Commonwealth v. DiFilippo

109 A.2d 224, 176 Pa. Super. 608, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 486
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 15, 1954
DocketAppeal, No. 266
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 109 A.2d 224 (Commonwealth v. DiFilippo) 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. DiFilippo, 109 A.2d 224, 176 Pa. Super. 608, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 486 (Pa. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

Opinion by

Wright, J.,

Armand DiFilippo was tried in the Court of Oyer and Terminer of Philadelphia County before Judge Sloane and a jury on bill number 159 May Sessions 1953, charging assault and battery, aggravated assault [610]*610and battery, assault and battery with intent to ravish, and rape; on bill number 160 charging contributing to the delinquency of a minor; and on bill number 161 charging incestuous fornication. The jury found DiFilippo guilty on all three bills. His motion for new trial was denied, and sentence was imposed. This appeal raises six questions, of which we deem it necessary to consider only one, since we are in agreement with appellant’s principal contention, namely, that the jury was improperly impaneled.

Twelve jurors were called and seated in the box before any challenging began. Then appellant’s counsel peremptorily challenged five of these original twelve jurors, and the District Attorney challenged none. As additional jurors were called, appellant’s counsel continued to exercise his right of challenge, without any corresponding exercise on the part of the Commonwealth, until he had exhausted his quota of twenty peremptory challenges. It became apparent that, as a matter of tactics, the defense had succeeded in securing an all male jury. The District Attorney was then permitted by the trial judge to exercise his right of challenge, and proceeded therewith until he had exhausted his original quota of twenty peremptory challenges. After a conference in chambers, the trial judge placed the following statement on the record:

“It is agreed that the defense counsel exercised twenty peremptory challenges before the Commonwealth exercised any of its challenges. Since this is a case involving incestuous statutory rape on a girl that rvill be shown to be under sixteen years of age by her uncle, it appears in chambers beyond the hearing of the panel that defense counsel stated that he did not want any women on the jury, that he is going to exercise his peremptory challenges until he exhausted all the women jurors as jurors.
[611]*611“The assistant district attorney, in consultation with Joseph Alessandroni, representing the family of the prosecutrix, decided that they thought there ought to be some women on the jury and began exercising their challenges. That is the long and short of it, and I have permitted the Commonwealth to do it.
“This was done over the objection of defense counsel, who raised the query whether the Commonwealth has a right to do it when the assistant district attorney did not challenge alternately with defense counsel when he had the opportunity.
“I have allowed the assistant district attorney to do it, first, because I know of no statutory objection to it, and, also, because I thought it was only fair to the Commonwealth to overcome whatever there is in the thought that there should be no women in the jury box”.

There is no constitutional right to any peremptory challenges. The right is legislative in origin: Commonwealth v. Antico, 146 Pa. Superior Ct. 293, 22 A. 2d 204. Our statute on the subject is the Act of March 6, 1901, P. L. 16, as amended, 19 PS §811, which provides as follows: “From and after the passage of this act it shall be unlawful for any district attorney of any county in this commonwealth, in empaneling any jury for the trial in any court of any indictment charging a felony or a misdemeanor, to stand aside jurors, but in every such case the commonwealth and the defendant shall, in addition to the challenges for cause now allowed, be entitled to peremptory challenges as follows: ... in the trial of misdemeanors and felonies, triable exclusively in the courts of oyer and terminer and general jail delivery, the commonwealth and the defendant shall each be entitled to twenty peremptory challenges; all of which challenges shall be made and assigned by the commonwealth and the defendant re-[612]*612speetively when the juror is called: . . . (Italics supplied)”. In Commonwealth v. Conroy, 207 Pa. 212, 56 A. 427, Mr. Justice Dean pointed out that the word “respectively” in the Act of 1901 is synonymous with the word “alternately” in the Act of 1860,1 saying: “The act of 1901 did not repeal the act of 1860, nor was it intended to have that effect; the latter act is a supplement to the former. Its purpose was to take from the commonwealth the right to stand aside jurors until the panel was exhausted, and put the commonwealth upon an equality with defendant as to the number of peremptory challenges”.

There are, as a matter of actual practice, two methods of impaneling a jury. In one, used principally in homicide cases, jurors are called singly, and the right of peremptory challenge must be exercised as the juror is called. If not so exercised, the right is deemed to be waived, and the juror in question may not be thereafter challenged. In the words of President Judge Rice in Commonwealth v. Brown, 23 Pa. Superior Ct. 470:

“As has been said repeatedly the right of peremptory challenge is not of itself a right to select but a right to reject jurors. . . . The defendants’ counsel contended that the right may be exercised at any time up to the moment the impaneled jury is sworn . . . The principal object aimed at in the act of 1901 was not merely the abolition of this practice of standing aside’ [613]*613jurors, but the extinguishment of the right which lay back of it, and the establishment of a, rule which would prevent its exercise in the future in that or any other mode. The first part of the general purpose was accomplished by declaring that it shall be unlawful for any district attorney ‘to stand aside jurors,’ and the second and most important part, by declaring, ‘all of which challenges shall be made and assigned by the commonwealth and the defendant respectively when the juror is called’. By this act the commonwealth and the defendant are put on an equality, both as to the number of peremptory challenges, and as to the time when the right to malee them is to be exercised. ... If an opportunity is afforded to exercise the right of peremptory challenge, and all that it implies, when the juror is called and brought face to face with the accused in the presence of the court, and the right is not exercised, it must be deemed to be waived; it cannot be held in reserve, arbitrarily, until a full jury is impaneled (italics supplied)”. And see Commonwealth v. Evans, 212 Pa. 369, 61 A. 989.

A second method used generally in other criminal cases, whether or not they are triable exclusively in the Court of Oyer and Terminer, is to call jurors in a group. “The trial court, in its opinion overruling the motion for a new trial, held that the practice of examining jurors on their voir dire in homicide, was irregular in other criminal cases; that the regular practice in these cases was to call all the jurors into the box, examine them on their voir dire, and challenge therefrom, allowing challenges for cause where it could be shown to exist, and if not, the challenges to be regulated by the Act of 1901. This, we take it, is the customary practice throughout the Commonwealth”: Commonwealth v. Exler, 61 Pa. Superior Ct. 423. And see Commonwealth v. Deysher, 139 Pa. Superior Ct. [614]*614497, 12 A. 2d. 492.

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Bluebook (online)
109 A.2d 224, 176 Pa. Super. 608, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-difilippo-pasuperct-1954.