Commonwealth v. Bryant

79 A.2d 193, 367 Pa. 135, 1951 Pa. LEXIS 358
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 21, 1951
DocketAppeal, 286
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 79 A.2d 193 (Commonwealth v. Bryant) 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. Bryant, 79 A.2d 193, 367 Pa. 135, 1951 Pa. LEXIS 358 (Pa. 1951).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

Edward J. Bryant, the appellant, was jointly indicted for murder along with one Joseph Chambers. He was tried separately and convicted of murder in the first degree' with the penalty fixed at death. On *137 this appeal from the judgment and sentence, he assigns for error the action of the court below in receiving in evidence at trial oral and written statements which he had made to interrogating police .officers, while in custody after his arrest, without having been advised of his right to counsel or of his privilege against self-incrimination. There is no suggestion that the statements were the product of any coercion or inducement practiced upon the accused. Nor did he repudiate them or otherwise impugn them such as by charging incommunicado restraint or debilitating questioning.’

It is the appellant’s contention that, despite the absence of any evidence of coercion in connection with his making the incriminating statements, “. . . the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of- the United States and of Article I, Section 9 of the Constitution of Pennsylvania require, at least in a capital case, that an accused from the moment of his arrest be informed of his right to counsel and of his privilege against self-incrimination and, absent some intelligent waiver on his part following his being informed of his right to counsel, that the accused be furnished counsel. The corollary of this requirement is that the deprivation or denial of these rights renders inadmissible any evidence secured thereby from the accused.”

Nowhere does it appear that the defendant requested counsel and was refused or that he expressed a desire to remain silent but was compelled to answer. The most that can be said in such connection is that the police officers did not inform him of the rights to which he now lays claim. He was, however, informed of the nature of the charge for which he was arrested, was cautioned that anything he said might be used against him at trial and was given a prompt prelimi *138 nary hearing upon being returned to Pennsylvania.

The following are the material facts. Late in the afternoon of November 8, 1948, Joseph Saturno, sixty-five, was found bloody and unconscious in his first-floor three-room apartment in South Philadelphia where he lived alone. His condition was the result of an extremely brutal beating which he had received, unwitnessed, save by the perpetrators. He was promptly removed to a hospital where he died several hours later without having regained consciousness. There •were evidences from the condition of. .the apartment and the victim’s clothing indicating that robbery was the motive of. the culprit or culprits. . Within an. hour or two of the discovery of the crime, the police arrested Chambers, Bryant’s co-indictee, who lived but a short distance from the victim’s apartment. Prom information received from Chambers, the police sought Bryant as a suspect but were unable to find him; a search of Chambers’ house, where Bryant had been living, failed to uncover him.

A month later (December 8th), Bryant was arrested by the police of Newark, New Jersey, for an offense committed there and was promptly identified by his finger prints as the person wanted in Philadelphia for the murder of Saturno. The police of the latter city were at once notified of Bryant’s apprehension and two detectives from Philadelphia went to Newark the same day. There, in the presence of a local officer in the Newark detective headquarters, they interviewed Bryant after having informed him that he was wanted in Philadelphia for murder. Bryant related that he and Chambers, at the latter’s suggestion, had gone to Saturno’s apartment on the afternoon of November 8th for the purpose of robbing him of money which Chambers claimed to have seen Saturno exhibit earlier that day; that Chambers slugged Saturno into uncon *139 sciousness and repeated the sordid performance (ultimately with a blackjack he had picked up in the apartment) each time the victim showed signs of reviving; that, in the meantime, the two of them had searched Saturno, removing his shoes, socks and outer clothes for the purpose, and had ransacked bureaus and drawers, turning things topsy-turvy, in their quest for hidden money; that he (Bryant) had not struck Saturno; that, at Chambers’ direction, he had left before the robbery was completed and had gone back to Chambers’ house; and that, when Chambers returned there, he told Bryant, upon the latter’s inquiry, that he had not gotten anything from Saturno or his apartment, — an assertion which Bryant did not accredit. After Bryant had made this oral statement to the Philadelphia detectives, they returned home the same day, leaving the prisoner in the custody of the Newark police.

The Philadelphia officers went back to Newark on the afternoon of December 10th and returned with Bryant to Philadelphia where they arrived about 6 p.in. that evening. They took him to the central police station in City Hall where they obtained from him a statement in question-and-answer form which one of the detectives typed. The preliminary questions asked by the detective and answered by Bryant, as shown by the statement, were as follows : “Q. What is your name, age and address? A. My name is Edward J. Bryant; I am 25 years of age, and my home is 218 Bailey Street, Steelton, Pennsylvania. Q. Do you know why you have been placed under arrest? A. Yes; for murder. Q. Are you willing to tell us your part in this murder? A. Yes, sir. Q. Have you been threatened in any way? A. No, sir. Q. Have any promises been made to you, in order to give this statement? A. No, sir. Q. We warn you at this time that anything that you tell us in this *140 statement can and will be used as evidence against you at the time of your trial in court. Do you understand that? A. Yes, sir. Q. Will you go .on then in your own way and tell us all that happened?” Bryant then related in detail substantially what he had told the detectives on December 8th in Newark as above recited. When the statement was completed, the accused signed it on each of its two pages.

Bryant was housed in the central police station overnight; next morning, he was given a hearing on the murder charge before a magistrate who forthwith committed him to jail to await action of the. grand jury. He was indicted for murder on January 12, 1949, was arraigned on January 14, 1949, and pleaded “Not Guilty”, being then represented by the public defender. Through the latter, Bryant at once moved for a continuance of the trial which was granted. At the same time, he made an affidavit of destitute circumstances and requested the court to assign him counsel which the court did four days later (January 18, 1949), appointing to defend him the experienced counsel who since then have at all times ably represented him. The trial was begun May 4, 1949, and ended two days later with the jury’s verdict as already stated.

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Bluebook (online)
79 A.2d 193, 367 Pa. 135, 1951 Pa. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-bryant-pa-1951.