Commonwealth v. Bruno

175 A. 518, 316 Pa. 394, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 739
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 24, 1934
DocketAppeal, 252
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 175 A. 518 (Commonwealth v. Bruno) 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. Bruno, 175 A. 518, 316 Pa. 394, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 739 (Pa. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Drew,

The defendant, Frank Bruno, was convicted of murder of the first degree and the penalty fixed at death. From the judgment and sentence entered against him he took this appeal.

In the early morning of March 2,1932, a double house of the ordinary type, owned by Rocco Riccardo, at 245 Mill Street, Borough of Dunmore, Lackawanna County, burst into flames. One half of this house was occupied by Riccardo, the other half by Elmer Myers and his wife and family, under a lease from Riccardo. During the course of the fire, which substantially consumed the building, Marion Myers or Wells, eleven years of age, a daughter of Mrs. Myers by another marriage, was burned to death'. Bruno and Riccardo were jointly indicted for murder, and later a severance was granted to Riccardo.

*397 At the trial, various witnesses testified to facts showing a conspiracy to burn this building for the purpose of collecting insurance; it appeared that Riccardo had promised Bruno the job of burning the building, and also that Bruno had previously, for pay, set another fire for Riccardo for the same purpose; that Riccardo had let it be known, shortly before the fire, that he was going to Pittsburgh, and that he did not return to the Mill Street neighborhood until two days after the fire; that a few hours before the fire was started, Bruno was seen about the premises with a five-gallon can, that an odor of gasoline was then observed by persons on the Myers side of the house, and that his car was parked near by; and that, when Bruno was seen a few days later, his face appeared to be burned and his hair singed. It was also testified that at a meeting of Bruno, Riccardo and others, some time after the fire, preparations for Bruno’s defense to another charge of arson were discussed, and Bruno then said, with reference to the Mill Street fire, “If there is any funny business going on, if I burn you will all burn.” There was evidence that insurance policies were assigned by Riccardo for the purpose of furnishing financial assistance to Bruno in the present case. It further appeared from Bruno’s own testimony that he had previously been three times convicted on charges of arson, with regard to two of which he admitted he was guilty and had offered perjured alibis. On his own admission he was a professional incendiary.

In this ease, as in the other arson cases in which he was convicted, his defense was an alibi. He said that he took no part in setting fire to this dwelling and that on the evening of the fire he hired a U-Drive-It car in Scranton and drove to Carbondale to deliver whiskey which had been ordered by telephone message from the Dew Drop Inn, and that he did not get back to Dunmore until after the fire. Records of the U-Drive-It company and testimony of two of its employees corroborated Bruno’s statement that he had hired a car that night. For the Com *398 monwealth the owner and the tenant of the Dew Drop Inn testified in rebuttal that they neither saw nor talked to Bruno that evening, and that there had been no telephone service at the inn on March 1st or for some time prior thereto. Other testimony, offered for the defense, was to the effect that Bruno did not appear to have been burned when he was seen on the morning after the fire, and that burns for which he was treated on June 18,1932, were of fresh origin.

In this case we are concerned with three statutory provisions : section 74 of the Act of March 31, 1860, P. L. 382 * , which provides that “All murder which shall be ......committed in the perpetration of, or attempt to perpetrate any arson......shall be deemed murder of the first degree”; section 137 of the Act of 1860, supra, which defined arson as follows: “If any person shall maliciously and voluntarily burn or cause to be burned ......any......dwelling house of another,......the person so offending shall be adjudged guilty of felonious arson”; and section 1 of the Act of April 25, 1929, P. L. 767, which extended the felony of arson to include the malicious burning of one’s own dwelling house, in the following words: “Any person who wilfully and maliciously sets fire to, or burns,......any dwelling house, ......whether the property of himself or of another, shall be guilty of the felony of arson.”

Defendant first contends that under the indictment he cannot be convicted of murder of the first degree. His argument is this: The indictment, since its language follows that of the Act of 1929, alleges a death resulting from the perpetration of an arson within the meaning of that act; arson as defined in the Act of 1929, however, is broader than the arson defined in the Act of 1860; but arson as used in the murder section of the Act of 1860 can mean no more than the offense defined in the *399 arson section of that act; therefore, inasmuch as defendant cannot, under the provisions as to first-degree murder in section 74 of the Act of 1860, he convicted of murder committed in the perpetration of arson as broadened by the Act of 1929, he cannot be convicted of murder of the first degree under this indictment. He further contends that since he was hired by Riccardo, the owner of the house, to set the fire, he can be guilty of no greater crime than his principal, and therefore he would not be guilty of burning the dwelling house of another, and his offense would not constitute arson, within the meaning of the Act of 1860.

To this argument it may be answered that, even if it be admitted that arson as defined in the Act of 1860 cannot include the offense of burning one’s own dwelling which is made arson by the Act of 1929, this indictment is still sufficient. The crime with which defendant was charged in the indictment, and for which he was tried, was murder, and not arson. The indictment alleged that he “then and there feloniously, wilfully and of malice aforethought did kill and murder the said Marion Myers.” Having properly charged him with murder, then, the Commonwealth was at the trial required to do no more than show the elements of murder provided for in the Act of 1860, in order to invoke the penalty imposed by that act. The fact that the language of the indictment in setting forth the arson was similar to that of the Act of 1929 is of no avail to defendant. Section 20 of the Act of March 31, 1860, P. L. 427, provides: “In any indictment for murder......it shall not be necessary to set forth the manner in which, or the means by which the death of the deceased was caused, but it shall be sufficient in every indictment for murder, to charge that the defendant did feloniously, wilfully, and of his malice aforethought, kill and murder the deceased.” See Goersen v. Com., 99 Pa. 388, 397; Com. v. Buccieri, 153 Pa. 535, 547. Where murder is committed in the perpetration of a felony, the perpretation of such felony need not be set forth in the in *400 dictment: Com. v. Flanagan, 7 W. & S. 415; People v. Witt, 170 Cal. 104; State v. Juliano, 138 Atl. (N. J.) 575. Accordingly, that portion of this indictment which sets forth arson may be considered surplusage and so may be disregarded.

Since, therefore, the indictment properly charged defendant with murder in unmistakable terms, the Commonwealth was free to establish that the crime had been committed in any manner which it could support with sufficient evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
175 A. 518, 316 Pa. 394, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-bruno-pa-1934.