Commonwealth v. Burdell

107 A.2d 739, 176 Pa. Super. 219, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 465
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 30, 1954
DocketAppeal, 125
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 107 A.2d 739 (Commonwealth v. Burdell) 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. Burdell, 107 A.2d 739, 176 Pa. Super. 219, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 465 (Pa. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rhodes, P. J.,

Appellant, Fred Burdell, has appealed from conviction and sentence on bill of indictment charging armed robbery, at No. 2, June Term, 1952, in the Court of Oyer and Terminer of Butler County. Appellant was sentenced to undergo imprisonment in the Western State Penitentiary for a term of not less than four years nor more than eight years, to be sent, in the first instance, to the Western Correctional Diagnostic and Classification Center, at Pittsburgh. Appellant was also indicted for aggravated assault and battery, at No. 23, June Term, 1952, in the Court of Quarter Sessions of Butler County. He was tried on both bills before the same jury which rendered verdicts of guilty. Sentence on bill No. 23 was suspended, but appellant has nevertheless appealed. In the absence of a judgment this conviction is not necessarily reviewable. Com. v. Kimmel, 172 Pa. Superior Ct. 76, 81, 92 A. 2d 247.

Motions for new trial were refused by President Judge Grape of the Thirty-third Judicial District, specially presiding, who was the trial judge.

The court below fully considered the many reasons advanced for a new trial. Appellant’s several contentions that the court erred in refusing his motions for a new trial will be considered as embraced in the statement of questions involved.

The Commonwealth established that on the afternoon of March 14, 1952, at approximately two o’clock, the home of. Craig Saul, in the City, of Butler, was entered and oyer $100,000 felonio.usly taken. . Entry;was gained to the house under the pretext of. delivering a box to Mr. Saul. Two men who were carrying the box entered first; they were armed.' Mrs. Saúl ivas forced into a. chair and. then a third .man came in the house. The latter went through all the rooms of the house, *223 including tlie cellar. In the meantime, one of the men removed the telephone and Mrs. Saul was taken to the upstairs hall where she was required to sit on the stairs with her feet on the landing. She was held there throughout the robbery by the first man who had entered the house, with the help at times of the second man who had entered. Mrs. Saul suffered considerable injury at the hands of these armed men. Mrs. Saul was thus restrained for about a quarter of an hour. During this time a safe, which was located in the dining room on the first floor, was opened and approximately $100,000 in cash and bonds belonging to the Sauls was taken therefrom. Then the three men left the house. Mrs. Saul followed and observed them getting into the back seat of a large gray car with dark cloth covering the glass on the inside.

Appellant was identified by Mrs. Saul as being the person who first entered the house, and who was with her during the entire time she was held in custody by the perpetrators of the robbery. Mrs. Saul partially identified the other participants.

(1) A primary contention of appellant is that the trial judge erred in admitting evidence of a crime committed in Allegheny County two days before the entry of the Saul home. Evidence of the extortion of $2,600 from Craig Saul by appellant in Allegheny County was admitted for the purpose of showing a course of conduct or plan or scheme on the part of appellant and others to feloniously take from Craig Saul his personal property, as well as to establish the identity of appellant. Craig- Saul testified that on the morning of March 12, 1952, he went to Pittsburgh with three individuals, Jack Vergili, Willie Mendocini, and Sam Eratta. They registered at the Roosevelt Hotel. A party was arranged by Mendocini. The group remained at the hotel during that day; and at ten o’clock in the *224 evening Saul wanted to go home and called his brother, who came to the hotel and directed the other three men to take him to his home in Butler. On the pretext of taking Saul to Butler the group drove toward Bankin, Allegheny County, where appellant, in his police uniform, stopped Saul’s Cadillac automobile, which was being operated by Mendocini, and accused them of driving through a stop sign and of being engaged in the numbers business. Appellant indicated that he would confiscate Saul’s automobile unless he was “fixed.” Saul offered appellant $100. The sum of $2,600 was finally extorted from Saul; this was all the money that he had in his wallet at the time.

The Commonwealth also showed that Vergili and Fratta were friends of Saul, who had not previously met appellant, and that Mendocini and appellant had been friends from childhood. The jury could believe that, on the same evening the group was at the Roosevelt Hotel, Mendocini made a telephone call from the hotel to appellant at his Braddock home. The testimony further disclosed that Saul’s companions knew that he was in the habit of having large sums of money on his person and in a safe in his home.

We agree with the court below that the offenses were so closely connected that the evidence of the one committed in Allegheny County was properly received in the trial of appellant in Butler County. Not only did the Allegheny County occurrence tend to prove a design or plan to rob Saul, but it also had a logical bearing upon the identity of appellant in the robbery at the Saul home on March 14, 1952. It may be said that the two occurrences constituted closely connected crimes for a common purpose. Com. v. Ransom, 169 Pa. Superior Ct. 306, 314, 82 A. 2d 547. See, also, Com. v. Fugmann, 330 Pa. 4, 20, 198 A. 99; Com. v. Chalfa, 313 Pa. 175, 178, 169 A. 564.

*225 (2) Did the trial judge err in limiting the number of peremptory challenges to ten?

Under section 1 of the Act of March 6, 1901, P. L. 16, as amended, 19 PS §811, in the trial of misdemeanors and felonies, triable exclusively in the courts of oyer and terminer and general jail delivery, a defendant is entitled to twenty peremptory challenges. At appellant’s trial a stipulation of counsel was entered into as follows:

“By Mr. Painter: It is stipulated by and between counsel for the Commonwealth and counsel for the defendant, Fred Burdell, that the challenges, peremptory challenges, in this case, shall be limited to ten for each side.
“By Mr. Cingolani: Counsel for the defendant agrees.”

Appellant now contends that the trial judge erred in permitting such a stipulation to be entered and in limiting the number of peremptory challenges accordingly.

In Com. v. Antico, 146 Pa. Superior Ct. 293, 314, 22 A. 2d 204, 215, this Court said: “There is no constitutional right to any peremptory challenges. It is legislative in origin and is subject to change or even abrogation by the legislature, so long as it does not deny the accused a trial by jury ‘as heretofore.’ Defendants were entitled to a trial by a fair and impartial jury, but not to a trial by any particular juror or jurors.” Appellant could waive such a statutory right, and appellant was bound by the action of his trial counsel in this respect. See Com. v. McMurray, 198 Pa. 51, 60, 47 A. 952.

(3) Was it reversible error to admit in evidence a tape recording after appellant’s counsel, with appellant’s approval, withdrew all objections?

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Bluebook (online)
107 A.2d 739, 176 Pa. Super. 219, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-burdell-pasuperct-1954.