Commonwealth v. Barnak

54 A.2d 865, 357 Pa. 391, 1947 Pa. LEXIS 440
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 14, 1947
DocketAppeal, 231
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 54 A.2d 865 (Commonwealth v. Barnak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Barnak, 54 A.2d 865, 357 Pa. 391, 1947 Pa. LEXIS 440 (Pa. 1947).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Maxey,

On December 20, 1945, about 10:45 p.m., Lieutenant Benjamin Clifford Bowman, Jr., ivlio had recently served in the United States Army and was then a student at Lehigh University, was introduced by Gladys Fisher, at the Colonnade Club in Bethlehem, to Mrs. Madeline Barnak. Sixty-five or seventy minutes later he was dying in front of the home of Mrs. Barnak’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schiffner, 211 South Car-lisle Street, Allentown, with a thirty-two caliber bullet in his head.

Mrs. Barnak had not been living with her husband since October 18, 1945, and Lt. Bowman, after meeting her and dancing with her until 11:15 p.m., offered to escort her to her parents’ residence. She and he, accompanied by Miss Fisher, left the club at 11:20 p.m., in a car driven five miles by Anthony Brichta, directly to 211 South Carlisle Street.

Lt. Bowman and Mrs. Barnak got out of the car. As the night was cold, Miss Fisher suggested that they close the door so that the driver could-go up half a block and turn the ear around and pick up Lt. Bowman and return him to Lehigh University. As the car made the “U” turn, Miss Fisher and the driver heard two shots and saw a man running two houses north from the home of Mr. and Mrs. Schiffner, toward Hanover Avenue. The driver, with Miss Fisher, tried to follow the man who was running, but the latter quickly disappeared from view. The man they saw was described by them as short in stature, with broad shoulders, broad hips, and a narrow waistline. “He wore a broad brim hat and a dark overcoat; he ran very awkwardly.” This description in its entirety fits John Barnak. Because of an *394 injury to his leg when he was seven years of age, his left leg was three quarters of an inch shorter than his right leg.

Both Mrs. Barnak and Lt. Bowman had been fatally shot. The former died in a few minutes, and the latter died almost instantly. The time of his death was officially recorded as being at 11:55 p.m., December 20, 1945.

Mrs. Barnak’s father, Charles Schiffner, was that night at his home at 211 Carlisle Street, Allentown, with his wife and two daughters. He heard the machine stop and heard two shots fired. He ran out and saw a man with a brown overcoat and brown hat running down the street. The man turned at the corner and looked back. At the corner there was an electric arc light, eighteen and a half feet above the street. Schiffner said: “I recognized him as John Barnak. I recognized him the minute he turned his face that I could see him.” At that time the moon was shining. 1 There was snow on the ground.

Mrs. Barnak was carried into her father’s house. She was still breathing. The police were summoned. An hour later Schiffner saw Barnak at police headquarters and positively identified him as the man who ran away from the scene of the homicide. He said he first saw Barnak when he was three doors away. At the corner when Barnak turned his head around “the machine lights” from Brichta’s car “shone right in his face.” Barnak then had an overcoat on.

Raymond L. Higgins testified that he resided at 21.1% Carlisle Street, Allentown, and that he was a “next-door neighbor” to Schiffner and was at home at 10:80 to 10:45 p.m. on December 20, 1945, and that he saw a man going away from Higgins’ cellar window. *395 The man had on an overcoat and slouch hat, and he said the man was five feet five or six inches tall. When Barn ak’s hat, Commonwealth’s Exhibit F, was shown him, he said it resembled the hat the man had on the night of the homicide; that the overcoat he was shown, Exhibit G, also looked like the coat he saw on the man that night.

Marguerite M. Dennis testified that on December 20, 1945, she was at 116 South Carlisle Street, where her mother-in-law resided. That is the corner of East Hickory and Carlisle Streets. She said that she heard two shots fired, that she stepped outside at the corner, and that she saw a man running down the street toward her, that he was about a quarter of a block away, that he continued running toward her, and that he was about ten or twelve feet away from her when she ran back inside. She said that she got a look at his face; that he had an overcoat and slouch hat on.

Gladys Fisher testified that after hearing shots she saw a man running about “two houses away from the home of Mr. and Mrs. Schiffner,” and that she, in Brichta’s car, followed this man about a block. “He had gone down an alley.” She said the man was “short of stature, had a broad brim hat, dark in color, broad shoulders, broad hips, and a narrow waistline, and ran very awkwardly.” When shown Commonwealth’s Exhibit G, John Barnak’s overcoat, she said: “That looks exactly like what I’ve seen the night of the murder, December 20th.” When asked if she could now identify the man she had seen running from the scene of the crime, she answered: “Yes.” Question: “At the time you saw him, was he wearing a slouch hat and an overcoat?” Answer: “Yes.” She said: “At police headquarters I was told to identify a man, if I had ever seen him before, wearing a topcoat, broad-rimmed hat. I could not identify him right clearly because he was right in front of me, but the minute they took him away from me I could just picture that was the same image I seen running *396 December 20th, a few houses from Mr. and Mrs. Schiffner’s home.”

The Commonwealth also offered in evidence two empty cartridge shells, one found on the porch at 211 South Carlisle Street shortly after the homicide, the other found at 103 South Bradford Street, a block and a half away from the scene, after the shells had been identified by a ballistic expert as having been discharged by the same firearm, and after it was shown that a person fleeing from 211 South Carlisle Street would travel past 103 South Bradford Street in gaining access to the Hamilton Street bridge, and after there was testimony that the defendant was seen running up an alley toward South Bradford Street. To go from 211 South Carlisle Street to the home where Barnak was found one would cross the Hamilton Street bridge.

R. A. Wolf testified that on November 26, 1945, he saw a man, wearing a large coat and a large hat, walking with a limp, prowling around in the neighborhood of 217 South Carlisle Street.

William F. Granitz testified that he had known Barnak for a long time; that he saw him on November 9, 1945; that he asked Barnak if he, Barnak, knew where he, Granitz, could, get a girl friend, in a “kidding” way. Barnak said: “Yes.” Barnak.then gave him a slip of paper and wrote down the name of Madge, 211 South Carlisle Street, evidently referring to Barnak’s wife. Granitz said he came back to Barnak in about three, quarters of an hour and Barnak asked him, Granitz, “if he was over.” Granitz, in a “kidding” way replied: “Yes.” He said that Barnak told him, “It’s lucky you didn’t go over. That’s my wife. I’d beat you up, and beat anybody else up that goes with her.” When Barnak was asked on cross-examination whether he had said that he’d punch anybody on the nose that he saw with his wife, he said: “Gne nian.” When asked who that was he stated: “I don’t remember his name, but he was on this witness stand.”

*397 Mrs.

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54 A.2d 865, 357 Pa. 391, 1947 Pa. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-barnak-pa-1947.