar with this rule of determination and acted upon it. At the outset he cites the Act of May 14, 1925, P. L. 759, providing, inter alia, as follows: ". . . In cases of pleas of guilty, the court, where it determines the crime to be murder of the first degree, shall, at its discretion, impose sentence of death or imprisonment for life." The court then proceeded to review the facts of this case as revealed by defendant's confession and by witnesses. In the course of his opinion, the Judge said: "Senauskas used a deadly weapon against a vital part of the body, i. e., a shot passed through the heart of Seminuk. *548 Under such circumstances we have a right to presume that malice and intention existed. Senauskas not only had ample time while sitting in this Inn to deliberate and premeditate, but under his own statements the arrangements between him and Polens had been going on for several days, if not weeks." The conclusion of the court states that "after the examination of witnesses and hearing had in due form of law . . . it is adjudged and determined that the crime and the degree of the crime whereof the said Joe Senauskas . . . is convicted by his own plea of guilty and his confession and testimony taken, is murder in the first degree." The third assignment of error is overruled.
The fourth assignment is that "the court below erred in finding the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree." It is overruled.
The fifth assignment of error is based on the sentence. It is overruled.
The sixth assignment is based on the failure of the judge "to ask the defendant, prior to the imposition of sentence, if he had anything to say why sentence of death should not be pronounced against him." The record shows that after the court announced its decision fixing the degree of murder at first, it asked the defendant, "Have you anything to say why sentence should not be pronounced against you?" Appellant contends that this is error because the question did not contain the words "of death" after the word "sentence."
Blackstone in Vol. 4, page 376, in referring to this traditional inquiry, states that the prisoner should be asked "if he has anything to say why judgment should not be awarded against him." In Rizzolo v. Com.,
The rule of the common law as to the right of the prisoner to be asked whether he had anything to say why judgment should not be awarded against him or, to put it another way, why sentence of death should not be pronounced against him, does not now possess the inflexibility it did in an earlier day. At common law the rule served a purpose that could not be served in any other way. It gave a prisoner in a capital case "an opportunity to allege any ground of arrest, or to plead a pardon, if he had obtained one, or to urge any other legal objection to further proceedings against him": Schwab v. Berggren,
Modern criminal procedure has thus taken away this rule's raison d'etre, and it is an honored maxim of the law that "cessante ratione legis cessat, et ipsa lex." However, the practice of propounding to a prisoner in *550 a capital case the above stated question has been long followed and since, as Chief Justice GIBSON once said, "forms are deeply seated in the foundations of the law," careful judges will continue to make in such cases this ancient inquiry in unequivocal language. Failure to do so will constitute reversible error only when it is shown that the prisoner has been thereby prejudiced.
In Hamilton v. Com.,
In Gannon v. People,
The seventh assignment is based on the refusal of the court to permit the defendant to withdraw his plea of guilty. InCom. v. Senauskas,
The burden of proving that Judge ARIRD made any commitment before the plea of guilty was entered, as to the sentence to be imposed, was not sustained. The presumption is that it was not made. Regardless of the presumption in favor of the regularity and propriety of official conduct, the allegation is prima facie incredible, for there was no motive for such a commitment; the evidence then available showed that the Commonwealth was justified in asking for a conviction of the defendant of the highest degree of murder and for the imposition of the extreme penalty. *553
The only admissible evidence offered to support the burden of proof is the testimony of A. L. Cohen, Polen's attorney, who testified that he said [addressing Judge ARIRD at the time of trial]: "I have just talked to Mr. MacDonald and he has told me he is going to enter a plea. Will you give me the same consideration as you do Mr. MacDonald?" The judge replied, according to Mr. Cohen: "I will give you every consideration; of course, I will give you the consideration I will give Mr. MacDonald or anybody else that comes into this court." Attorney Cohen admitted on cross-examination that Judge ARIRD made him no promises.
Attorney MacDonald, now deceased, made an ex-parte affidavit on June 25, 1936, that on June 3rd, Judge ARIRD sent for him before court opened and promised him on his own volition that "if a plea of guilty was entered [for Senauskas], the penalty would not be the electric chair," and that the plea of guilty that day entered in open court "was upon the advice of deponent as counsel upon the representation of the Court that the sentence would not be, in case of first degree murder being found, the electric chair," and that "he communicated the facts relating to the conversation to A. L. Cohen, Esq., who represented John G. Polens."
Judge ARIRD'S version of what happened is that at 9:30 a. m., on the second day of trial, Attorney MacDonald came into his chambers and talked with him in the presence of the court stenographer. The attorney stated that he was nervous and wanted the judge to tell him how to proceed with the case. This the judge refused to do. The attorney then said that his client was "clearly guilty" and that he intended to advise him to plead guilty. To this Judge ARIRD replied that Mr. MacDonald should use his own judgment. "There was no other discussion of any kind." Nothing was said as to the sentence to be imposed. Court was then opened and defendant and his counsel came to the bar. Leave was asked to withdraw the plea of not guilty and to enter a *554 plea of guilty. The court asked the appellant if he desired to withdraw his plea and enter a plea of guilty "and the defendant himself replied in the affirmative."
The record completely supports Judge BROWNSON'S conclusion that the plea of guilty entered in this case was not induced by any promise made by him that the death penalty would not be imposed. This assignment of error is overruled.
The eighth assignment is based upon the alleged error of Judge BROWNSON in receiving testimony that the defendant, previous to trial, had expressed an intention to plead guilty. This assignment is overruled.
The ninth assignment of error is based on the alleged error of the court below in approving the appointment of L. B. Schofield, Esq., as Assistant District Attorney. This assignment requires no discussion and is overruled.
The judgment of the court below is affirmed and the record is remitted so that sentence may be carried out.