Commonwealth v. Bibalo

100 A.2d 45, 375 Pa. 257, 1953 Pa. LEXIS 457
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 9, 1953
DocketAppeal, 223
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 100 A.2d 45 (Commonwealth v. Bibalo) 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. Bibalo, 100 A.2d 45, 375 Pa. 257, 1953 Pa. LEXIS 457 (Pa. 1953).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Arnold,

A jury found the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree and the death penalty was imposed. The only defense presented was legal insanity.

The verdict established the following facts: The defendant, 20 years of age, was making his home with his grandmother at TJniondale, Susquehanna County, and had been visiting his mother at Simpson, Lackawanna County, just previous to December 10, 1951. At about nine o’clock in the morning of that day he left her home and went to Forest City, Susquehanna County, where he arrived at about 10:00 o’clock A.M. *260 He then went to a beer garden and had at least four drinks and began “hitch-hiking” his way to Uniondale. The victim, Anthony Shema, of Forest City, picked np the defendant. While travelling the defendant asked Shema if he were going hunting and upon receiving an affirmative answer, told him he knew of a good place to hunt, and the victim asked him to go along. In his confession the defendant said that at this time “. . . I thought that would be a good time to shoot him, while hunting, and I could get his car.” They drove to the home of defendant’s grandmother where defendant alighted, went into the house and came out with a 22 caliber riñe. They walked into the woods until they came to a stone wall, where both of them sat down. They were watching for deer and at that time, as stated by defendant in his confession, “I was again thinking about having the car, so I aimed the gun at his head and pulled the trigger. He then fell off the wall and I walked over to him and I saw that he was still living, so I took the gun by the barrel and hit him over the neck, the back of the neck, and I hit him about five times until the gun broke. I guess he was dead then, so I took the parts of the gun and threw them over the wall. I then pulled his gun from under him and reached into his watch pocket and took the keys for his car and took five shells from his hunting coat.”

Shortly after the killing the state police were requested to investigate a report of a missing hunter known as Anthony Shema of Forest City. The officers made inquiries at Forest City and later sent out a teletype message describing the missing hunter and his automobile. They learned that a postal clerk had seen a person driving a car similar to Shema’s and that the driver had had difficulty with it. Upon receiving a description of the vehicle and the operator, *261 and after further inquiries, the police officers became suspicious of the defendant and went to his grandmother’s home. The defendant was not there, but later the officers made the arrest. Defendant then led them to the spot where the body of Anthony Shema was found and showed them where he had thrown the parts of the gun, which he identified. The victim’s car, with its license tags removed, was found in New York state near the Pennsylvania state line. The defendant stated that he had abandoned the car and removed the license plates to hide the identity of it. He made an oral confession at the time of his arrest and later signed a written statement before a justice of the peace. He then made a second trip to the scene of the crime with the officers and the coroner. The coroner’s examination of the body disclosed that underneath the victim’s collar a deep laceration appeared across the back of the neck. The defendant was asked about this and said that he had inflicted the cut with the victim’s own knife, and later stated that he “tried to cut the head off so the body could not be identified, so he could hide the head.”

We have reviewed both the law and the evidence to determine whether the ingredients necessary to constitute murder in the first degree were proved to exist: Act of 1870, P. L. 15, §2, 19 PS §1187. Beyond any doubt these elements were proved to exist.

On the question of whether or not the defendant knew the difference between right and wrong (which is the test of legal insanity), two qualified psychiatrists for the defendant, Dr. Claude R. Young and Dr. Francis M. Ginley, testified that in their opinion the defendant did not know the difference between right and wrong, nor did he know the consequences of his act at the time he committed it. Dr. Young testified that the defendant was a “low grade moron” (being *262 of a mental age of eight to nine years); and according to Dr. Ginley he was a high grade moron of 10 to 11 years. The rest of their testimony had to do with the history of the defendant as related by lay witnesses, which they took into consideration.

The Commonwealth called Dr. John Shovlin who was superintendent of the Farview State Hospital for the Criminal Insane. He expressed the opinion, — and he was well qualified, — that the defendant did know the difference between right and wrong, that although he was mentally defective, he was not so defective that he did not know what he was doing; and that he knew the nature and quality of his act and the consequences of it. He testified that defendant’s I. Q. was determined to be 75, and that the normal ranges being from 90 to 110, the probable average would be 87. 1 He further stated that it would be difficult to express an opinion that the defendant was a low grade moron or a high grade moron. In his opinion the defendant was somewhere between a low grade and a middle grade moron with mental age between 9 and 10 years, was not insane, and could not be placed in the Farview State Hospital.

The fact that the defendant had been committed to the Pennsylvania Institution for Defective Delinquents at Huntingdon; that he had had one leg shorter than the other until he was some eleven years of age; and that he was somewhat of a problem child, are, at the most, matters which may aid the expert in pronouncing his final judgment, — that is, whether the defendant knew the difference between right and wrong. The question of whom the jury should believe was ex *263 clusively for it, and this question was resolved against the defendant.

On this state of facts unquestionably the court was not required as a matter of law to reduce the sentence from death to life imprisonment merely because the defendant was unstable and either a moron or a mental defective. See Commonwealth v. Elliott, 371 Pa. 70, 89 A. 2d 782, where the defendant had a low mental level and had been three times sent to correctional institutions.

We next pass to the additional contentions of the appellant.

(1) The first relates to the court’s admitting in evidence a written confession made by the defendant. The written confession was preceded by an oral confession which was already in evidence. They were obtained without threat or inducement that might secure a false confession. The mere fact that the defendant was in custody when he made the confessions did not make them any less voluntary: Commonwealth v. Spardute, 278 Pa. 37, 48, 122 A. 161; Commonwealth v. Smith, 374 Pa. 220, 97 A. 2d 25. The case of Turner v. Pennsylvania, 338 U. S. 62

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Bluebook (online)
100 A.2d 45, 375 Pa. 257, 1953 Pa. LEXIS 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-bibalo-pa-1953.