Commonwealth v. Craven

11 A.2d 191, 138 Pa. Super. 436, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 375
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 17, 1939
DocketAppeal, 288
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 11 A.2d 191 (Commonwealth v. Craven) 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. Craven, 11 A.2d 191, 138 Pa. Super. 436, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 375 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Baldrige, J.,

The appellant, Frank A. Craven, was indicted for murder and manslaughter in connection with the death of Frank Camodeca, a prisoner in the Philadelphia County prison at Holmesburg. After a trial lasting eight days, the jury brought in a verdict of not guilty of murder but guilty of involuntary manslaughter. Motion for a new trial was heard by the court in banc and refused.

This appeal is from the sentence imposed of imprisonment from one to three years.

In Philadelphia there are two county prisons. Both were under the,immediate management of Superintendent Mills, who had two deputies, one of whom was Craven. His duties were confined to the management and control, under the advice of Mills, of the Holmes-burg prison, with which we are concerned. It is built in the form of a wheel, with cell blocks radiating from the center. Between two of these blocks, and entirely separate therefrom, is a one-story building, known as “Klondike,” where refractory prisoners are sent at times for punishment, which includes reduced rations and subjection to heat. This building, with one en *439 trance on the eastern end, is of brick and concrete construction, 60 feet long, 12% feet wide, with an inside height of 8% feet. On, the north side of the interior is a 4-foot-wide corridor running the full length of the building, with three double-sash windows and .three skylights. On the south side are twelve cells, each 4 feet wide, 8 feet long, and 8 feet high. Each cell is equipped with an iron-grated door, a toilet, and running water, but no furniture, except at nighttime a small mattress is provided. In the roof of each cell is a ventilator, 10 inches in diameter, which is generally open. There are five radiators along the outer wall of the corridor and one on the ceiling at each end of the building. The heat is turned on in the engineroom, located under another cell block, and is regulated by valves, one of which is just inside the building and the others are on the radiators. If the heat is on and all the radiators are turned off, still some heat passes through the building in an uninsulated 2-inch pipe, 60 feet long, attached to the ceiling.

Craven, as assistant superintendent, or warden, had under him a captain of the guards, five or six sergeants, and a number of guards, making a total personnel of one hundred and thirteen employees and officials in charge of this prison, which had approximately fourteen hundred inmates.

About August 15 or 16, 1938, some of the prisoners, in a protest to the food served, went on a hunger strike. Notice thereof was sent to Superintendent Mills who was away on vacation. He returned to the institution on Friday, August 19th, and found some of the prisoners defiant and disorderly. About 11 o’clock that night, the ringleaders of the rebellious prisoners, including Frank Camodeca, were sent to Klondike. Immediately Sergeant Hart, by virtue of a standing order given him some time prior thereto by the defendant, ordered the engineer to turn on the steam. That was the usual custom, even in summertime, as the cells were damp *440 and it was necessary that some heat be furnished as the prisoners were deprived of all their clothing except light underwear. On Saturday thirteen prisoners and on Sunday six additional ones were removed to Klondike, making in all twenty-five prisoners. From Friday night until at least Sunday afternoon, a 5-pound pressure of steam continuously flowed through the supply lines and radiators. These prisoners were visited three times a day, at approximately 8 a. m., noon, and 5 p. m., when they were given bread and water, the latter having been turned off in the cells, so that for approximately fifteen hours each night they were locked in their cells with all the windows and skylights closed, without water or any means of outside communication.

We will not detail all, only some, of the tortures to which these men were subjected. They testified, and much of their testimony was not denied, that their cells were like ovens, the doors and walls were so hot that it was impossible to touch them without receiving burns, and of their difficulty in breathing. They told of their crowded conditions; in some of these 4-foot-wide cells three men were confined. Camodeca, who weighed 239 pounds, had two cellmates, Spatz and McQuade. Testimony was given of their suffering from thirst and of horrible methods to which they resorted in their unsuccessful efforts to quench it, and of their complaints to the guards, imploring them to have Craven and a doctor visit them. One attempted to commit suicide, another injured his arm, and a third had a cut in his head which, according to his story, was sustained when he “passed out.” It is most improbable that Craven, responsible for these prisoners, with knowledge of the serious trouble that had preceded their removal to Klondike, was entirely ignorant of the conditions that existed.

When Monday morning, August 22d, came, the guards made their usual visitation and then they found four *441 of the twenty-five men dead, including Camodeca and Ms cellmate McQuade.

Dr. Baldi, the chief physician of the prison, was out of town between August 19th and 22d, returning the morning of the latter date. Learning of the trouble, he hurried over to Klondike and found the heat “tremendous,” “unbearable.” He immediately had the living prisoners removed from Klondike. One was hysterical, others in a state of collapse, requiring hospitalization, and the rest were more or less seriously affected as a result of the heat and lack of water and food.

Dr. Crane, the coroner’s physician, performed an autopsy upon the body of Camodeca. He testified that he had sustained many abrasions, burns, bruises, a cut above one eye, the other severely blackened; that there was congestion of the coverings of the brain and head and of the mucous membrane of the eyes, nose and mouth to such an extent that the blood vessels had ruptured and blood had run down on his cheeks; diffuse hemorrhages were present through the lungs; the heart, kidneys, and surface of the body were congested, indicating contact with extreme heat. He expressed the opinion that, from his examination, death was due to a heat stroke.

The general defense set up was (1) that Camodeca’s death was not due to exposure to heat but resulted from a fight in the cell; and (2) that, even if death was due to heat, there was no proof that defendant’s conduct amounted to such rashness or recklessness that constituted involuntary manslaughter.

We may state here that there was no testimony of any blows being struck or of any violence. Spatz, the only person in the cell with Camodeca who survived, stated that there had been no fighting, that Camodeca from time to time struggled in his weakened condition to stand and would fall. When found, his face was downward upon the concrete floor.

*442 Coming now to the appellant’s assignments of error, the first two are directed to the admission in evidence of complaints of prisoners and of requests to the guards that appellant come to Klondike. This evidence had a bearing on the inmates’ sufferings and their efforts to obtain relief during this period.

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Bluebook (online)
11 A.2d 191, 138 Pa. Super. 436, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-craven-pasuperct-1939.