279 Pa. 564 | Pa. | 1924
Opinion by
The judge in the court below continued the hearing of a homicide case then on trial from the courthouse to a house or building in the county seat to take the testimony of a material witness too ill to appear in court to testify, and whose removal from the house would in all probability have resulted in death. It was not known, when the case was called for trial, that the witness was
Court was opened in the usual manner. The witness was sworn, examined and cross-examined on all phases of her testimony. Indeed, the only evidence on which defendant could rely for mitigation of the offense was secured from this witness; it indicated his state of mind when the gun was fired. Whether this condition was due to excitement, nervousness, or the witness’s version of what she saw, was immaterial; it had a tendency to benefit defendant. The proceedings were then continued in due form to the room in the courthouse where begun, resulting in defendant’s conviction of murder in the first degree, upon which sentence was pronounced, and from which he appeals, assigning as error the removal of the court as above indicated. Our examination of the record shows every ingredient of the crime of which he stands convicted, and the evidence fully supports the verdict.
Defendant with others formed a plan to hold up the paymaster of the Fred A. Havens Contracting Company, and, on April 11, 1923, they purchased a shotgun at the store of Jacob Lapinsohn, in Philadelphia. Thursday night, preceding the murder, all the parties remained at the residence of one of their number, leaving early Fri
Defendant now contends he was deprived of a constitutional right to a fair and public trial in being forced to go to the home of the witness and there have the testimony taken against him from a witness too ill to attend court. Not that the conduct of the officers was unfair, but that all the circumstances attending the witness and her testimony, the time, the place, the person deposing, the heightened solemnity of the occasion, forced undue attention to this- witness, and the jury’s mind was thus over-influenced. This, defendant urges, would not have occurred had the woman been brought into the regular place of holding court, there to testify in the presence of the court and the general public, the latter not being able in any number to attend the hearing in her room, for lack of space.
In Summers v. Kramer, 271 Pa. 189, 196, we repeated the definition “a court is a place where justice is judicially administered.” And in Carter’s Est., 254 Pa. 518, in striking down the proceeding, we said that a court must be understood to mean a tribunal officially assembled under authority of law, at the appropriate time and place for the administration of justice. In that case the whole proceeding was begun and completed in the office of the president judge. The reasoning in Carter’s Est, supra, was the same as in Jones v. O’Connor, 252 Pa. 311, where the judge ordered the further hearing of a contested election ease at his chambers in a city some distance from the county seat.
It is no doubt correct, and the rule should be rigidly observed, that all legal business to be heard by a judge and jury or a judge without a jury, over which our various courts as constituted have jurisdiction, should be conducted in the courthouse at the county seat. It is only on rare occasions, such as the instant case, or in minor matters by agreement of counsel, that court can be conducted in places other than the courthouse, except of course as directed by statute.
As a general rule, the order of a trial judge, changing the place of a trial to another place in the county seat to take the testimony of a material witness unable, through disease, or other illness, to attend the regular place for trial, will not be reversed unless it appears there has been an abuse of discretion.
We are not impressed with the argument that the attending circumstances unduly impressed those connected with the trial, with the probability of truthfulness of this witness’s statements. All criminal trials should proceed on the basis of seriousness and solemnity, without qualification or degree. And the jury should not consider evidence taken in a room where one is sick of any higher evidential value than that taken in the court room. Indeed, its tendency might be the opposite. Defendant’s
The authorities in other states not entirely in harmony with this view are largely controlled by their statutes, as, for instance, Carter v. State, 100 Miss. 342, 56 So. 454, Ann. Cas. 1914 A., 369; Mell v. State, 133 Ark. 197, 202 S. W. 33; Dunn v. State, 2 Ark. 229, 35 Am. Dec. 54. Even in some of these jurisdictions it has been held not necessary that every step be taken in the court room: Scott v. State, 133 Ala. 112, 32 So. 623; State v. Richards, 126 Iowa 497, 102 N. W. 439; Litchfield Bank v. Church, 29 Conn. 137; Bates v. Sabin, 64 Vt. 511, 24 Atl. 1013. There are many cases which support the view we have announced: Hampton v. U. S., Morris (Iowa) 489; State v. Tracy, 34 N. D. 498, 158 N. W. 1069; Underwood v. Commonwealth, 119 Ky. 384, 84 S. W. 311; Davis v. Commonwealth, 121 S. W. (Ky.) 429; Humphrey v. Humphrey, 3 Neb. Unof. 467, 91 N. W. 856; Selleck v. Janesville, 100 Wis. 157, 75 N. W. 975, 41 L. R. A. 563, 69 Am. St. Rep. 906.
We are of opinion the court below did not abuse its discretion in ordering the trial to take place where it did.
Judgment affirmed, and it is directed that the record be remitted for the purpose of execution.