Commonwealth v. Heller

87 A.2d 287, 369 Pa. 457, 1952 Pa. LEXIS 285
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 24, 1952
DocketAppeal, 75
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 87 A.2d 287 (Commonwealth v. Heller) 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. Heller, 87 A.2d 287, 369 Pa. 457, 1952 Pa. LEXIS 285 (Pa. 1952).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Horace Stern,

Defendant killed his wife and the jury found him guilty of murder of the first degree with penalty of life imprisonment. He appeals from his conviction. .

The parties had been married for ten years and the wife was thirty years of age. At the trial defendant testified that she was a hypochondriac, extremely nervous, and continually expressing the fear that she would die in her sleep; the result was that she prevented his obtaining adequate rest and peace of mind. At six o’clock on the morning of May 18,1950, leaving his wife still sleeping, he arose, dressed, went downstairs, drank a cup of coffee, and glanced over the morning newspaper. He then went upstairs again after arming himself with a heavy galvanized iron pipe which he had procured in the kitchen, and, standing by her bedside, he bludgeoned the head of his sleeping wife with such force as to crush her skull in two places, causing a hemorrhage of the brain and her immediate death. He felt her pulse and, finding it lifeless, he placed the pipe on the bed, covered his wife’s body with the blankets, washed the blood from his arms and hands, removed his shirt and rolled it up together with his washrag and the pillow ease on which he had slept, all of which were stained with blood, and placed them in the, bathroom; he awakened his children, two boys aged respectively five and eight, helped them dress, took them to the house of his brother, Avent to some taprooms and procured drinks of whiskey, and then proceeded to a police station where’ he told the captain that he had just killed his wife. When asked by one of the detectives as to his reason for committing the crime he said that “maybe” it was something that occurred five or six or seven years ago, but ventured no further explanation. That afternoon he gave the *460 police a written and signed statement in which he detailed all that had occurred immediately prior to and following the killing, but claimed that he had no consciousness of what he was doing from the time he went up to the bedroom until he saw the blood and realized that his wife was dead.

The defense was that of insanity, but there was not a shred of testimony offered to support it other than the defendant’s own assertion that he did not know at the time he killed his wife what he was doing, — that his mind then went blank. There is no evidence in the record of any mental pathology of the defendant prior to the murder. He was employed by the Atlantic Refining Company and had never missed a day there from work. He says that he had occasional headaches, but admits that he never consulted a physician in regard to them. He produced several witnesses — relatives, friends, fellow workmen — none of whom testified to having noticed anything of importance that was abnormal in either his speech or his conduct,; the most that those who worked with him said was that he sometimes seemed to be tired in the mornings, as though he had not slept well the night before. A psychiatrist, who testified on his behalf and who had examined him on November 1, six months after the murder, said that he found him in a state of “extreme depression and marked anxiety,” — a far cry from a diagnosis of insanity as of that time. He expressed the belief that defendant “became acutely mentally ill,” that he was “in marked depression” at the time he killed his wife, basing this impression on what defendant had told him and “what he learned from others.” 1 However, *461 when asked directly: “Did he know the difference between right and wrong on November 1?” the witness answered: “I don’t know.” When asked: “Did.he know the difference between right and wrong on May 18?” his reply was: “I don’t know.” When asked: “Did he know the nature and quality of his acts on May 18?” his reply was: “I don’t know if he did or not.” The most that this expert finally ventured to say on defendant’s behalf was: “I think he was in such disturbed state of mind that he was not entirely non compos mentis but certainly he didn’t know what he was doing.” Asked, finally, whether he had “cause to doubt whether defendant knew the difference between right and wrong on May 18th, 1950”, he replied: “From what I gathered, I wouldn’t think that he would when he had no sleep and had all this piled on his head.” All this testimony, viewed as an entirety, falls considerably short of an unambiguous opinion that at the time of the-homicide defendant did not understand the nature and quality of his act or the difference between right and wrong, which is the legal test for a finding of insanity that would excuse the perpetrator of a homicide from criminal responsibility.

One of defendant’s complaints on appeal is that the trial judge, in referring to the testimony of this psychiatrist, charged the jury that “An opinion is only an opinion. It creates no fact. . . . Because of this, opinion evidence is considered of a low grade and not entitled-to much weight against positive testimony of actual facts.” This characterization of opinion evidence was stated in exactly those same words in Ray v. Phil *462 adelphia, 344 Pa. 439, 441, 25 A. 2d 145,146; they were approved in Pochron Will, 367 Pa. 306, 311, 80 A. 2d 794, 796, 797, as having been “well expressed”, and were repeated in McCormick Transportation Co. v. Philadelphia Transportation Co., 161 Pa. Superior Ct. 533, 538, 539, 55 A. 2d 771, 774; see also Wood Appeal, 167 Pa. Superior Ct. 92, 100, 74 A. 2d 538, 542. 2 If, therefore, it be true, as obviously it is, that “Opinion evidence is not entitled to much weight against positive testimony of actual facts,” defendant’s actions in the present case, speaking louder than his words, wholly refute the opinion evidence of the expert medical witness, vague and inadequate as it was to establish what the law regards as exculpatory insanity. Everything that defendant did both immediately before and immediately after he killed his wife shows that he was in perfect possession of his senses, and the jury was well justified in not accepting his own statement that just for the few minutes required in which to perpetrate the killing he was mentally irresponsible and had no consciousness of what he was doing. Moreover, as already pointed out, he admitted that there might have been a reason for murdering his wife. His father-in-law testified that defendant told him that the reason occurred 7½ years before, although to him also, as to the detective, he did not state what the reason was. But the evidence indicates either of two possible motivations or perhaps a combination of both. The one was in regard to his impatience with his wife’s nervousness and premonitions of death during her sleep; the other *463 is suggested by the question addressed to him in cross-examination. “Weren’t you conducting an illicit romance with another woman?” He denied this and was then asked, “Did you ever suggest to another woman that she divorce her husband and if she did you would know what to do?” This too he denied.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 A.2d 287, 369 Pa. 457, 1952 Pa. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-heller-pa-1952.