Commonwealth v. Buckman

82 Pa. Super. 428, 1923 Pa. Super. LEXIS 335
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 21, 1923
DocketAppeal, 158
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 82 Pa. Super. 428 (Commonwealth v. Buckman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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. Buckman, 82 Pa. Super. 428, 1923 Pa. Super. LEXIS 335 (Pa. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinions

Opinion by

Gawthrop, J.,

The appellant, a married man, about sixty-two years of age, by occupation a farmer, was convicted in the Oyer and Terminer of Bucks County of the crime of statutory rape committed on the person of a little girl, Lucille McKenna, of the age of twelve years. In order to discuss intelligently certain of the assignments of error a statement of the material facts is necessary. The child resided with her mother and stepfather, John B. Margerum, at Washington’s Crossing, Bucks County, and the defendant lived within a half mile of the child’s home. The Commonwealth’s case consisted of the testimony of the child and her mother. The child testified that on an afternoon during harvest of 1920 she was in the defendant’s hay mow, tramping hay which the defendant was pitching from a wagon into the hay mow; that the defendant came to the mow to help her; that he threw her down and, with force and against her will, had carnal intercourse with her; that she cried out but no one came to her rescue; that her clothing became stained with blood; that after the incident she accompanied the defendant to the field and helped him load *431 another load of hay; that the defendant’s brother was working in the field; that after the second load was brought to the barn she went home; that her mother saw the stains on her clothing; that she did not tell anyone about the incident until more than a year afterward. Her explanation of the reason for this was that her stepfather had stated that if anything happened to any of the children he would send them to a reform school. She testified further that the first person she told of the defendant’s conduct in the hay mow was one David Byan; that her reason for telling Byan was that there was talk in the neighborhood about her misconduct with Byan; that prior to that time her stepfather had forbidden her to talk with Byan; that Byan said he was going to tell her stepfather about the defendant’s conduct; that a little later the defendant called her into his house and read to her a letter written to him by Byan, stating that a little girl had come to him crying and told him of the defendant’s relations with her, that he intended to inform the child’s parents and suggesting that if the defendant desired to save himself he should meet Byan alone at nine o’clock the following evening. She testified further that after the defendant read her this letter, he handed her a paper containing a form of a letter addressed to hifn and signed by her stating that the defendant had been a great friend of her family, and that the statements in Byan’s letter were untrue and made for the purpose of causing a disturbance between the defendant and her stepfather. She testified that she copied the letter, signed it, put it in an envelope addressed to the defendant and handed it to him, and that the statements therein were untrue and made because she was afraid of the defendant. The defendant and his brother testified that the girl’s accusation was false; that the hay was taken from the wagon to the mow by a hay fork attached to a rope and pulley operated by horses; that the girl drove the horses, but was not in the mow; that the defendant was on the wagon and the brother alone was in *432 the mow. The defendant produced the letter purporting to have been written and sent to bim by David Ryan and also the letter written by tbe child to bim.

At tbe trial tbe defendant offered to prove by a witness on tbe stand that be was acquainted with tbe prosecutor, John Margerum; that immediately prior to tbe institution of tbe prosecution against tbe defendant, tbe prosecutor called this witness to bis, bouse and informed him that be bad a charge which be was going to prefer against tbe defendant, wherein be would accuse tbe defendant of having sexual intercourse with bis daughter; that be, tbe prosecutor, was after tbe defendant and wanted to get bim, or an expression to that effect; that be wanted tbe witness to aid bim by lodging a like information, charging tbe defendant with having committed a like offense upon tbe witness’s minor daughter; that tbe purpose of making tbe charge was to compel tbe defendant to make a conveyance of a bouse and lot in Taylorsville to David H. Ryan in trust for bis stepdaughter, Lucille McKenna; that in pursuance of this proposal tbe witness was induced to lodge such information before a justice of the peace; and that there was no merit in tbe complaint, because tbe daughter of tbe witness denied any improper conduct on tbe part of tbe defendant. Tbe manifest purpose of tbe offer, as stated to tbe trial judge, was to prove that tbe prosecution was instituted in pursuance of a conspiracy between the prosecutor and others for purposes of extortion, and for tbe further purpose of discrediting tbe good faith of tbe prosecution. This offer was refused and is tbe subject of tbe seventh assignment of error. In disposing of tbe motion for a new trial, in which tbe exclusion of the offer which is tbe subject of this assignment was assigned as a reason, tbe learned trial judge stated that tbe offer was an attempt to introduce into tbe case evidence relating to another charge, of which tbe defendant was afterward relieved and that it was irrelevant because it bad no relation to the charge on which tbe defendant was *433 being tried. After a careful study of this record, we are of opinion that the exclusion of this offer was reversible error. The case is a very serious one and calls for corresponding care in its consideration. The crime charged, considering the youth of the child, is so repellent that we must be sure that conviction resulted from a trial free from prejudicial error. It must be remembered that rape is an accusation easy to be made, hard to be proved, but harder to be defended by the party accused, though innocent : 1 Hal. P. C. 635. While we do not express the view that the prosecution in this case was malicious or the result of a conspiracy to accuse, for we have no information upon that question, yet by very reason of the ease in the making of such an accusation and the difficulty of defending it, full opportunity should be accorded the accused to prove facts showing malice or bad faith on the part of the prosecutor. This was the defendant’s right. The opportunity to show such facts is consistent with the caution which should be scrupulously observed in a trial in which the heinousness of the offense tends sometimes to inspire a jury with righteous indignation resulting in a hasty or illy considered verdict. If the evidence had been admitted and measured up to the offer it might have satisfied the jury that the prosecution was instituted from an ulterior motive and not to avenge a. wrong done to the child. While such a motive is not necessarily inconsistent with the truth of the charge, it had such bearing upon the good faith of the prosecution that evidence thereof was relevant. The seventh assignment of error is sustained.

The eighth assignment of error complains of the exclusion of the defendant’s offer to prove by a physician that it would be impossible for a man, holding the girl in the way described by her, to have connection with her person. The Commonwealth’s objection to the offer was sustained on the ground that the question was not one upon which expert medical testimony was admissible because the jury was as well able to determine the question *434 as a physician would be.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 Pa. Super. 428, 1923 Pa. Super. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-buckman-pasuperct-1923.