Commonwealth v. Hackett

307 A.2d 334, 225 Pa. Super. 22, 1973 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1476
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 14, 1973
DocketAppeals, 522 and 523
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 307 A.2d 334 (Commonwealth v. Hackett) 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. Hackett, 307 A.2d 334, 225 Pa. Super. 22, 1973 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1476 (Pa. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

Opinion by

Hoffman, J.,

This is an appeal from a judgment of sentence of possession of heroin and operating an automobile under the influence of a narcotic drug. Appellant contends that the trial court erred in excluding exculpatory evidence during the trial.

On November 13, 1971, at approximately 12:30 a.m., police found appellant unconscious at the wheel of his automobile. The motor was running, the headlights on, and the vehicle’s wheels partially on the sidewalk. Officer McCallion of the Lansdale Police observed an empty vial, a tourniquet and an empty syringe with fresh blood on the car’s front seat. Appellant was aroused and taken to the North Penn Hospital by the police for a suspected drug overdose. From there, police took appellant to the station, where upon request appellant stripped himself and was examined. No needle marks were found on his body. Appellant also gave a urine sample to the police. Chemical analysis of the urine established the presence of heroin.

At the time of trial, appellant offered the defense that he had been involuntarily drugged. He testified that at about 9:00 p.m., at a gas station where he was working, he consumed a,n unfinished soda, which had been left by one Dennis Keyser. Appellant said that after closing time, he drove to visit his mother and then proceeded to his sister’s home in Phoenixville when he passed out behind the wheel. He denied injecting himself, and maintained that the soda contained the heroin which he had orally consumed, ignorant of its contents.

*24 Appellant sought to have Dennis Keyser testify as a defense witness. The trial judge conducted an in camera Greene hearing, 1 at which he ascertained that Key-ser would refuse to answer all questions on the basis of the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. As a result of this hearing, the trial judge refused to permit appellant to call Keyser to the stand. 2

The trial judge further refused to allow into evidence oral and written statements made by Keyser, which if believed, would have exculpated defendant entirely. Likewise, the trial judge refused to allow defense counsel to question Detectives Yance and Kulp about the significance of the lack of needle marks on the body of a suspected drug user. It is on the basis of these evidentiary rulings that appellant appeals his conviction. 3

During the examination of Detective Yance, defense counsel asked if needle marks are easily found and identified on a person recently injected. Yance was then “Chief of Narcotics for the County Detectives.” He had an extensive background in drug arrests and testified that he had conducted numerous physical examinations of drug offenders. The Commonwealth objected to the question propounded by defense counsel. The trial judge sustained the objection and stated that he would not permit testimony “as to the general fact” that drug addicts, as a class, have visible needle marks on their bodies since “it was not about the defendant nor was the issue relevant.”

*25 As defendant’s defense was that he had involuntarily consumed heroin orally, and because the paraphernalia found at the scene indicated drug injection, the issue of needle marks was quite relevant. If appellant’s version were true, the presence of drug paraphernalia would be evidence that appellant had been “framed”. Certainly, had the answer to the question posed to Detective Yance been in the affirmative, the fact that no needle marks were found on defendant’s body would be highly relevant.

The extent of Keyser’s role in bringing about appellant’s drugged condition was critical to appellant’s defense. Defense counsel made an offer of proof by way of oral and written statements made by Keyser to support appellant’s defense. Counsel sought to call defendant’s former private counsel, James J. McNamee, Esquire, who would have testified that Keyser had made an oral statement admitting to the fact that he had “fixed” appellant by putting heroin in the soda bottle. Appellant also sought to introduce a signed written statement made by Keyser which also described the circumstances of the heroin, consumption and the motive for “fixing” appellant.

The trial judge refused both the admission of the written statements and the testimony of McNamee concerning oral admissions made to him by Keyser. The trial judge reasoned that such evidence was hearsay. In Ms opinion, Judge Smilue stated: “Unless they [the statements] fall within an exception to the hearsay rule, they are inadmissible. Since Keyser was present at trial but refused to testify, it would be reversible error to permit his statements, supposedly made to defense counsel or by letter to defendant, in evidence.”

The declaration against Interest exception to the hearsay rule has generally been limited to declarations against the declarant’s pecuniary or propietary interest and not his penal interest. See Donnelly v. U. S., 228 *26 U.S. 243 (1913); Wigmore, Evidence §1476, p. 281 (3d ed. 1940); 162 A.L.R. 437, and cases cited therein.

New cases in Pennsylvania have ever referred directly to the doctrine. In Commonwealth v. Antonini, 165 Pa. Superior Ct. 501, 69 A. 2d 436 (1949), our Court held that a written statement executed by decedent prior to his death which inculpated himself and the defendant in a criminal act could not be admitted. In the recent cases of Commonwealth v. Honigman, 216 Pa. Superior Ct. 303, 264 A. 2d 424 (1970) and Commonwealth v. Somershoe, 217 Pa. Superior Ct. 156, 269 A. 2d 149 (1970), this Court held that even if the evidence is exculpatory, it would not be admissible.

The dissenting opinion in Honigman, supra, pointed out the distinction between declarations that inculpate and those which exculpate a defendant. The Court in Antonini, at 507, stated: “Professor Wigmore severely criticises the majority opinion [Donnelly v. U. S., supra], and states that the Holmes dissent represents what the law is or ought to be, i.e., that a declaration against penal interest only is admissible. But neither Justice Holmes in his dissent, nor Professor Wigmore in his treatise, ever contended that such declaration against interest, to wit, a confession, by a party deceased, could be received in evidence to inculpate another.” (Emphasis in original.)

The dissenting opinion to Honigman, supra, called for the admission of declarations against penal interests, where the statements exculpate the defendant. In tracing the law in other jurisdictions, the opinion stated at 308-309:

“ ‘The rule in New York should be modernized to hold that an admission against penal interest will be received where material and where the person making the admission is dead, beyond the jurisdiction and thus not available; or where he is in court and refuses to testify as to the fact of the admission on the ground of *27 self-incrimination.’ People v.

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Bluebook (online)
307 A.2d 334, 225 Pa. Super. 22, 1973 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-hackett-pasuperct-1973.