Commonwealth v. Goetz

195 A. 144, 129 Pa. Super. 22, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 293
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 4, 1937
DocketAppeal, 262
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 195 A. 144 (Commonwealth v. Goetz) 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. Goetz, 195 A. 144, 129 Pa. Super. 22, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 293 (Pa. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

On September 18, 1936, shortly before eleven o’clock at night, John Keinhold, a druggist in the City of Erie, closed his store, got his car — a small delivery truck — , and started to drive to his home. When he had gone about a mile he stopped for a traffic light, and two men, armed with revolvers, held him up, took possession of his car, drove him into the country, robbed him of his money and of a diamond ring and then drove him back to the city, where, about midnight, they released him. When Keinhold arrived home, about half an hour later, he immediately called the police and described the two robbers. The following afternoon the police searched certain premises at 814 Parade Street, where Oscar Goetz, one of the men suspected by them, in consequence of Keinhold’s description, was accustomed to visit, but found nothing connected with the crime. They took back with them, however, the woman who occupied the apartment, and placed her in a cell in jail. The following morning the police again visited 814 Parade Street, taking with them the woman occupant. They found there, sleeping in one bed, Oscar Goetz and John Calabrese, two men who fitted generally with the descriptions of the robbers given by Keinhold, and two revolvers which were not there when they searched the premises the afternoon before. These men were arrested and taken to the police station, where, the same morning, they were identified by Keinhold as the robbers, out of a line of nine men. They were jointly indicted, but on demand of Calabrese they were tried separately, and each was convicted. At their respective trials they denied their guilt, denied being together on the night of September 18, 1936, and offered separate alibis as to their whereabouts that night. Shortly after *25 they were sentenced and appeals had been taken to this Court, certain circumstances were brought to the attention of Calabrese’s attorney and the district attorney, which caused the latter some concern as to whether Reinhold had not been mistaken in his identification of Calabrese and had, perhaps, confused him with another associate of Goetz who greatly resembled Calabrese. With a commendable appreciation of his duties as an officer of justice, the district attorney joined with counsel for Calabrese in asking this Court to return the record to the court below for further investigation into these matters, in order that a new trial might be granted Calabrese if the court was of the opinion that the interests of justice required it. Accordingly the record in the Calabrese case was returned to the court below where it is still pending. The present appeal is by Goetz from the judgment of sentence following his conviction. He presents three grounds for reversal, which we will consider in order.

(1) He contends that as the record in the Calabrese case was returned to the court below to allow it to consider the evidence discovered and produced since the discharge of the rule for a new trial, tending to support Calabrese’s alibi and refute his identification by Reinhold as one of the robbers, which may result in a reinstatement of the rule and the grant of a new trial, the same course should be followed with Goetz, and a new trial be granted him if one is awarded to Calabrese. We would be impressed with this argument if Goetz and Calabrese had testified to being together on the night of the robbery, but at a different place — that is, had sworn to a joint alibi instead of separate alibis,— for in that event, if Reinhold was mistaken in his identification of one of them it would follow, if they were together that night, that he was mistaken as to both. But this would not follow if they were not together when the robbery occurred. In that case, Reinhold’s mistaken identification of Calabrese — if the court *26 below, on further consideration of the matter, should come to the conclusion that he was mistaken — would have no corresponding effect on the identification of Goetz, which, at the trial, was somewhat stronger than that of Calabrese. Goetz was the robber whom Reinhold identified as first accosting him and faking possession of the driver’s seat in the car, and, at once, he recognized Goetz’s face, even though he did not know his name, as he had seen him in his store several times. Furthermore, there were circumstances tending to weaken the identification of Calabrese which were not present with respect to Goetz. The contention is without merit.

(2) He contends that it was error to permit the revolvers found in the apartment at 814 Parade Street on Sunday morning, September 20, to be received in evidence on the trial. When the police visited this apartment on Sunday morning, they found two revolvers, one under the dresser, or bureau, near the bed, in the room in which Goetz and Calabrese were sleeping and the other in a bag hanging on the wall, “as you come in off the dining room.” The police had searched these rooms the previous afternoon, when looking for the diamond ring, and testified that at that time there was no revolver under the dresser or in the bag hanging on the wall. They had carefully examined both. The woman, who occupied the apartment, was taken to jail by the police on their leaving the place on Saturday afternoon and stayed in a cell there until she was taken back on Sunday morning and Goetz and Calabrese were found sleeping there in one bed. The men who robbed Reinhold were armed with revolvers. It was too dark for him to recognize any distinguishing marks on them, but the finding of two revolvers in these rooms, after their occupancy by Goetz and Calabrese, which were not there the day before, and which could not have been put there by the tenant, who was in jail during the intervening period, was, in the circum *27 stances, relevant evidence, and the revolvers were properly admitted in evidence even though Eeinhold was not able to identify them as the revolvers used by the robbers. See Com. v. Karamarkovic, 218 Pa. 405, 408, 67 A. 650; Com. v. Ross, 266 Pa. 580, 585, 110 A. 327; Com. v. Ronello, 242 Pa. 381, 89 A. 553.

(3) Appellant complains that it was error for the court below to permit Sergeant Scalise to testify as to the description of the robbers given him by Eeinhold when he called up the police and notified them of the robbery, within half an hour after he was released, to wit, two young men, between twenty-one and twenty-five years old, one short, and the other taller; the short one, chunky and having bushy hair, and the tall one, slim with thin light hair. As before stated these descriptions were generally applicable to Goetz and Calabrese, respectively.

On the trial of Goetz, Eeinhold identified him as one of the robbers, picking him out from his place beside his counsel. He also identified Calabrese, picking him out from his seat in the rear of the court room. Goetz's counsel then entered upon a lengthy cross-examination of Eeinhold as to the color of the clothes the robbers wore, the color of their shirts, the color of their neckties, etc., in an endeavor to impeach or discredit the identification. Eeinhold explained that it was dark of Eeinhold as to the color of the clothes the robbers clothes, shirts or neckties, that his attention was directed to their faces, which he saw as they were passing street lights and which he recognized as those of persons he had seen before, although he did not know their names.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 A. 144, 129 Pa. Super. 22, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-goetz-pasuperct-1937.