Commonwealth v. De Petro

36 A.2d 513, 154 Pa. Super. 535
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 8, 1943
DocketAppeals, 87 and 88
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 36 A.2d 513 (Commonwealth v. De Petro) 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. De Petro, 36 A.2d 513, 154 Pa. Super. 535 (Pa. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion by

Baldrige, J.,

These two appeals were argued together and will be disposed of in one opinion.

James De Petro was indicted (No. 19 December Term, 1940) charged in the first count with the offense of arson and in the second count with burning a building to defraud the insurer. Verna De Petro and Anthony Montonaro were indicted (No. 20 December Term, 1940) *537 and also charged in two counts with arson and burning a building to defraud the insurer. They were all tried together as the alleged offenses had their origin in one fire and were convicted as indicted. James De Petro and Anthony Montonaro were given prison sentences and thereafter they took appeals. Verna De Petro was given a suspended sentence.

In view of the questions raised in these appeals it will be necessary to state in some detail the facts. On the night of July 5, 1940, a frame dwelling house owned by James and Verna De Petro, located in the Borough of Barnesboro, Cambria County, was totally destroyed by fire. James De Petro was in attendance at a firemen’s convention held in Punxsutawney when the fire occurred, and his five children, ranging in age from 9 to 14 years, were also absent from home. There is some conflict as to what transpired in the house just before the fire. Montonaro testified that he had left his home, which was in the neighborhood of the De Petro home, to look for his young daughter; that as he passed the De Petro house he saw through the window what appeared to be a flame. He ran around to the back porch, attempted to open the rear door, which did not yield, and then he “hit it” with his shoulder and fell to the floor when the door opened suddenly. The flames immediately burst out and enveloped him. At that moment some unidentified person ran past him and with difficulty he got out of the house, but not before he was very badly burned over his back, face, and arms.

Officer McAllister said that Montonaro told him that he and Mrs. De Petro had been playing cards until about 10 o’clock when he went to the kitchen to get a drink and while there something exploded and that he did not remember thereafter whether he walked, or was blown out, of the house. When his attention was called to those statements they were denied.

County detective Cowan said that Mrs. De Petro at *538 the hospital the next morning told him that the defendant, Montonaro, and she were in the house playing cards at the time of the fire; that Montonaro went to the kitchen and some 5 or 10 minutes thereafter there was an explosion; that he was blown from the kitchen into the dining room where she was. She denied making those statements.

She testified that she was lying down upstairs and heard a noise. She then arose came downstairs, and “I stood in the hall and the flames was coming out of there something awful, and I ran down to the .head of the stairs, and’ that part was all on fire. I kept right on going sideways. I got into the dining room, and kitchen, and when I got to the kitchen as far as the door, I couldn’t go further, and I made a grab for the door knob and I just didn’t have the power; I was too weak to open the door. I stood there in a daze, or whatever it was, I don’t know, and then the door flew open and I got the air.”

Admittedly Mrs. De Petro and Montonaro were badly burned and were found wandering in the alley in the. rear of the De Petro house immediately after the breaking out of the fire. They were taken to the hospital where they had to remain a number of weeks.

Some of the neighbors in describing the fire said they heard a noise like a “bump” and others said an explosion occurred in the house, followed by a burst of flames all over the building; that the flames were of a bluish white color, very hot, and accompanied by a roaring noise, indicating the presence of inflammables. When Mrs. De Petro was being taken to the hospital in an automobile she kicked off her shoes and a number of witnesses testified that these shoes smelled of gasoline that night. A chemist testified that shortly after the fire he discovered traces of gasoline on the shoes. He explained the tendency of gasoline vapors to explode and when that occurs it is followed by a hot, fast fire with flames of a bluish white nature. This witness *539 also testified that he had examined the coat worn by Mrs. De Petro some days after the fire and found no odor of gasoline on it, which was not unexpected because of the volatility of gasoline, but that a microscopic view of the area burned showed that the top of the fibres were scorched due to a quick flame, which did not burn deeper than the exposed fibres; that it was a different result than would have followed an ordinary burn. A nurse in the hospital, who attended Montonaro the night of the fire, said she smelled gasoline on his clothes. There was evidence also that among the ruins were found two 5 gallon tin cans, which were thoroughly burned both inside and out. De Petro attempted to account for the presence of the cans by stating that they had been used for alcohol for his truck during the previous winter. There was no evidence of any fire having been in the house on this warm summer evening. Nor was any explanation given of the origin of the fire upon the part of the defendants.

The Borough of Barnesboro maintains two pieces of fire apparatus, one a Seagrave pumper and the other, an older one, is a Stutz pumper. On the night of the fire the more modern pumper was in a firemen’s parade in Punxsutawney. When the alarm was given volunteer firemen responded, taking the Stutz apparatus and an attempt was made to pump the water from a creek nearby to the burning building. For a short period this pumper worked perfectly and then suddenly it ceased to function. It seems that the Stutz machine had been used successfully on July 2, three days previously. The day following the De Petro fire an examination was made of the suction hose of the pump used wherein it was found that there were some pieces of lamp wick of the kind used in oil stoves which prevented the water from being pumped out of the stream. There was a screen with small holes at the intake of the hose and an additional one where connection is made with the pump. These screens prevent foreign matter from being *540 sucked In and interfering with the action of the pump. The commonwealth contends that this foreign matter could not have entered the hose through the screens and was maliciously placed there by someone. The appellants complain of the admission of this evidence, but we think that was a matter for the jury’s consideration.

H. D. Plouse testified that he was in charge of the fire apparatus and that on July 5 De Petro seemed to be keenly interested in the time he was going to Punxsutawney, the truck he was taking, the route he intended to follow each way, and the length of time he would be absent from Barnesboro; that De Petro talked with him at least four times that day and oh each occasion he persistently repeated in substance these inquiries. He told De Petro that he would be leaving about 6 o’clock and that he intended to take the Seagrave truck. De Petro denied having the conversations testified to by Plouse. He said he left his home about 5:30 p. m. that day, went to Punxsutawney, and did not get home until after his house had been consumed by fire. '

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Bluebook (online)
36 A.2d 513, 154 Pa. Super. 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-de-petro-pasuperct-1943.