The Commonwealth appeals from the order of the district court granting relator’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
Relator was convicted in the state court in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, of first degree murder. Pursuant to the Pennsylvania practicе which prevailed at that time (Penal Code of June 24, 1939, P.L. 872, § 701, 18 Purdon’s Pa.Stat.Annot. § 4701, based on Act of May 14, 1925, P.L. 759, § 1) the jury fixed the penalty at life imprisonment and he was sentenced accordingly. In the state courts, where he exhausted his remedies
Relator had been indicted jointly with two other defendants for a felonious killing during the perpetration of an armed robbery. Each of the defendants was separately tried. At relator’s trial the Commonwealth introduced a statement he had given to the police in which he admitted that he drove the other two defendants to and from thе scene of the crime, but denied knowledge of their purpose to rob. The Commonwealth’s case also showed that the car was driven rapidly and without lights from the scene of the robbery; that after the event relator appeared at а diner and inquired about the commotion, saying, contrary to what appeared in his statement, that he had been asleep; that' he then asked two waitresses if they had seen the car, and when one replied that she had and the other that she had nоt, he responded to the latter, “You are a smart girl, Pat, to keep your mouth shut.”
The Commonwealth then offered in evidence the defendant’s prior criminal record, and when the court inquired whether it intended to ask for the death penalty the district attоrney unequivocal
After the evidence on both sides had been closed the district attorney in the course of his summation to the jury deсlared that the Commonwealth was not seeking the death penalty but that this was not binding upon the jury. At the request of defendant’s counsel this statement of the district attorney to the jury was then formally recorded in the transcript.
The criminal record was admitted under the then prevailing practice in Pennsylvania, approved in Commonweath v. Parker,
The admission of so much of relator’s record as consisted of charges of
In United States ex rel. Scoleri v. Banmiller,
The Commonwealth urges that Scoleri is inapplicable because the prior convictions admitted in evidence there were more serious in nature and greater in number. Rather, this сase is said to be like United States ex rel. Rucker v. Myers,
Scoleri and Rucker are not to be read, however, as holding that the Parker rule does not offend due process unless a multitude of criminal convictions is introduced against a defendant. Due process is denied by the introduction of a defendant’s criminal record if it impairs his right to а fair determination by the jury of the question of his guilt. In the absence of circumstances of reprehensible conduct by the prosecution
A consideration of these factors shows that the present case is the very opposite of Rucker. There the relator did not deny having committed the murder, but presented as his only defense his voluntary intoxication, which admittedly had no legal relevance; the only real question was whether the jury should fix the penalty at death or life imprisonment. We, therefore, found that the admission of the criminal record, which was properly before the jury in the determination of penalty, did the relator no harm. Here the issue of guilt was substantial. In his statement to the police, which was received in evidence, relator had denied any criminal purpose on his part and any knowledge of such a purpоse by those who were with him. There was no evidence that he was present at the scene of the crime. The record of thirteen arrests and four pleas of guilty and two convictions, all on offenses relating to theft of property, similar to the felony giving rise to the murder, must have gravely prejudiced the defendant before the jury.
There is added reason for condemning the prejudicial evidence here. The Parker rule was deemed unavoidable in order to afford the jury adequate means of detеrmining the penalty. Here, however, the alternative of the death penalty was removed when the district attorney stated that he would not press for the death penalty and the court instructed the jury that there could be only one of two verdicts: eithеr murder in the first degree with life imprisonment or not guilty, thus submitting to the jury only a question as to which the evidence was admittedly impermissible. It is true that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court on relator’s appeal from his conviction found the district attorney’s withdrawal of his demand for the death penalty irrelevant. The ground for this conclusion was that the statute conferred on the jury alone the right and power to determine whether the penalty should be death or life imprisonment, and it therefore could have disregarded any recommendation made by the district attorney or even the court. Commonwealth v. Lowry,
The order of the court below will be affirmed.
Notes
. United States ex rel. Lowry v. Myers,
. Commonwealth ex rel. Lowry v. Myers,
. “The Commonwealth does not ask for the death penalty in this ease. However, ladies and gentlemen, you are the ones that decide that. What we ask for does not bind you. If you find him guilty of murder in the first degree, you have the right to give him either death or life. We tell you Tvhat our recommendation is.”
. It is unnecessary, in view of the conclusion we have reached, to consider the effect under this test of the district attorney’s about face after his assurance to the court that he was pressing for the death penalty in order to obtain the admission of the criminal record.
. See also Spencer v. Texas,
