Commonwealth v. Giacobbe

19 A.2d 71, 341 Pa. 187, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 405
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 21, 1941
DocketAppeals, 83-84
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 19 A.2d 71 (Commonwealth v. Giacobbe) 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. Giacobbe, 19 A.2d 71, 341 Pa. 187, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 405 (Pa. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Stern,

A multiplicity of assignments of error is usually an indication of weakness. 1 Here they are thirty-one in number, nearly all of them either trivial or so ruled *189 by previous decisions as to be removed from the realm of the debatable. The one important question is whether the evidence, which ivas wholly circumstantial, is sufficient to support the verdict, — that of guilty of murder in the first degree with penalty of life imprisonment,— having regard to the well-established principle that “when a charge of crime is sought to be sustained by circumstantial evidence, the hypothesis of guilt should flow from the facts and circumstances proved, and be consistent with them all. The evidence must be such as to exclude to a moral certainty every hypothesis but that of guilt of the offense imputed; the facts and circumstances must not only be consistent with and point to the guilt of the accused, but they must be inconsistent with his innocence”: Commonwealth v. Benz, 318 Pa. 465, 472, 178 A. 390, 392; Commonwealth v. Bardolph, 326 Pa. 513, 521, 192 A. 916, 920; Commonwealth v. Gabriel, 130 Pa. Superior Ct. 191, 195, 196 A. 866, 868.

According to the Commonwealth’s case, defendant was for twenty-five years the wife of Antonio Giacobbe, but there were admissions on her part that her married life was not a happy one. Giacobbe died on April 2, 1933. His body was exhumed in May, 1939, and some of the vital organs were extracted and turned over to the city chemists, Drs. Burke and Lampert, for analysis. Dr. Burke testified as to large quantities of arsenic which he found in the liver, stomach and kidneys, and which, he declared, were “far in excess of the usual amount of arsenic found in poisoning cases.” Dr. Wads-worth, the coroner’s physician, stated that, on the basis of Dr. Burke’s report, it was his opinion that Giacobbe had died of arsenic poisoning. There was evidence that no arsenic had been prescribed for the deceased by any physician, and also that the embalming fluid used on his body contained none.

A number of industrial insurance policies in varying amounts had been placed on Giacobbe’s life, in nearly all of which defendant was named as beneficiary, and *190 after Ms death she collected on them a total of approximately $3,800, including the proceeds of a policy of the John B. Stetson Company where the deceased had been employed. Not only did defendant participate largely in the negotiation of these policies, but some of them were taken out on her own initiative. On one occasion she requested the insurance agent not to mention the matter to her husband because he “didn’t care much for insurance and I [the agent] would spoil it if I spoke to him about it.” This agent prepared the application and asked Giacobbe to sign it without informing him as to its nature or even showing it to him, and, upon Giacobbe saying that he could not write, the agent himself signed Giacobbe’s name and made a cross-mark. Later defendant asked this same agent “if she could get more insurance on her husband,” and another policy was taken out, the application again being executed by the agent by making a cross-mark and signing Giacobbe’s name. Two policies were also written on Giaeobbe’s life at the request of one Paul Petrillo upon his false representation that Giacobbe was his uncle; they named Petrillo as beneficiary, the applications being executed by the agents signing Giacobbe’s name. Petrillo, who conducted a tailor shop in the immediate neighborhood of the Giacobbe home, was an intimate friend of defendant; she admitted that she had meretricious relations with him both before and after her husband’s death.

In a signed statement made by defendant in the office of the district attorney, where she had been surrendered by her attorney for questioning, she stated that about two months before her husband died Petrillo had told her he was going to “fix” him, and would marry her upon the death of his wife, who was an invalid. She admitted that by “fix” she understood he was going to kill her husband, but at the trial testified' that she “thought it was a joke.”

Giacobbe suffered from diabetes for many years, but on or about March 23, 1933, he became acutely ill. It *191 was not until a week later, on March 30th, that defendant sent for a physician, Dr. Pescatore. The doctor found Giacobbe in great distress, gave him a hypodermic of morphine “to quiet him down,” and told defendant he thought he ought to come back the following day because her husband “looked very ill.” She told him not to return, that she would call him if she thought it necessary. Three days later, on April 2nd, he and several other physicians received emergency calls, but upon arrival at the house they found Giacobbe dead. As Doctor Pescatore emerged from the room where Giacobbe lay, defendant took him aside and asked for a death certificate. On that very night she notified one of the insurance agents of her husband’s death, and shortly thereafter the necessary proofs were executed and the insurance money was collected by her and Petrillo on their respective policies. Although by that time, at least, she had knowledge that Petrillo, pretending to be a nephew, had placed insurance on her husband’s life, she made no objection or comment.

A couple of weeks after Giacobbe’s death Petrillo brought to defendant’s house one Morris Bolber, a self-proclaimed faith healer who professed having the power to drive away evil spirits. Defendant told Bolber that she could not sleep at nights as she always saw her husband “coming after her.” Bolber said: “He is not coming ; he is dead. The only thing, your conscience bothers you and therefore you think he is coming,” to which she made no reply.

Defendant testified that the first time Petrillo told her he had killed her husband was about two months after Giacobbe’s death. When asked as to the means he had employed she said she “thought he must have given him something.”

Before defendant was formally arrested or charged with murder, but after being interrogated in the office of the district attorney, she was granted, at her request, permission to visit her home. While there she twice *192 tried to commit suicide, once by swallowing creolin and immediately thereafter by trying to shoot herself.

Although some of the testimony hereinbefore summarized was, of course, explained or denied by defendant, the evidence in its totality was such as to prevent the withdrawal of the case from the jury. Facts which individually are not of controlling importance may, when cumulated, lead to probable or even well-nigh inevitable inferences, since each incriminating fact brings not merely additional but often multiple weight to the conclusion which it tends to establish. Here we have a variety of motives for the murder arising from defendant’s lack of affection for her husband, her relations with Petrillo, his desire to marry her, and the insurance which they carried on Giacobbe’s life. We have also the element of constant opportunity for the commission of the crime by Petrillo and its facilitation by defendant. We have Petrillo’s announced intention of “fixing” Giacobbe and his subsequent statement that he had carried out that intention.

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Bluebook (online)
19 A.2d 71, 341 Pa. 187, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-giacobbe-pa-1941.