Commonwealth v. Jones

129 A. 582, 283 Pa. 564, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 448
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 4, 1925
DocketAppeal, 304
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 129 A. 582 (Commonwealth v. Jones) 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. Jones, 129 A. 582, 283 Pa. 564, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 448 (Pa. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moschzisker,

Defendant appeals from a sentence on conviction of murder in the first degree.

The homicide occurred in the morning of September 22, 1923. On the previous evening, defendant, Mattie Jones, and the deceased, William Martin, with whom the former had been living for about three years prior to the tragedy here involved, attended 'a party at the residence of a mutual friend. Defendant wanted deceased to return with her to their common abode rather early in the evening, and, on his refusal to do so, she went alone, taking his hat and coat with her. Later she came back to the house where the party was being held and again asked Martin to go home with her; when he refused, she remarked, in the hearing of several witnesses, “If you do not come now, when you do come home the undertaker is going to* take you out.” Defendant again went to their residence without deceased, and, when another man, who had been at the party, passed, she invited him in to inquire about it and to find out whether he had left Martin there, saying, “I am going to kill him when he gets home.” There was also testimony by several witnesses of statements made by defendant to the effect that she intended to kill *567 Martin, because of Ms attentions to other women. No one other than defendant was present when the deceased returned from the party to the room occupied by them. Later that morning she reported at the police station, carrying in her hand a pistol, wrapped in paper, containing several undischarged cartridges and three which had been fired. She surrendered herself, saying that she had killed her husband; a written confession was taken down by the sergeant of police, who produced it at the trial, wherein defendant said that Martin had come home at half past two in the morning, and when she questioned him concerning a woman with whom he had been dancing, he 'told her that she wiould have to get out, to which she replied that she was “not going anywhere,” whereupon Martin threatened her with a revolver; that he put the revolver under his pillow and went to sleep, but later arose and again ordered her out of the house, saying if she did not go he would send her to hell. Defendant states Martin then got his revolver and threatened to put it down her throat; that he pulled her out of bed, and “we started to tussle. He had the revolver. It went off.” At trial, however, she told a somewhat different story, claiming the revolver was on a trunk, and, after deceased had struck, beaten and threatened to kill her, they both rushed for the weapon at the same moment, she obtaining it and firing several shots, in order to protect herself from harm which she felt he intended to do her. Defendant said she did not know how many times the pistol was discharged, or where deceased was when hit, but the coroner’s physician, a man of long experience with gunshot wounds, who had made the postmortem examination, testified that one bullet had entered Martin’s back to the right of the eighth rib, another had struck him behind the right ear, passing through his head, and that, in his opinion, the pistol had not been discharged at “very close range.”

*568 The printed record indicates the Commonwealth’s theory at the trial was that defendant took the revolver from under Martin’s pillow, and, in a passion of jealousy, shot him from behind while he slept, and the case of the accused was that she killed in self-defense.

To sustain her case, the prisoner testified, and brought other witnesses to prove, that, for at least a year before the date of the homicide, deceased had “fought with her all the time,” beating her so frequently that she had marks and bruises all over her body, and was obliged to leave him on several occasions. She asserted that Martin would come home drunk, and, the least thing she said to him, he would start to “fuss and fight” with her; that, if she talked back, he would hit her in the eye with his fist. One of her witnesses testified that defendant repeatedly came to her with complaints about her troubles, saying that the deceased was “very cruel to her and had beaten her and was drunk.” This witness stated that! she had seen Martin drunk “time and time again” during a period of 'years, — had “oftentimes seek him full of whiskey.” All of this testimony was general in character, and evidently introduced to show the evil disposition of the deceased.

The trial judge, in ruling on a point of evidence, gave his understanding of the defense thus: “In your opening to the jury you [counsel for the prisoner] stated your defense would be self-defense. The defendant has testified that the deceased was a bad man in that he assaulted her 'several times and blackened her eyes. Several of the witnesses testified that he was a man of that type, a bad and dangerous man......and the stepfather of Mattie Jones testified he was a man who drank to excess......; all of which was offered, I take it, to show that he was a man likely to commit the offense which this Jones woman testified he had committed;” To demonstrate the correctness of the trial judge’s understanding of the defense, and of the purpose with which the testimony to sustain it, — concern *569 ing the long-continued and persistent misconduct of Martin, — was introduced, we may quote the words of defendant’s counsel, where he stated that the testimony in question was offered to show deceased was “the likely aggressor in this new provocation which arose on the morning on which he was killed.” This can mean only what the trial judge said, that the testimony was offered to prove Martin had a violent disposition; that he was a man of such a character the jury might well believe he made the assault on defendant against which, the latter claims, she believed, at the time, it was necessary to defend herself, even to the extent of killing him.

To meet the testimony introduced by defendant for the purpose of proving that Martin was a bad and dangerous man, and one likely to commit the assault charged by her as giving rise to the homicide (all of which was too general to be met by specific denials), the Commonwealth called several witnesses to show that, as a matter of fact,, deceased was a sober, law-abiding, peaceable citizen. The first and second assignments relate to rulings admitting this testimony over the objection of defendant. What we have already outlined, concerning the facts of the case and the trial in the court below, is sufficient to sustain the ruling complained of, under the law as recently stated by us in Commonwealth v. Castellana, 277 Pa. 117, 125, where, after discussing the relevant authorities, we said: “The prisoner’s sole plea was the affirmative one of self-defense, and to prove this, which he was obliged to do in order to secure an acquittal, he became the accuser of the deceased, charging that the latter, without provocation, attacked him with a ¡deadly weapon; to sustain this allegation, he produced a number of witnesses, who, while not expressly called to establish the bad reputation of [the deceased] all gave testimony tending ¡to show, and with the evident purpose of proving, that as a matter of fact deceased was a bad and dangerous man who would be likely to commit an assault such as that charged......On this *570

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Bluebook (online)
129 A. 582, 283 Pa. 564, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-jones-pa-1925.