273 Pa. 213 | Pa. | 1922
Opinion by
Defendant appeals from a judgment of sentence to death, resulting from a verdict against him of guilty of murder of the first degree for the felonious killing of Felix Nowak.
The circumstances of the crime were most cruel and atrocious. It is charged the accused, having shot the deceased, inflicting fatal wounds, to conceal his crime, set fire to the house in which his victim was living, and Nowak, his wife and three children were consumed in the fire.
Valeroso and Nowak, with their respective families, occupied the same house, the latter being the owner. He had contracted to sell the property to> defendant, reserving certain rooms for his, Nowak’s, occupancy. The consideration for the sale was to be paid in installments by Valeroso. At the time of the commission of the crime, he was in arrears in his payments, and a letter had been written to him and his wife by Nowak’s attorney, threatening to evict them from the property. On the night of the tragedy, both families were in the house. All of the Valeroso family, consisting of the defendant, his wife and four children, escaped from it; none of the Nowak family was saved. It is not necessary, in disposing of the case in the way we shall, to further detail the circumstances which led to the defendant’s conviction.
On the trial, to show motive, and as one of the most important pieces of evidence in the case, the Common
Defendant challenges the Commonwealth’s position with reference to this letter in three respects: First, in calling for its production by him in open court before the jury; second, its contention, sustained by the trial court, that the receipt of the letter by him, could be inferred, from the fact that it was addressed to him and his wife, and deposited, postage paid, in a post office; and, third, the original letter not having been produced on call, the offering, under the court’s ruling, of secondary evidence of its contents.
In a criminal proceeding, is it proper to call on the defendant, in open court, and before the jury which is trying him, to produce a letter alleged to have been written and mailed to him, in order that it may be given in evidence, to aid in establishing his guilt, or if not produced, that secondary proof of its contents may be shown, for a like purpose? The Constitution of Pennsylvania, article I, section 9, provides, “In all criminal prosecutions the accused......cannot be compelled to give evidence against himself.” This and language of similar import in the Constitution of the United States crystallized a principle in our constitutions, state and federal, which had been established in English law, necessary to the maintenance of liberty.
If the prisoner on trial has no other shield to protect him, he always has that of his own silence in the court room — it is inviolable by prosecuting attorney, court or jury. Would this be true, if he could be subjected to call in open court for testimony deemed by the prosecution necessary to establish guilt, when, in many instances, not to speak, in answer to the call, would be more prejudicial than to give full utterance, and where to answer at all, without complete explanation, might amount well nigh to confession of guilt? To jealously guard the rights of one accused of crime, has been one of the fundamentals of the administration of justice, in all courts where English law and customs regulate the affairs of
The right to compel the accused to exhibit himself for identification, which is closely related to the question we are considering, has been the subject of much discussion. In People v. Gardner, 28 L. R. A. 699, the New York Court of Appeals decided that compelling the defendant in a criminal case to stand up, for the purpose of identification, does not violate the constitutional provision against compelling one to be a witness against himself, the court in the course of its opinion saying, “The history of the constitutional provision referred to clearly demonstrates that it was not intended to reach a case like this......The main purpose of the provision was to prohibit the compulsory oral examination of the prisoners
In our own case of Johnson v. Commonwealth, 115 Pa. 369, one of the most celebrated criminal trials of its day, the district attorney called upon the prisoner on trial, to stand up and repeat certain words, in the presence of the widow of the man he was charged with having murdered, for the purpose of aiding her in identification. Of this incident in the trial, we said it “may be dismissed with the remark that no objection was made or exception taken thereto in the court below. So far as the record shows, the request was promptly acceded to without any objection either by the prisoner himself or his counsel. Having thus waived the right of objection and taken the chances of a favorable result, it would be con
When the question we are dealing with came squarely before the New York Court of Appeals, it said: “The practice, however, of calling upon defendants in criminal cases to produce incriminating papers alleged to be in their possession is so frequently adopted by zealous prosecutors and is so objectionable that we take this occasion to express our disapproval thereof......To allow a demand for the production of a document to be made upon an accused person in the presence of the jury is to require him to produce it or deny his possession thereof, or by reason of his silence to warrant injurious inferences against him. For this reason the practice is properly forbidden.......We approve the rule laid down in
The propriety of calling on the defendant in a criminal case to produce a document, was given consideration by the Superior Court in Commonwealth v. Hubbard, 65 Pa. Superior Ct. 213 (1916), where the immediate question was, whether secondary proof of the contents of a paper, traced to defendant’s possession, could be given without demand having been made on him to produce it. Mr. Justice Kephart, then of the Superior Court and speaking for it, in demonstrating the proposition that it was not necessary to call on the defendant to produce a document traced to him, used this significant language, “The court is without power to compel obedience to such notice and the notice would be futile. Courts should not require vain things to be done. If the notice were required, the prosecuting officer, in the presence of the jury, would have the right to demand the production of the original writing. The accused must then either produce the document, explain its nonproduction or remain silent. In either circumstance, the result is likely to be highly prejudicial to his case before the jury. The accused, under the Constitution of Pennsylvania, need not be required to testify against himself. He should not be placed in a position before the jury where his action would be tantamount to giving, under compulsion, incriminating evidence against himself.”
The call to produce the letter made by the Commonwealth on the defendant, in open court and before the jury, was violative of his constitutional privileges and the trial court erred in permitting it to be made.
It is not necessary to determine the broad question whether the mailing of a letter, postage prepaid, is prima facie evidence, in a criminal case, that it was received by the person to whom it was addressed, because the copy
The eleventh and twelfth assignments of error are sustained and the record is remitted to the court below to the end that a new trial may be had.