Commonwealth v. Kline

65 A.2d 348, 361 Pa. 434, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 330
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 21, 1949
DocketAppeal, 102
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 65 A.2d 348 (Commonwealth v. Kline) 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. Kline, 65 A.2d 348, 361 Pa. 434, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 330 (Pa. 1949).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Maxey,

Charles James Kline was convicted in Warren County after trial on an indictment charging statutory rape on his daughter Barbara. He was sentenced to pay the costs of prosecution, a fine of $300.00, and imprisonment in the Western Penitentiary for not less than seven and one-half years and not more than fifteen years. On appeal to the Superior Court the judgment was reversed because of alleged errors in the admission of evidence.

The date of the commission of the alleged offense was October 20, 1946, when the daughter was 4 months and 6 days past 15 years of age. It is not necessary to relate all the unsavory details of the crime charged. The only question before us is whether the court erred in admitting the testimony of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Borg, neighbors of the defendant, who were permitted to testify that the defendant “late in October 1946” had exhibited himself in a nude condition and lasciviously to Mrs. Borg. The back porch of the Borg home and of the defendant’s home were about fifty feet apart. Mr. and Mrs. Borg were called to rebut defendant’s denial on cross-examination that he had ever exposed himself *437 without any clothes on to anybody (with possibly one exception, not material here). The evidence was objected to for the reason that “the defendant in this case is not charged with indecent exposure but with rape, and any evidence of this type would only prejudice the jury against him without any material benefit to the Commonwealth.” Mrs. Borg testified: “I was finishing the dishes and went out on the porch to hang up my tea towel when Mr. Kline appeared in the doorway of his house without any clothes. I became frightened and went in the house. I stood behind the door and he immediately went behind his kitchen door. There is a window there which shows that there was somebody back there. I went out on the porch again and the same thing happened again. I called my husband . . .”. When her husband stood in the downstairs window Kline did not make any appearance. Mrs. Borg continued: “I went out on the porch and he [Kline] would appear in the door, I would go in and he would step back and close the screen door. After this went on for an hour I set a trap for him. In our dining room we have Venetian blinds.” She and her husband watched Kline through the blinds. She was asked: “Did he [Kline] go through any actions or movements?” She answered: “It was just bodily motions.” When she was also asked as to his nakedness she said he may have had shoes on but other than that he had no clothes on at all.

Mr. Borg testified that he “peeked through the blind” and saw Kline “in front of the screen door completely undressed”. He said he saw Kline in that nude condition for a period of fifteen minutes. The time was at 3:00 o’clock in the afternoon. He said Kline “pushed the screen door completely open against the railing and stood in front of the screen door”. He also testified that after observing Kline for about fifteen minutes he, the witness, “called the police”.

*438 The Superior Court said: “This so-called ‘rebuttal’ evidence was not admissible to affect the defendant’s credibility or for any other purpose.” The court then quotes from our opinion in Commonwealth v. Petrillo, 341 Pa. 209, 223, 19 A. 2d 288, where we said: “No witness can be contradicted on everything he testifies to in order to ‘test his credibility.’ The pivotal issues in a trial cannot be ‘side-tracked’ for the determination of whether or not a witness lied in making a statement about something which has no relationship to the case on trial.”

It is an established principle in criminal procedure that proof of the commission of another crime cannot be put in evidence as a proof of the commission of the crime charged,- unless there is such connection between them as to give the fact of the commission of the other crime probative value on the issue of the defendant’s guilt of the crime charged. Henry’s Pennsylvania Trial Evidence, Third Edition, Section 30, pages 48 and 49, says it is “a fundamental principle that a prisoner shall not be required to answer for the commission of an offense that is not specially charged against him in the indictment. But if criminal conduct proposed to be proved forms -in any way a link in a chain of circumstances which connects the defendant with the crime charged, it is admissible. In such case, in order that one act may be evidence of another, -there must be some connection between them which may be traced in a general design, purpose or plan of the person doing the act, or which may be shown by such circumstances as necessarily tend to establish that the person who committed one act must have been guilty of the other. ... If facts offered to be proved bear on the offense charged and tend to prove a fact in issue . . . such proofs are admissible even though they incidentally tend to prove the commission of another offense.” Citing Goersen v. Com., 99 Pa. 388; Com. v. *439 Coles, 265 Pa. 362, 367; and Com. v. Edwards, 318 Pa. 1. In this last named case this Court said in an .opinion by Chief Justice Frazer (p. 9): “The law is clear that evidence of offenses other than the one for which a defendant is on trial, is admissible if . . . the prior misconduct tends to show the state of mind of the prisoner upon the act of which he is accused.”

In Commonwealth v. Winter, 289 Pa. 284, 137 A. 261, defendant was found guilty of the murder of two children. He was sentenced to death. On appeal for a new trial it was alleged that there was an error in the trial because it was improper to admit the evidence against defendant that on the morning of the day the two children came to their death he had solicited their two older brothers to commit sodomy.. This Court in finding no error in the admission of that evidence said: “The courts are bound to recognize, particularly in .crimes relating to matters of sex . . . that the mental state of the accused is an important factor; anything which throws;light upon his state of mind just previous to the commission of the offense with which he is charged strongly illuminates his place in the picture of, the crime and gives better opportunity to estimate the likelihood of his connection with it. . . . In the instant case, it is the theory of the prosecution that the defendant killed these children as a result of his having debauched or attempted to debauch.them, and,—as showing:the state of his mind, just, prior to his .coming in contact with them, as being such as would lead him to the commission of crime upon them,—it was proper and relevant to show his crime-seeking attitude with other children.. This takes the-evidence out of the rule as to unrelated crimes and makes it competent and proper for reception.”

In Commonwealth v. Lipschutz, 89 Pa. Superior Ct. 142, the defendant Was indicted for indecent assault and indecent exposure. Four girls whose ages ranged from 8 *440 to 11 years testified, each in support of a single incident involving the witness and the appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
65 A.2d 348, 361 Pa. 434, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-kline-pa-1949.