Commonwealth v. Dorazio

74 A.2d 125, 365 Pa. 291, 1950 Pa. LEXIS 457
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 26, 1950
DocketAppeal, 184
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 74 A.2d 125 (Commonwealth v. Dorazio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme 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. Dorazio, 74 A.2d 125, 365 Pa. 291, 1950 Pa. LEXIS 457 (Pa. 1950).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Allen M. Stearne,

The appellant, Gustav Dorazio, appeals from the judgment and sentence entered against him on a verdict of guilty of murder in the second degree.

On Friday, January 7,1949, the appellant and Albert Blomeyer, the deceased, were both employes of 0. Schmidt & Sons Brewing Company of Philadelphia, employed in different departments. They were members of rival unions, each of which sought to represent the brewery workers. The deceased and two other employes had for some time been circulating a petition seeking an election supervised by the National Labor Relations Board to determine union representation.

At about 9:30 A.M. on the day of the killing the defendant complained to the vice-president of the company that a petition was being circulated by a man named Hornung, that if Hornung were not stopped he (defendant) “was going to let [him] have it.” At about 10 A.M. the defendant approached Hornung and threatened him “to lay off taking up this petition, to stop taking it around, and if [he] didn’t [defendant] was going *293 to send [Mm] home in an ambulance.” Defendant also spoke to another employe, Keehfus, at about 10 A.M., saying, “I just told Hornung I am going to send him to the hospital. You better watch out, I am going to send you home in an undertaker’s wagon.”

From the Commonwealth’s evidence the jury could have found the following facts: shortly after 3 P.M. the victim and several other men went to the Sternewirt, a brewery tap room, where beer is gratuitously served to employes and guests of the brewery. The victim had several beers. He also was securing signatures to a union petition. Morton L. Smith, the business agent for the union to which defendant belonged, was also in the Sternewirt at this time. At about 4 P.M. the victim left the plant in the company of two men, Witt and Am-berg, employed in the same department (the fermenting room of the brewhouse) and he was walking between them. As the victim and his companions were walking on a street adjacent to the brewery the defendant was standing alone behind a pillar near the brewery plant. The defendant came from behind the pillar and followed behind the three men. He overtook them and “started swinging” at the victim and struck him. The victim turned, apparently recognized the defendant, and said, “It’s Gus Dorazio.” In turn the victim started to run down Edward Street back towards the brewery. The defendant followed in close pursuit. As the victim ran up the street he passed Smith, the rival union’s agent, who put his hand out, whether or not to stop the victim is not clear. The victim ran into a brewery building known as the brew house; he ran up a flight of steps and passed through a door into a corridor. The Commonwealth’s witness stated that neither Blomeyer nor defendant fell as they went up the steps and passed through the door immediately fronting on these steps. Immediately thereafter eye-witnesses observed the victim on the floor of the corridor either “in a crouched *294 position” or lying on his left side; the defendant was .standing over Blomeyer punching him, repeatedly in and about the head and body. Witt, one of the men who had been walking with the deceased had followed the flight and sought to pull defendant away from the victim. The defendant beat Witt, knocked him down several times and struck him until and after he said he had enough. The assistant brew master ran up to stop the defendant- and the defendant struck him in the stomach and knocked him across the corridor, down on one knee, momentarily helpless and breathless. Two witnesses testified that defendant struck the victim, while he lay prostrate, at . least ten to fifteen times. After this incident the defendant ran or was pursued a short distance by an increasing crowd of brewery employes to a delicatessen store on Second Street, where he was apprehended and taken into custody by the police.

The victim washed, was taken to a neighborhood hospital and was discharged after a brief course of treatment. The victim became ill a short time later that day, passed into semi-conscious state, was removed from his home to a hospital where he died about 9 P.M. that evening.

; The coroner’s physician testified that death was “a result of hemorrhage with pressure against the brain resulting from a fracture of the skull”; that there was “a widespread comminuted fracture throughout the right temporal and parietal bones” with massive epidural hemorrhage pressing in and distorting the right anterior lateral surface of the brain. Under cross-examination the doctor testified that there were various lines of fracture as though the head either hit or was hit by a hard object. He stated “it is seldom that a fist — a blow of a fist can cause a comminuted fracture like that, but I would not exclude that possibility.” The doctor after looking at the defendant’s hands testified he could have caused the injuries; he further stated that he did not *295 believe that tbe kind of fracture deceased sustained could result from tripping and striking bis head on a door, that it was a smash fracture. The doctor stated that it was bis opinion that tbe injuries were tbe result of one powerful blow.

Tbe defendant’s version of this occurrence was that unnamed persons bad been threatening bim and calling bim names; that on tbe night before tbe incident be received an anonymous threatening phone call. The defendant denied having made threats against anyone. He testified that be knew tbe three men were connected with tbe O. I. O. because be bad seen them around tbe plant; that be bad stopped tbe three men to ask them about tbe phone call; that be merely touched tbe victim on tbe shoulder to start a conversation and tbe victim punched bim and ran. He stated that be did chase tbe victim into tbe corridor but what took place there was a general fight in which be was only defending himself. Tbe defendant contends that tbe victim’s bead injury resulted not from any alleged beating but from a fall either at tbe top of tbe steps or in tbe corridor. Defendant testified, “As be was starting to go up the steps, be was stumbling up tbe steps, climbing up tbe steps and he squashed bis bead in tbe door, and as be squashed bis bead' against one door, tbe other door opened.” After tbe fall, defendant said be was picking tbe victim up when tbe victim and Witt started to punch bim and be fought back.

Tbe defendant bad been a professional heavyweight prize fighter for about 8 years prior to 1944; be fought a “great many” times and bad been a contender for tbe heavyweight championship of tbe world in 1941, being defeated by tbe then champion, Joe Louis. Defendant was about five feet nine inches tall and weighed about 190 pounds.

In reviewing a record of conviction for murder under tbe Act of February 15, 1870, P. L. 15, section 1, 19 PS *296 1186, it is our duty to determine whether the degree or elements of murder in the specified degree are present; whether there is sufficient evidence from which the jury could find beyond a reasonable doubt that the degree of murder was committed by the accused: Commonwealth v. Karmendi, 328 Pa. 321, 323-4, 195 A. 62. In the determination of such question we ordinarily confine ourselves to the commonwealth’s evidence:

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Bluebook (online)
74 A.2d 125, 365 Pa. 291, 1950 Pa. LEXIS 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-dorazio-pa-1950.