Commonwealth v. Cantanzariti

2 Pa. D. & C. 637, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 373
CourtMontgomery County Court of Oyer and Terminer
DecidedApril 24, 1922
DocketNo. 9
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Pa. D. & C. 637 (Commonwealth v. Cantanzariti) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montgomery County Court of Oyer and Terminer primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Cantanzariti, 2 Pa. D. & C. 637, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 373 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Swartz, P. J.,

The prisoner, Guiseppe Cantanzariti, was charged with the murder of Guiseppe lannuce. He plead self-defence at the trial. The jury found him guilty of murder in the first degree.

In this decision we shall call Guiseppe Cantanzariti the accused and refer to lannuce as Joe or the deceased.

On the evening of Sept. 17, 1921, Joe, the deceased, went to a hospital in Norristown with some fruit for a sick friend. He found that his friend had left the hospital. He then carried the fruit to the house where accused boarded, on Franklin Street, in the Borough of Norristown. He met the accused and a fellow-countryman, named Scandoni, at this boarding-house. Joe shared his fruit with the others and they drank a couple of bottles of wine. The three left the boarding-house. Scandoni separated from the others. The latter went to the lodging-house of the accused, who was the sole occupant of the building. They arrived at this house on Washington Street about nine o’clock. It is located about half a block west of Ford Street. Washington Street runs parallel with the Schuylkill River and crosses Ford Street, which leads to the Swedes Ford Bridge. This is a covered structure and spans the said river. It is a toll-bridge. The eastern side of the bridge is used by the tracks of the Reading Railway. The middle course of the bridge [638]*638is used as a driveway for vehicles, and on the western side there is a passageway for foot travelers. These three compartments occupy the entire width of the bridge. The distance to the bridge from the intersection of Washington and Ford Streets is about one block.

On the west side of Ford Street, going toward the bridge, there is a high board fence separating the street from a vacant lot. Several boards had been removed from this fence, and this left an ample opening for a person to pass from the sidewalk into the vacant lot. This opening in the fence is 137 feet from the bridge entrance. On the eastern side of the street, near Washington Street, there is an open shed used by a scrap-iron dealer. Under this shed there is a pump. On the same side of Ford Street and close to the bridge is the house of Annie Signorovitch. Her husband, daughter Julia and her son Arthur live with her.

The bridge is 676 feet long and leads into the Borough of Bridgeport. The canal bridge on Ford Street, in the Borough of Bridgeport, is about 150 feet beyond the south outlet of the river bridge. It has a retaining-wall, the top of which is nearly ten feet above the water of the canal and about one foot higher than the surface of the ground abutting on the wall.

On the west side of Ford Street, in Bridgeport, there is a guard fence running from the canal bridge toward the river bridge. At the end of this guard fence a telegraph pole is located. The distance from the pole to the canal bridge retaining-wall is twenty-four feet.

The surface of the ground from this pole to the canal wall is practically level. The distance from the pole directly across to the canal wall is twenty-four feet. The distance from the bottom of the canal wall across the towpath to the edge of the canal water is eighteen feet. This open space, including the tow-path, is nearly level. From the bottom of the canal retaining-wall to the water’s edge there is a slight fall of the ground.

Joe, the deceased, lived with his family in Bridgeport, and the direct way to his home from the lodging-house of the accused would take him over the Swedes Ford Bridge.

According to the testimony of Mrs. Dimitri, Joe passed her gate on Washington Street on his way to Ford Street. He stopped and talked with her. Her house is one-half block west of Ford Street, and the lodging-house of the accused was five doors farther to the west, on the same side of Washington Street. She testified that Joe was drunk. About five or ten minutes after Joe had passed, the accused followed, also going toward Ford Street and the bridge. She says ten or fifteen minutes after the two men had passed her house, she heard a noise that sounded like a revolver shot; that it appeared to come from the Bridgeport side of the bridge. She also testified that ten or fifteen minutes after the revolver shot, the accused passed her gate, going toward his lodging-house. The defendant declared on the stand that he did not go back to his lodging-house by way of the Ford Street Bridge. He testified that, after the killing of Joe, he ran west on the railroad siding, near the canal bridge, and went as far as the De Kalb Street Bridge over the Schuylkill; that he crossed that bridge to Norristown and then came east on Washington Street to his lodging-house. The De Kalb Street Bridge is about one-half mile west of the Ford Street Bridge.

Mrs. Signorovitch, who lived on the east side of Ford Street, next to the bridge on the Norristown side, testified that about half-past nine o’clock on Sept. 17, 1921, she saw the accused enter the opening already described in the high board fence. He remained inside a short time and then came out, crossed over Ford Street to the scrap-yard shed. He went in and came out in [639]*639about a minute with a handkerchief in his hand. He recrossed Ford Street and again entered the opening in the board fence and remained inside until Joe passed by the opening. About two or three minutes after Joe went into the bridge, she saw the accused come out of the opening. He hurried to the bridge and crossed over to the railroad tracks on the east side. He could not enter at that point because a box-car was standing at the opening. A gate closed the driveway. He looked through the gate and then turned to the foot-walk, passed the watchman, who called him back. He showed something to the gateman. The defendant testified that he exhibited the card that entitled him to a free passage because he was employed by the railway company.

Mrs. Signorovitch and her daughter came to the bridge entrance and saw the accused run across the bridge. She heard some shots about fifteen minutes afterwards. She says she looked out of her second-story window, watching for the return of her husband. She also had some fears for her chickens. This is the reason given for her watchfulness. The mother and daughter saw the accused catch up with Joe before he reached the Bridgeport end of the bridge. They did not see the accused come back after the shooting. The daughter, Julia, and the son, Arthur, corroborate the mother as to the movements of the two men before and after they entered the bridge.

The accused testified that he and Joe walked along Ford Street toward the bridge entrance; that he stood close to the board fence, in the darkness, and attended to a call of nature; that Joe got ahead of him and that he ran after him and overtook him. He denied that he went into the fence opening or into the scrap-yard shed. He declared that he did not step into the fence opening at any time. He does not deny that he crossed Ford Street to the railway tracks on the bridge. He testified that he tripped, and that caused him to move to the other side of the street.

While the three witnesses agree that the accused was within the fence opening when Joe passed by, there is no explanation where Joe passed the time that the accused consumed in going through the various movements described by the three witnesses. They say that the lights at the surroundings were sufficient to enable them to see the occurrences they described. They say that the accused hid behind the fence opening and then crossed over to the scrap-yard and again entered the opening and went into hiding.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Pa. D. & C. 637, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-cantanzariti-paoytermctmontg-1922.