Commonwealth v. Harter

18 Pa. D. & C.3d 737, 1981 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 458
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Clinton County
DecidedApril 24, 1981
Docketno. 20-80
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Pa. D. & C.3d 737 (Commonwealth v. Harter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Clinton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Harter, 18 Pa. D. & C.3d 737, 1981 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 458 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1981).

Opinion

BROWN, P.J.,

Defendant was found guilty by a jury of murder of the first degree. His trial began on February 2, 1981 with jury selection and concluded on Friday, February 6, 1981 with the return of the aforesaid verdict. Defendant, in addition to his normal post-verdict motions, has filed a request for a new trial based on alleged outside improper influences to which he contends the jury was exposed.

Defendant’s first complaint is that at its evening meal on February 5, 1981 the jury was exposed to various items of conversation which were prejudicial to him. The jury had been sequestered [738]*738throughout the trial at the Fallon Hotel located approximately one and one-half blocks from the courthouse. The procedure arranged by the court for the jury to eat involved the panel’s being fed in a private dining room at the Fallon in the presence of two tipstaves. These two tipstaves, Mr. John Kessinger and Mr. John Barry ate with the jury in the private dining room; Mr. Kessinger and Mr. Barry also shared a room at the Fallon where they could monitor and control access to the panel during the evening when its members were in their rooms. During their sequestration, the jurors were denied total access to the community, including newspapers, television, radio, and their families.

At the evening meal in question, Mr. Kessinger was seated at the end of a long rectangular table at which all the jurors and alternates were seated. Mr. Barry was seated at the opposite end of the table. The remaining 12 jurors and four alternates were seated along both sides of the table. Immediately to Mr. Kessinger’s left was a juror, Thomas Shaffer. Next to Mr. Shaffer was either Ann Miller a juror, or possibly another male juror which would have meant that Ann Miller then was seated as the third person on Mr. Kessinger’s left. Immediately to Mr. Kessinger’s right was a juror, Joseph Dicello. The next person to his right was either an alternate juror, Jayne Irwin, or a juror, Guy Confer. Again, the jurors are somewhat uncertain as to whether Mrs. Irwin was seated as the second or third person from Mr. Kessinger’s right. In any event it would appear that Mrs. Irwin, an alternate juror, and Mrs. Miller, a juror, were seated directly across from one another so that either they were both seated as the second persons on both sides of Mr. Kessinger or as the third persons on both sides of Mr. Kessinger.

[739]*739During the course of the evening meal it is defendant’s contention that Mr. Kessinger improperly said something to the effect that defendant had a prior record or was well known at the courthouse. This allegation is based on the testimony of the alternate juror, Mrs. Irwin, who stated that during the meal Mr. Kessinger said “Everybody over there knows him.” Also, Mrs. Miller testified that Mr. Kessinger said that defendant was well known in the courts. Mr. Kessinger denies any such statements and likewise Mr. Shaffer and Mr. Dicello denied that any such conversations were had during the course of that meal. Obviously the court is in a perplexing situation where there is considerable disparity between the jurors’ testimony as to what was said and what was recalled. After a careful and extensive consideration of the testimony, the court concludes that the evidence does not support a finding that Mr. Kessinger made any statements during the meal alluding to defendant, his having a prior record, or his being well known at the courthouse.

In analyzing Mrs. Irwin’s testimony, her recollection that Mr. Kessinger said that everybody over there knows him, even if accepted as accurate, has been given considerably more meaning than the statement itself would allow. The assumption that the “him” in that statement referred to defendant has no justification in any of the conversation that preceded or followed it. Both Mrs. Miller and Mrs. Irwin appear sure that defendant’s name was not mentioned, yet they feel they were justified in concluding that defendant was being referred to. While the court does not doubt their sincerity in this assumption, there is no basis on which to conclude that the assumption was justified from what was said at the table. The court has to rely on facts and [740]*740cannot just simply conclude that such a reference occurred based upon the subjective feelings of either Mrs. Irwin or Mrs. Miller. It would further appear that Mrs. Irwin erroneously assumed that Mr. Kessinger in the alleged statement was referring to the courthouse and also erroneously assumed that the fact that someone may have been known at the courthouse would necessarily imply that the person had a criminal record.

Mrs. Miller’s recollection is similar to that of Mrs. Irwin except that she recalls the statement being made that he was well known in the court. She had no recollection of the defendant’s name coming up in the course of the conversation and is really unable to say why she concluded that she felt that defendant was being discussed in this context. Again as with Mrs. Irwin, the court believes that Mrs. Miller is sincere in her belief that she felt that defendant was being discussed and in circumstances which suggested that he had a prior criminal record. However, as with Mrs. Irwin, the court cannot find that such a belief was justified.

In addition to the alleged conversation regarding defendant, defendant also contends that there was a prejudicial conversation as to a murder trial held in November, 1980 involving a defendant by the name of Merrifield. Both Mrs. Miller andMrs. Irwin recall a discussion initiated by Mr. Kessinger to the effect that Mrs. Merrifield would never serve a day in her life and some other comments regarding Mrs. Merrifield being on bail at the present time. Again Mr. Kessinger denies any such statements. Mr. Shaffer and Mr. Dicello also deny such a conversation. Mr. Shaffer testified that a discussion of the Merrifield case occurred when one of the jurors asked Mr. Kessinger if he had ever been locked up with a jury [741]*741before and Mr. Kessinger indicated that he had been locked up and in sequestration during the Merrifield trial.

Mr. Shaffer further testified that during the course of the meal one of the other jurors questioned why prior convictions or arrests of a defendant were not used at trial to which Mr. Shaffer responded that this would constitute a violation of a defendant’s constitutional rights and would probably be a basis for a retrial. Mr. Shaffer speculated that this subject came up because of the testimony immediately prior to the evening meal when upon questioning by defense counsel, Roy Glossner, a corrections officer at the Clinton County Jail had testified that on his seeing defendant on the day of his arrest he said hello to defendant and inquired if he was here again from which it may have been inferred that defendant had been in jail prior to the particular incident. According to Mr. Shaffer’s testimony Mr. Kessinger did not participate in this part of the conversation which occurred between him and the other juror.

At the beginning of the trial, the jury panel was instructed by the court that any attempts to discuss the case or defendant with them were to be immediately brought to the court’s attention. Unfortunately, neither Mrs. Miller nor Mrs. Irwin attempted to do this, so that the court was prevented from doing anything to forestall the problem now at hand.

Following the jurors’ evening meal on the night in question, court was reconvened and defendant took the stand to testify.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Santiago
318 A.2d 737 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1974)
Commonwealth v. Sero
387 A.2d 63 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1978)
Commonwealth v. Stewart
295 A.2d 303 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1972)
Welshire v. Bruaw
200 A. 67 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Pa. D. & C.3d 737, 1981 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-harter-pactcomplclinto-1981.