Commonwealth v. Carroll

200 A. 139, 131 Pa. Super. 357, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 222
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 2, 1938
DocketAppeals, 184 and 185
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 200 A. 139 (Commonwealth v. Carroll) 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. Carroll, 200 A. 139, 131 Pa. Super. 357, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 222 (Pa. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

George R. McKee and Mrs. Alice McGann were killed in an automobile accident on West Liberty Avenue, near Cape May Avenue, Pittsburgh, on Thursday, December 10, 1936, at about 3:15 o’clock in the morning. They were riding in a Chevrolet coach with the defendant, Bartley J. Carroll, and a Mrs. Catherine Bert, .both of ¡whom were badly ¡injured in the accident. The car was being driven southwardly from Pittsburgh, in the direction of Dormont and Mt. Lebanon.

Carroll was subsequently charged with involuntary manslaughter and true bills were returned on separate indictments — No. 41 for the death of McKee, and No. 42 for the death of Mrs. McGann. They were tried together and a verdict of guilty was rendered on each indictment. Concurrent identical sentences were imposed from which the defendant has appealed.

The Commonwealth’s case rests on two propositions:

(1) That at the time of the accident the car was being driven at an unlawful speed and in a reckless manner, as a result of which it collided with a telephone pole and upset, causing the death of McKee and Mrs. McGann; and (2) that Carroll, the defendant, was driving the car when the accident thus occurred.

*359 The appellant contends that the evidence in the case is insufficient to establish these propositions.

We are of opinion that there was ample evidence to support both propositions and that the judgments should be affirmed.

(1) As to the reckless and unlawful operation of the car the evidence of Officer Tanner was, in itself, sufficient to sustain the verdicts, and was not seriously weakened or contradicted.

Tanner was a police officer employed by the County of Allegheny to patrol the Liberty Bridge and Tunnels. He used in his work a motorcycle with a side car. He came on duty at midnight of December 9th. The weather was clear, but the frost coming out of the ground had made the road “pretty slippery.” About 3:05 o’clock in the morning of December 10th, he saw the automobile, which figured in the fatal accident, going south on the Liberty Bridge, about 100 feet off the ramp of the Boulevard of the Allies. His attention was directed to it because of its zigzagging from one side of the road to the other and the speed at which it was going — from 45 to 50 miles an hour. 1 He started after it — when it was about 25 feet ahead of him — and his own speedometer showed he was going 45 to 50 miles an hour, but he did not gain on the car. There were some cars coming north to Pittsburgh, but no other cars going toward the tunnels. He tried to get up to the car before it got to the traffic signal at the north end of the Liberty Tunnels, but could not make it, and the car .started into the south-bound tunnel, 2 where it frequently swerved from one side of the road to the other. Tanner was going 50 miles per hour and *360 the car ahead was going at least that fast, for he did not gain on it until he got to the south end of the tunnel, when he drew alongside, blew his whistle and called to the driver to pull over. Instead of doing so the driver turned his wheel towards the officer on his left and would have run him down, if the latter had not swerved or turned to the left to avoid being hit and, in doing so, stalled his motor. By this time the driver of the Chevrolet coach was out on West Liberty Avenue, and when Tanner got his motor started was at the intersection of West Liberty Avenue and Saw Mill Run Boulevard, about half a block ahead. Tanner followed, going for a while at 55 miles an hour, but at that speed, with the condition of the roadway, he could not control the wheels and had to slow down somewhat and the Chevrolet car kept gaining. Tanner could see its tail light, getting dimmer, until right above Cape May Avenue it skidded, turned twice completely around the roadway, sparks flew, and the car ran into a telephone pole, and came to rest facing towards Pittsburgh, with the top on the ground and the four wheels spinning in the air. McKee was lying dead, with his fractured head in the centre of the inbound (that is, northbound) street railway track and Mrs. Bert was lying between the car and the tubes. The other two were in the car — Carroll in the front or driver’s seat and Mrs. Me Gann in the back seat, but it was impossible to get them out until the car was righted. Tanner helped put McKee’s body into the car of a Western Union messenger, named Buckwalter, who came along and took it to Mercy Hospital, and assisted Gaus and Osterling to put Mrs. Bert in their car, and they took her to the hospital. He then left to telephone for help and was gone, possibly, ten minutes and when he got back, the car had been righted and Carroll and Mrs. McGann had been taken from it, the latter dead. Tanner took Carroll to the hospital in the side car of his motorcycle, and patrol wagon No. 9 *361 which came along took Mrs. McGann’s body to the hospital. Liberty Avenue there was 45 feet wide between curbs and was paved with asphalt, except for the two street car tracks, where the paving was of stone.

Considering that 40 miles an hour was the maximum legal speed under the best road conditions, and that the slippery condition of the road required more care, 3 a speed of from 45 to 55 miles an hour, causing the car to swerve or zigzag from side to side and the refusal of the driver to slow up and pull over to one side, when ordered to do so, and his attempt to run the officer down instead, leave no doubt in our minds that the driver of the Chevrolet car was guilty of reckless conduct and wanton negligence amounting to an unlawful act, within the rule enunciated in Com. v. Gill, 120 Pa. Superior Ct. 22, 182 A. 103, such as to justify his conviction of involuntary manslaughter, when the consequences of his reckless driving resulted in the death of two people.

(2) We also think there was enough competent evidence that Carroll was the driver of the car to sustain his conviction. Admittedly he had borrowed the car from a man named Sam Crisanti, on Tuesday, December 8th, to attend a fireman’s funeral on Wednesday, December 9th; and he had been driving the car earlier the same evening. When the car first came onto the Liberty Bridge there were admittedly only four persons in it, Carroll, McKee, Mrs. Bert and Mrs. McGann. Going through the tunnel the tube was brightly lighted and when Tanner drew up alongside the Chevrolet car, while he did not recognize the faces of any of the occupants, he saw that the driver of the car, just to his *362 right, wore a brown overcoat and had glasses on. To the driver’s right was a woman (Mrs. Bert). In the rear seat, back of the driver, was a woman (Mrs. Mc-Gann) and to her right, back of Mrs. Bert, was a man in a black overcoat. Carroll wore glasses. McKee did not. The attempt of Carroll’s daughter to lead the jury to believe that he only used glasses for reading and never otherwise was effectually refuted by his own testimony (p. 255) where he testified on direct examination as follows: “I use glasses for reading. Q. Do you use glasses any other time? A.

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Bluebook (online)
200 A. 139, 131 Pa. Super. 357, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-carroll-pasuperct-1938.