Commonwealth v. Sullivan, Appellant.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
January 19, 1973
273 Pa. 273 | 299 A.2d 608
David M. Kozloff, for appellant.
Grant E. Wesner, Deputy District Attorney, with him Robert L. VanHoove, District Attorney, for Commonwealth, appellee.
OPINION BY MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS, January 19, 1973:
Appellant, John C. Sullivan, was tried by a jury in Berks County and convicted of murder in the second degree. After denial of motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment appellant filed this appeal. Appellant alleges eight trial errors as a basis for relief. On this record we find four issues to be totally without merit and shall proceed to discuss the remaining four asserted errors.1
Moreover, appellant cannot now successfully challenge the claimed error in the charge because the record discloses that as a matter of trial strategy appellant elected to seek an acquittal on the ground of self-defense and decided to forego consideration by the jury of a verdict of guilty of voluntary manslaughter. See Commonwealth v. McGrogan, 449 Pa. 584, 297 A. 2d 456 (1972). It is well settled that whether to object to the trial court‘s charge, to request clarification of the charge, or to request additional points for charge is one of the tactical decisions “within the exclusive province of counsel.” McGrogan, supra at 586, 297 A. 2d at 457; see United States ex rel. Green v. Rundle, 452 F. 2d 232 (3d Cir. 1971); United States v. McKenzie, 409 F. 2d 983 (2d Cir. 1969). In United States ex rel. Green v. Rundle, supra at 237, the Third Circuit held that counsel‘s failure to object or to request a particular instruction was a “deliberate by-pass” necessarily imputed to the appellant. Here defense counsel‘s failure to object to an erroneous instruction on voluntary manslaughter presents the identical situation.
Appellant may be eligible for relief if it is determined that counsel‘s conduct of the trial lacked the quality of representation set forth in Commonwealth ex rel. Washington v. Maroney, 427 Pa. 599, 235 A. 2d 349 (1967). We said in Washington, supra at 604-05,
Applying the “trial strategy-reasonable basis” tests of Washington and McGrogan here we find the record discloses that counsel‘s trial strategy was to seek an acquittal on the basis of self-defense. All of defendant‘s evidence plus the testimony he elicited on cross-examination was consistent with the asserted claim for acquittal on self-defense. Moreover, in requesting points for charge, defense counsel submitted 12 points, all relating to self-defense. It is evident from this record that counsel‘s defense strategy was fashioned and patterned for acquittal based on self-defense. This was, indeed, the defense blueprint for trial and submission of its position to the jury.5 Nowhere does the record reveal any attempt or plan to have the jury return an alternative verdict of voluntary manslaughter. Instead the defense trial record is a studied effort to avoid any deviation or compromise from its sole and primary strategic objective of obtaining an acquittal. The de-
Viewing this defense strategy as it developed during the trial and prior to the verdict, it is clear that here, just as in McGrogan, “counsel sought to limit the jury‘s options to either finding first or second degree murder or outright acquittal.” McGrogan, supra at 590, 297 A. 2d at 459. In McGrogan, we held that this identical trial strategy of limiting the jury‘s options was not an unreasonable one.6 Similarly, here the record discloses a reasonable basis for counsel‘s trial decision, particularly in light of his objective of acquittal. Moreover, counsel‘s challenge to the manslaughter charge was first made in post-trial motions only after the verdict of second degree murder was returned and the possibility of an outright acquittal was foreclosed. We recently stressed in McGrogan, supra at 591, 297 A. 2d at 460, that “. . . as the Supreme Court appropriately noted in Henry, when for some reason counsel‘s deliberate trial strategy ‘backfires,’ the failure of the strategy cannot form the basis for relief upon review. Id. at 451, 85 S. Ct. at 569; . . .”
Appellant‘s second contention is that the trial court erred in permitting the Commonwealth to cross-examine him over his objection concerning certain events surrounding the stabbing. First, appellant contends
Secondly, appellant argues that he did not place his character in issue. Therefore evidence elicited by the Commonwealth showing that appellant did not pay any rent to the owner of the dwelling where he lived and where the stabbing occurred was an impermissible attack on his character, because it implied he was a “freeloader.” However, such cross-examination was not an attack on appellant‘s character or reputation. Appellant‘s theory of the case was self-defense. Thus, in order to show he had no duty to retreat when attacked by decedent, appellant sought to establish that he was in his own dwelling. The Commonwealth attempted to rebut this element of self-defense by proving that appellant paid no rent and thus was not in his own dwelling as he claimed at the time of the stabbing.
Appellant‘s third contention is that an inculpatory statement made prior to being advised of his Miranda rights should have been excluded from evidence. Appellant was confronted in his bedroom by three police officers and informed he was under arrest. Before any of the officers said anything further appellant stated, “I was going to give myself up in the morning anyhow.” This statement appellant claims, should not have been admitted at trial over his objection. However, Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S. Ct. 1602 (1966), does not preclude the admission of such a volunteered statement. “Volunteered statements of any kind (are not barred by the Fifth Amendment) and their admissibility is not affected by our holding today.” Mi-
Appellant finally contends that certain prejudicial photographs were admitted into evidence. These black and white photographs, depicted the room where the stabbing occurred, showing large amounts of blood on the furniture. Appellant argues that admission of the photographs was an abuse of the trial court‘s discretion because the pictures were “gruesome,” “unsavory,” and “could easily have been inflammatory to the jury.” See Commonwealth v. Powell, 428 Pa. 275, 241 A. 2d 119 (1968).
In Powell, supra at 278-79, 241 A. 2d at 121, we said that “the proper test to be applied by a trial court in determining the admissibility of photographs in homicide cases is whether or not the photographs are of such essential evidentiary value that their need clearly outweighs the likelihood of inflaming the minds and passions of the jurors.” Applying this test here, we
Judgment of sentence is affirmed.
CONCURRING OPINION BY MR. JUSTICE O‘BRIEN :
While I concur with the view of the majority that appellant‘s trial strategy in this case constitutes a deliberate bypass of an objection to the erroneous instruction on voluntary manslaughter, I must once again express my views concerning the necessity for specific exception to charge. The majority states that relief was denied in Commonwealth v. Jennings, 442 Pa. 18, 274 A. 2d 767 (1971), because the appellant‘s failure to take a specific exception to the erroneous charge foreclosed our consideration of the issue on appeal, as mandated by
My dissenting opinion in Jennings was joined by Justice EAGEN, and a majority of this Court was, there-
Mr. Justice EAGEN and Mr. Justice POMEROY join in this concurring opinion.
Notes
“In voluntary manslaughter there may be a specific intention to inflict serious bodily harm or even to take life, for if there is adequate provocation and passion, the taking of life under such circumstances would be manslaughter and not murder. A non-malicious felonious killing with a specific intent either to kill or seriously injure is voluntary manslaughter.
“Since voluntary manslaughter is an offense embraced within the terms of the indictment in this case, you must know what is meant by that term. The crime of voluntary manslaughter is a lesser grade than that of murder. It consists in the unlawful killing of another without malice, express or implied. That means without a direct intent to kill, and without hardness of heart, or cruelty, or recklessness of consequence, or mind regardless of social duty. The act of killing must, of course, be voluntary; the very name of the crime implies that. Because voluntary manslaughter involves an intentional act, confusion sometimes exists in the jury‘s mind concerning the difference between that crime and the crime of first degree murder. If you bear in mind that manslaughter is never attended by legal malice, that is, by a direct intent to kill or by depravity of heart or cruelty or recklessness or consequences, you will not go astray.” (Emphasis added.)
