Commonwealth v. Brown

164 A. 726, 309 Pa. 515, 86 A.L.R. 892, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 380
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 29, 1932
DocketAppeal, 313
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 164 A. 726 (Commonwealth v. Brown) 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. Brown, 164 A. 726, 309 Pa. 515, 86 A.L.R. 892, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 380 (Pa. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

On February 3,1932, Dorothy Lutz, eight years of age, was reported missing from her home in the City of Philadelphia. Five days later her dead body was found on the second floor of an empty house at 1021 North American Street in that city. On February 12th, appellant, William Brown, a mulatto, then sixteen years and nine months of age, was taken into custody by city detectives and questioned. A ring found near the child’s dead body was identified by two colored girls as having been in the possession of the defendant. The defendant Avhen on the witness stand admitted that he had previously found this ring. The coroner’s physician testified that the hair *519 found on the child was of the same type of hair as defendant’s. Defendant confessed that he attacked and murdered the child. He was indicted and tried on the charge of murder. At the trial the chief issue was whether the defendant’s confession was made voluntarily or under such duress as to destroy its value as evidence.

Defendant claimed that he was taken into custody about noon on February 12th, placed in a small, hot room at the police station and accused by the officers of the murder of the child, that he was struck by them over the eye with a blackjack, that he was struck altogether about fifteen or twenty times, that the officers continually cursed him and threatened to throw him “out to that mob,” that he was subjected to physical violence until he was taken to his cell about three o’clock the next morning, that he was denied food and water until 12: 30 p. m., February 13th (his last meal having been at 7 p. m., February 11th), and otherwise ill-treated. He testified that he finally said to the officers after they had drawn a gun on him and cocked the trigger back and threatened to blow his “damned brains” out: “You give me something to eat. Give me some water. Don’t beat me any more and I will say I did it. I will say I did it.” He said further: “I couldn’t tell them nothing. I just said I killed her. I killed her. And he said, 'Now tell me how you done it.’ I couldn’t tell him so he told me.” Defendant claimed that the officers supplied the details of the confession. The allegations of abuse and of deprivations of food and of physical injuries were denied not only by the police officers and detectives, but also by a physician who said that the defendant was under his observation at the police station every day during the time in question and that he bore no evidence of any physical violence having been done him, and that the latter made no complaint. A restaurant keeper testified that he furnished meals to the defendant.

*520 The jury found the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree and fixed the penalty of death. Defendant thereafter made a motion for a new trial. This motion was overruled and the defendant was sentenced to death. An appeal was then taken to this court.

Appellant claims that his trial was unfair. This claim is based on certain excerpts from the charge of the court. One of these excerpts (3d assignment) reads as follows: “You have listened to the harangue. You have listened to the statement made in the effort to play upon your sympathy that if you find this defendant guilty it will be too late to do anything else; that you cannot bring him back.

“Gentlemen of the jury, you took an oath. You turn as deaf an ear to any harangue of that kind as you do to anything said about evidence that has not been offered in this case.”

Webster’s New International Dictionary defines “harangue” as “a noisy, bombastic, ranting speech.” It was as improper for the trial judge to characterize in effect the utterances of counsel as “noisy, bombastic, and ranting” as it would have been to characterize similarily a witness’s testimony. It is a constitutional right of the defendant “to be heard by himself and his counsel.” (Section 9, article I of the Constitution.) “Perhaps the privilege most important to the person accused of crime, connected with his trial, is that to be defended by counsel:” Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, 8th edition, volume 1, page 696. “In guaranteeing to parties accused of crime the right to the aid of counsel, the Constitution secures it with all its accustomed incidents:” Ibid. 700. The weight to be given an address or given the testimony of witnesses is to be determined by the jury and not by the trial judge. For the latter to discredit the arguments of counsel by a contemptuous characterization of them is as much an invasion of the jury’s province and as prejudicial to the defendant as would be a like characterization of the testimony of an impor *521 tant witness. Arguments of counsel are an integral part of a jury trial. They are not mere trial trappings which a judge is at liberty to dispense with or to instruct a jury to disregard. Juries do not decide issues on naked facts alone that are presented to them; they decide issues both on these facts and on inferences reasonably drawn therefrom. It is the right of opposing counsel to urge jurors to accept as reasonable the inferences which they respectively press upon them, and it is the duty of jurors to consider carefully whether they will accept or reject such inferences. *

In those rare instances when trial judges have referred to the arguments of counsel contemptuously, appellate courts have considered it reversible error. In the case of McDuff v. Detroit Evening Journal Co., 84 Michigan 1, 47 N. W. 671, 22 A. S. R. 673, the Supreme Court of Michigan in an opinion by Mr. Justice Grant said: “Whatever language may be used by counsel in the heat of trial, it is the legal duty of the judge to preside, and decide with impartiality, and to keep counsel within proper bounds. Appellate courts must presume that one occupying so important a position as that of circuit judge can influence a jury. It is their duty to follow his instructions as to the law. Whenever he expresses an opinion on any disputed fact, or of the character of a witness, or compliments one attorney at the expense of *522 the other, or uses language which tends to bring an attorney in contempt before the jury, or uses any language which tends to prejudice them, he commits an error of law for which the verdict and judgment must be promptly set aside. Appellate courts cannot correct mistakes of fact. Trial courts, therefore, cannot be too circumspect and careful to see that questions of fact are submitted to the unbiased judgment of the jury, which, under our jurisprudence, are for their sole determination. To sanction such conduct and language as the above [referring to the trial judge’s remarks] would tend to render trials a farce, and result in a denial of justice.” The third assignment of error is sustained.

Another excerpt from the charge which is assigned for error (1st assignment) is as follows: “Police methods are sometimes not approved, but brutality is never condoned. I have never sat here and seen a defendant in such a terrible condition by his bandages and his face and the physical state of his body that I have ordered an investigation. I say now, as I did before, that I have sat in this court room as frequently, if not much more so than the other fourteen judges of this community.

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Bluebook (online)
164 A. 726, 309 Pa. 515, 86 A.L.R. 892, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-brown-pa-1932.