250 Pa. 552 | Pa. | 1915
Opinion bt
This appellant, a brother of Tony Vitale, the appellant in the preceding case, was indicted as a principal for the same murder. He, too, was tried as an accessory before the fact, and, having been convicted of murder of the first degree, his appeal is from the judgment pronounced upon him.
The first four assignments allege error in the refusal of the learned trial judge to sustain three challenges of jurors for cause. The trial of this appellant followed immediately after that of Tony Vitale. On the same, day that the jury returned a verdict against him Augustine was placed on trial. Three of the jurors who had found Tony guilty were called in the case against Augustine, this appellant, and, after each one had answered, under oath, that he had neither formed nor expressed an opinion either in favor of or against the prisoner that would prevent him from rendering a verdict according to the evidence, and that he stood perfectly impartial between the Commonwealth and the prisoner, he; was passed by the Commonwealth and challenged by the prisoner for cause, the cause assigned being that the jiirór, having sat in the case against Tony Vitale' and found him guilty of the murder of Collata, had formed
The challenge of a juror for cause is addressed to the trial judge, and nothing short of palpable error will justify a reversal of his ruling on such a challenge: Commonwealth v. Sushinskie, 242 Pa. 406. The conclusion is not to be avoided that such error was committed in the case now before us, and, if so, the judgment must be reversed: Staup v. Commonwealth, 74 Pa. 458.
In his opinion overruling the motion for a new trial, the learned trial judge commented on the fact that each of the three challenged jurors, before being passed by the Commonwealth, had answered under oath that he had formed no opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the prisoner, but on the trial of this appellant a material fact to be established by the Commonwealth was the guilt of Eocco Tassone as the principal. In the charge to the jury they were instructed that the first question for their consideration was whether Tassone was the principal in the crime and had fired the fatal shot, and that it was necessary for them to so find before they could convict the appellant as an accessory before the fact. The three challenged jurors had found and solemnly returned, in the case of the Commonwealth against Tony Vitale, that Tassone was the principal in the crime and had actually committed the murder. A very proper question put by counsel for the prisoner to one of the challenged jurors, and disallowed by the court, was, “Have you formed an opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the principal, Eocco Tassone?” The answer of the juror, if he had been permitted to answer, would undoubtedly have been that he had formed and expressed an opinion that Tassone was guilty as the principal, and, if he had so answered, it is inconceivable thát he could have been regarded as a competent juror to sit on the trial of the brother of the man whom he had just found guilty of identically the same offense as that charged in the indictment against the appellant. But
As the three jurors, unsuccessfully challenged for cause by the prisoner, did not serve, it is contended that he was not harmed, and this view is expressed by the court below denying the motion for a new trial. If the prisoner was deprived of any of his rights by the court’s refusal to sustain the challenges for cause, he was substantially injured. In compelling a defendant charged with a capital offense to use a peremptory challenge to save himself from a juror obviously unfit to sit in judgment upon him, and whose challenge for cause ought manifestly to be sustained, he is deprived of one of twenty rights given to him by the law of the land. This is well illustrated by the present case. The prisoner had exhausted all of his twenty challenges before the twelve jurors were selected, and, when one of them was passed by the Commonwealth, he was accepted by counsel for the prisoner, with the remark “we have no challenges.” On this appeal his learned counsel say that by those words they meant that their peremptory chai
The judgment is reversed on the first four assignments of error, and the record is ordered to be remanded to the court below, together with a copy of this opinion, setting forth the cause of reversal, for further proceeding in the said court, and a venire facias de novo is awarded.