Commonwealth v. Butts

204 A.2d 481, 204 Pa. Super. 302, 1964 Pa. Super. LEXIS 588
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 12, 1964
DocketAppeals, 463 and 464
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 204 A.2d 481 (Commonwealth v. Butts) 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. Butts, 204 A.2d 481, 204 Pa. Super. 302, 1964 Pa. Super. LEXIS 588 (Pa. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

Opinion by

Wright, J.,

In the late afternoon of November 27, 1961, on Twenty-First Street in the City of Philadelphia, south of the intersection at Delancey Place, a 1953 Dodge sedan owned and operated by George T. Butts collided with a pedestrian, Borneo Minero, a thirteen year old boy. The Dodge car then struck a 1952 Ford sedan parked at the east curb, forcing it into another parked car. Immediately after the collision the boy’s body was found lying on the trunk of the Ford automobile. The boy was taken to Graduate Hospital, where he was pronounced dead on arrival. At May Sessions 1962, the Grand Jury returned three bills of indictment against Butts as follows: Bill No. 329 charged voluntary manslaughter in the first count, and involuntary manslaughter in the second count; Bill No. 330 charged the operation of a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor; Bill No. 331 charged murder. On March 9, 1964, Butts appeared with counsel before Honorable Mark E. Leeever, specially presiding, entered pleas of not guilty, and waived his right to jury trial. Before calling any witnesses, and with leave of court, the District Attorney entered a nol. pros, as to Bill No. 331 and as to the first count in Bill No. 329. Butts was adjudged guilty as to the second count in Bill No. 329, and as to the charge in Bill No. 330. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were refused by the court en banc, and sentences were imposed. These appeals followed.

A comprehensive review of the Commonwealth’s testimony is set forth in the opinion below, and will be quoted in the paragraphs next following. So far as the defense was concerned, Butts did not take the stand *305 and the only testimony adduced was that of three character witnesses.

“Twenty-first Street is a one way street south. It is 26 feet wide, with a 12 foot east sidewalk. Delancey Place is 16 feet wide, with a 10 foot south sidewalk. On the east side of 21st Street, south of Delaney Place, were several parking meters and a Oity sign reading: ‘Two-hour meter parking.’ There were traffic signal lights at 21st and Spruce Streets and at 21st and Pine Streets, the streets immediately north and south of Delancey Place (a mid-block street) . . .

“There were no eye witnesses to the collision. However, Patricia Dolan, who lived on the third floor apartment of the building at the southeast corner of Delancey Place and 21st Street, testified that at about 5:50 P.M., that evening ‘having been aware of a tremendous crash. I went to the window and I remember a body going up into the air and landing on the trunk of a car.’ The defendant’s ‘black car ... is the one that hit the Ford in the front.’ She immediately notified the police by telephone.

“Police officers arrived at the scene of the accident a few moments later. The weather was dry and clear. It was ‘getting dark’ and the street lights were lit. Testimony of the officers and the photographs, which were admitted into evidence, indicate that the front of defendant’s car was headed diagonally into the rear of the Ford in a southeasterly direction, with its front end 46 feet south of the south curb of Delancey Place; that its left front wheel was almost against the curb; and that two or three wheels of the Ford were pushed up over the curb onto the east sidewalk, between the parking meter and the sign. Defendant’s car was badly smashed in front, particularly on the left front . . . The right rear of the Ford was damaged . . . The rear of the Chevrolet was damaged and it was pushed partly onto the sidewalk . . . There were no skid marks on *306 the street. The Dodge’s engine was still running. The Ford and the Chevrolet were not occupied and their engines were not running. The inference is clear that no brakes were applied before the collision and that the parked Ford and Chevrolet were pushed onto the east sidewalk on 21st Street by the collision.

“Officer Placentra testified that he and Officer Lang arrived at the scene of the accident about 5:56 P.M.; that they found all cars at rest, and the defendant’s engine was running; that the other engines were not running; that defendant was alone slumped in the front seat of his Dodge behind the wheel; that there was a strong odor of alcohol on defendant’s breath; that defendant ‘had a slight cut over his left eye’; and that defendant mumbled indistinctly in answer to questions. Officer Lang testified much the same. In addition, he testified that they received the radio call at 5:55 P.M., when their patrol car was between 20th and 21st Streets on Spruce Street, and they arrived at the scene one minute later.

“Officer Evans testified that he and Officer Daw arrived at 6:00 P.M.; that they observed defendant behind the wheel of his automobile; that an hour and a half later in the hospital there was ‘a strong odor of alcohol on his breath’; that he was surly and belligerent; that they had ‘to take him by the arms and take him out of the hospital’, one officer on each arm; that ‘I’d say he was drunk.’ Officer Daw corroborated this testimony. He testified that in his opinion defendant was intoxicated.

“Officer Brooks testified that defendant was lying on the driver’s seat of his car; that he had the odor of alcohol on his breath; that defendant was dazed and stuporous; that he had to help defendant out of his automobile into the police wagon; that one and a half hours later, in the hospital, defendant was belligerent, boisterous, mumbling and was still staggering; that he *307 had difficulty in standing up and difficulty in dressing — he was unable to button his underpants and trousers; and that he still had a heavy odor of alcohol on his breath. He kept repeating ‘I didn’t kill no-white boy.’

“Dr. Gilbert Fineman, police surgeon, testified that he examined defendant at 8:30 P.M., that evening. Defendant had a subnormal temperature of 97 degrees orally; ‘he had an abnormally high pulse rate of 148 per minute’; his pupils were enlarged and fixed; there was a very strong odor of alcohol about him; his speech was slurred; his clothing was disarrayed; his coordination was poor and his station was swaying; his gait was unsteady and imbalanced; he was sullen. Defendant admitted to Dr. Fineman that ‘he was intoxicated’. Dr. Fineman gave him the finger to nose test, the heel to toe test and the Rhomberg test; all were positive. On the basis of the foregoing, Dr. Fineman testified that it was his unequivocal opinion that defendant was then ‘under the influence of intoxicating beverages and was unable to operate a motor vehicle.’ Dr. Fineman was cross-examined as to the effect of the cut above defendant’s left eye on his condition. The doctor answered that it had no effect on defendant’s condition, and that it did not change his opinion that defendant was intoxicated.

“The deceased’s father arrived at the scene between 5:30 P.M. and 6:00 P.M., to meet his son according to their usual arrangement, as the father was a carrier of newspapers for the Evening Bulletin and his son was his helper. It was customary for the father to meet the boy on the southeast corner of Delancey Place and 21st Street. On arrival the father found the boy lying face up ‘stretched out like Christ on top of the car dead’. The father saw defendant — ‘He was there in the car and I thought he was sleeping behind the wheel’ . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 A.2d 481, 204 Pa. Super. 302, 1964 Pa. Super. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-butts-pasuperct-1964.