Commonwealth v. Kumitis

74 A.2d 741, 167 Pa. Super. 184, 1950 Pa. Super. LEXIS 479
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 20, 1950
DocketAppeal, 41
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 74 A.2d 741 (Commonwealth v. Kumitis) 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. Kumitis, 74 A.2d 741, 167 Pa. Super. 184, 1950 Pa. Super. LEXIS 479 (Pa. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

Opinion by

Dithrich, J.,

. Defendant, appearing in propria persona in this appeal from a conviction and sentence for aggravated robbery, has filed 18 assignments of error and a 70-page statement of the question involved, which boils down to “Whether the conduct of the trial judge met with the *186 fundamental standards of fairness and decency imposed by the Bill of Bights as secured by the Constitution of Pennsylvania, and whether the manner in which it was conducted, ran afoul of the basic standards of fairness which is involved in the constitutional concept of due process of law.”

After considering all of the assignments very carefully, we have reached the conclusion that they are, with one possible exception, without merit.

Defendant was indicted and convicted of having committed, with accomplices unnamed and unapprehended, an armed robbery of the B.P.O. Elks Lodge Club in Berwick, Pennsylvania, and of having stolen and carried away approximately $1500 in cash, a quantity of liquor, and a number of slot machines.

Boy Croop, night steward at the Club, stated that about four o’clock in the morning of September 23,1944, someone rang the doorbell at the rear entrance of the Club. When he opened the door he was confronted with three masked and armed men, who forced him back into the building, bound his hands and feet with rope, and placed a blindfold over his eyes. He was forced to remain in that position on the floor of the banquet hall adjoining the grill for a period of approximately an hour, during which time he could hear four persons — the three whom he saw were later joined by a fourth, whose voice he recognized as that of the defendant — ransack the building, most of the time being occupied in removing eleven slot machines, which were quite heavy. As soon as he was able to free himself, he reported the robbery to the Berwick police. After an investigation, in which the local police were aided by the State Police, two of the slot machines were recovered from a hotel in Mt. Carbon, Schuylkill County. The proprietor testified that they had been left at his place by the defendant on or about October 10, 1944.

*187 On October 21 the defendant was arrested in front of the residence of Frank Marknnas and his wife, Violet Marknnas, in Mahanoy City,- where the defendant had a room. In his room the officers found a fountain pen, which was identified as having been stolen in the robbery, and in a shed at the rear of the premises one of the missing slot machines was found. On the same day the officers, armed with a search warrant for premises rented by Mrs. Markunas in Eyan Township,- where defendant maintained a headquarters and repair shop for the pinball machine business in which he was engaged, found a pair of pliers and a screw driver which had been stolen from the Club, keys which opened the locks of the slot machines, keys to the cash register, and keys to various doors of the Club. In a tool box they found eleven locks to which were later fitted the keys to the eleven slot machines which had been stolen.

Defendant did not take the stand in his own defense, but Sergeant Frick and Private Weichel of the State Police testified that he told Sergeant Frick that he knew the Club was going, to be robbed; that he knew who robbed it, but that he was not there when the “job was pulled”; and that the other men brought the stolen property, including the slot machines, to him at the farm in the afternoon of the same day the robbery was conmitted. The only person who testified for the defendant was Mrs. Markunas, who said that defendant left her home between nine and ten o’clock in the evening of September 22 and returned about three o’clock in the morning of September 23. She further testfied that he entered the kitchen, where she was baking a cake for her husband’s birthday; that she made him a cup of coffee; and that he then went upstairs to his room.

The first assignment of error, that the court erred in ruling that defendant had lost his right to appeal, is moot. In an order dated December 27, 1949, ordering that the defendant be brought before the court for sen *188 tence, the trial judge inadvertently stated that the time for taking an appeal had expired. He explains that what he meant to say was that the time for “specifying in writing [the] manifest errors in the record” in support of the motion in arrest of judgment had expired. The Commonwealth agrees, however, that an appeal could not he taken until the defendant had been sentenced and that he has since perfected his appeal within the required time. »

As to the second assignment, that the court erred in refusing to grant a new trial, we are of opinion that while the record is not entirely free of error, there is none so prejudicial as to entitle defendant to a new trial.

Assignment No. 3. is that “The . . . court erred in refusing to . . . [sustain] the . . . demurrer based on the law of jurisdiction.” The indictment was captioned “In the Court of Oyer and Terminer of the Peace in and for the County of Columbia,” and the verdict was found “In the Court of Quarter Sessions of the County of Columbia.” (Emphasis added.) The learned president judge of the court below, in his opinion refusing the motions in arrest of judgment and for a new trial, says :

“It appears that the District Attorney in drawing the indictment used a printed form for the ‘Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace’ and with a typewriter had the words ‘Quarter Sessions’ stricken out and the words ‘Oyer & Terminer’ inserted above the stricken words....
“The blank form of verdict sent out with the jury . . . was also a printed form for the Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace, and the jury returned a verdict of guilty upon this form without having the title of the court corrected. Counsel now contend that the verdict is fatally defective for this reason.”

Of course there is no such court as “Oyer and Terminer of the Peace,” the correct designation being “Oyer and Terminer and. General Jail Delivery”; but *189 section 1 of the Act of May 10, 1927, P. L. 879, 17 PS §392, provides that: “Whenever any indictment, other than an indictment for murder, shall be found in any court of oyer and terminer, or quarter sessions of the peace, of the county where the offense was committed, for any crime not triable under existing law in the. court where found, the court may nevertheless proceed with the trial of the accused in the court in which such indictment was found, unless the court shall, upon motion of the accused, certify the indictment to the proper court for trial. No motion made after verdict, or writ of error or appeal, based on a failure to indict or try a defendant ... in the proper court, as provided by existing law, shall be granted or sustained, unless it be affirmatively shown that the accused was in fact prejudiced in his defense upon the merits and a failure of justice has resulted.” The error was at most a formal defect which could be corrected even after appeal taken, and defendant was in no way prejudiced thereby. Commonwealth v. Eberhardt, 164 Pa. Superior Ct. 591, 67 A. 2d 613.

Assignment No.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Commonwealth v. MARINO
245 A.2d 868 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1968)
Commonwealth ex rel. Smith v. Patterson
179 A.2d 233 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1962)
Commonwealth v. Kumitis
24 Pa. D. & C.2d 450 (Columbia County Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1961)
Commonwealth v. Kumitis
151 A.2d 653 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1959)
Commonwealth v. Kumitis
17 Pa. D. & C.2d 445 (Bucks County Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1958)
Commonwealth ex rel. Kumitis v. Burke
81 Pa. D. & C. 236 (Philadelphia County Court of Quarter Sessions, 1951)
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Little v. Keenan
78 A.2d 27 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 A.2d 741, 167 Pa. Super. 184, 1950 Pa. Super. LEXIS 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-kumitis-pasuperct-1950.