Commonwealth v. Kaufman

126 A.2d 758, 182 Pa. Super. 197, 1956 Pa. Super. LEXIS 374
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 15, 1956
DocketAppeal, 71
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 126 A.2d 758 (Commonwealth v. Kaufman) 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. Kaufman, 126 A.2d 758, 182 Pa. Super. 197, 1956 Pa. Super. LEXIS 374 (Pa. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

Opinion by

Gunther, J.,

This is an appeal from the conviction and sentence for the crime of arson which arose in the City of Philadelphia. Appellant, Louis Kaufman, was charged and convicted by a jury of setting fire to a warehouse leased by Furniture Fair, Inc., in which he owned one-third of the capital stock and approximately one-fourth of the voting stock. Furniture Fair, Inc., was engaged in the retail sale of furniture at Market Street in the City of Philadelphia, and for the storage of its furniture stock, it leased a warehouse located at 5107-09 Wyalusing Avenue.

In the late morning of Saturday, August 23, 1952, a fire broke out in the warehouse on Wyalusing Avenue. The alarm was received by Engine Company No. 65 of the Philadelphia Fire Department at 11:52 A.M., and within the space of a minute the firemen were at the scene of the fire which was about two blocks away from the engine house. Immediately upon arrival, a one inch and a two inch water line were stretched, and, with the aid of a ladder company, forcible entry was made into that warehouse. The warehouse was a large, one-story building with slanting roof and several large skylights. Entrance to the warehouse was made through a small door forming a part of a sliding door covering the front of the warehouse.

- Captain DiRomaldo, the first officer to arrive from the fire department, testified that one of his men en *199 tered the warehouse through the small door and then opened the sliding door so as to expose the entire front of the furniture warehouse. He further testified that he and his men fought “four or five unconnected fires” which were “coming from the floor up.” He was unable to see these separate fires at one and the same time because of the dense smoke, but came upon each fire as he and his men advanced further into the warehouse. Under cross-examination, he reiterated that he and his men had to fight four or five “individual fires” spreading up from the floor. He was asked if these fires could have been caused by sparks from a single fire leaping from one place to another. He replied that while such was possible, he did not consider that probable because the base of all these fires was at the floor area, and if the fires had been caused by leaping sparks, they would have been burning from the top and not from the bottom.

Captain DiBomaldo also testified that he saw “from about eight to ten” sulphur candles partially consumed at some time but that during the entire performance of his duties in extinguishing the fires he could not detect the odor of any sulphur dioxide, thereby inferring that the sulphur candles were not burning during the conflagration.

The next witness, Captain Putz, testified that he came to the scene with a ladder company and went immediately to the roof of the building to ventilate the burning warehouse and in order to rid it of the smoke and fumes. He and his men broke a skylight and placed a one inch water hose down into it. He was able to see little flecks of fire around the ventilators that had come off but, because of the smoke, could not see the fires inside the warehouse. On cross-examination he stated that he did not detect any odor of sul *200 phur dioxide either at the roof or inside the warehouse. He further stated that, after going down into the warehouse later, he saw two fire areas, one directly back from the door area and one to the right, behind a partition area.

Captain Hassett, the assistant fire marshal, whose duty it was to investigate fires and their causes for the fire department, testified that he arrived on the scene at approximately one o’clock P.M., and that upon making his investigation, he found sulphur candles dangerously close to inflammable materials of the type which would both carry and accelerate a fire if they were lighted. The original positions of the sulphur candles indicated that they were deliberately placed near combustible material in such a position that a fire was inevitable. The candles were originally placed in the warehouse by appellant and two employees. Both the defendant and the employees expressed the opinion to Captain Hassett, after viewing the fire department photographs, that the candles shown on the photographs were not in the position in which they were placed originally by them. A strong inference arose that someone had returned to the warehouse before the fire and had changed the positions of the candles.

William B. Sullender, a Commonwealth witness, testified that he occupied the office at the head of the driveway at 5407 Wyalusing Avenue and that on the morning of the fire, between 10:30 and 11:00 A.M., the defendant came to the warehouse with two others. They were in the warehouse between twenty and thirty minutes. The three men came out of the warehouse and the two helpers drove off. About eight or ten minutes later the witness was looking through a window which gave him a vieAV of the driveway and he saw someone *201 Avalk by tbe Avindow. He walked to a door which opens onto tbe driveivay and be saiv tbe defendant going through the small door which is a part of the large sliding door of the warehouse. Sullender testified he recognized the defendant as one of the firm which rents the building and that the defendant then entered the building. Eight or ten minutes later, the witness testified, he saAV the defendant walk out the driveway and walk west on Wyalusing Avenue. A few minutes to 12:00 noon, the fire broke out.

It is significant that the defendant, in his interrogation by the fire department investigators, never admitted returning to the warehouse by himself until after Captain Hassett was informed by Sullender that the defendant had entered the Avarehouse alone shortly before the fire broke out. There are other factors which amply support the jury’s verdict but with those we need not concern ourselves in view of the limited question raised on appeal.

The defendant admitted freely that he and his two employees did in fact place the sulphur candles in the warehouse but the defense, briefly, was to the effect that the candles Avere placed in the Avarehouse to fumigate it from cockroaches with Avhich it had become infested. The defendant testified that the cockroaches had gotten into the new furniture and this was discovered on a delivery to a customer. DDT bombs were first used but without the desired result and it was decided to try sulphur candles. It was maintained that the candles Avere not moved and the defendant did not reenter the warehouse after the candles were placed and ignited.

During the testimony of Captain Hassett, he was questioned concerning his qualifications as an expert. It appeared that he had been in the fire department *202 for over fourteen years and had also been in charge of the Marine Corps Fire Department at Camp Lejuene, North Carolina during the war. In addition, he had attended seminars at Purdue University in arson investigation and one at New York University. For a period of years it had been his duty to investigate fires for the Philadelphia fire department to determine, if possible, their nature and origin.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 A.2d 758, 182 Pa. Super. 197, 1956 Pa. Super. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-kaufman-pasuperct-1956.