Commonwealth v. Martin

188 A. 407, 124 Pa. Super. 293, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 372
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 5, 1936
DocketAppeal, 34
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 188 A. 407 (Commonwealth v. Martin) 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. Martin, 188 A. 407, 124 Pa. Super. 293, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 372 (Pa. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

On Sunday, April 28, 1935, a fire destroyed the two story unoccupied frame dwelling house, situated on a plot of ground in Venango County, owned by H. Earl Hoffman and others, and known as the “Dog Hollow Lease.” The fire occurred about 9:30 o’clock in the evening. An investigation by the state police resulted in the arrest of three persons living in the vicinity. They were Wilbur Martin, appellant herein, Perry Gilmore and Edward Lee Coast. The arrests of appellant and Gilmore followed the making of certain statements by Coast, subsequently reduced to writing and hereinafter considered.

We gather from the record that Martin, Gilmore and Coast were separately indicted under Section 1 of the Act of April 25, 1929, P. L. 767, 18 PS §3021, which provides, in substance, that any person who wilfully and maliciously burns, or causes to be burned, “or who aids, counsels, or procures the burning, of any dwelling house, etc.,” shall be guilty of the felony of arson, and punished as therein provided. Each indictment con *295 tained two counts—the first, charging the burning of the dwelling house in question, and the second, that the particular defendant named in the first count aided, counseled and procured the burning by the other two defendants. Referring to the indictment involved upon this appeal, Martin was charged in the first count with the burning of the house, and in the second with aiding, counseling and procuring its burning by Coast and Gilmore. The Commonwealth nol pros’d the indictment against Coast, but held him in custody as a material witness. The indictment against Gilmore at No. 4, August Sessions, 1935, of the Quarter Sessions, and the indictment against Martin, at No. 5 of that term and court, were consolidated for trial in the Oyer and Terminer, over the objections of the defendants. The verdict as recorded against each defendant read: “Not guilty of Arson, but guilty of counseling but not aiding and procuring.” Each defendant, after the refusal of his motions in arrest of judgment and for a new trial, was sentenced to an imprisonment of not less than two nor more than four years in the penitentiary. Martin, alone, has appealed and the court below granted a supersedeas.

The first and third assignments raise one of the serious questions involved upon this appeal. They are based upon the admission in evidence of a certain typewritten statement containing four pages, signed and sworn to by Coast on May 2, 1935, and designated as “Commonwealth’s Exhibit B.” In general, this statement, made by Coast to police officers and the sheriff at the time of his arrest* implicated Gilmore and the appellant in the burning of the house for the purpose of preventing it from being occupied by a proposed tenant, Lawrence McLaughlin, with whom they were at enmity. The circumstances leading up to .the admission in evidence of this statement were- these. At the trial Coast was called and examined as the principal witness for *296 the Commonwealth. His testimony, was to the effect that on the day preceding the fire while Gilmore and the witness were having their noon meal with the latter’s grandmother, with whom they lived, a man named McLaughlin came and inquired for the key to the house. He told Coast he was moving in on Tuesday and asked the number of oil wells on the lease. Coast repeated this conversation to Gilmore who said the house should be burned down because people like the Mc-Laughlins were undesirable in the neighborhood. Later that afternoon, Coast and Gilmore went to appellant’s house where the conversation with McLaughlin was again discussed. Appellant said he would burn the house down and Gilmore suggested the use of waste soaked in oil and a candle. That evening Coast visited one Clarence Hoffman and left for his grandmother’s home about 9:30 or 10:00 o’clock. The road led past the Dog Hollow Lease house. When he had gone half way to that point, he noticed the house was in flames and, leaving the road, walked through the fields in order to avoid passing the house for fear the fire would be blamed on him. When Coast reached home Gilmore was in bed and Coast related on the stand the following conversation with Gilmore: “I said ‘Did you see the fire, Perry?’ He said, ‘Yes.’ He said, ‘Wilbur Martin ought to have waited around midnight before he set it afire so everybody, would have been in bed.’” Coast also testified that he and Gilmore met appellant the following morning, when “Perry Gilmore said to Wilbur Martin, ‘What did you burn that place for?’ He said he didn’t, someone beat him to it, and he just grinned.”

As there were no discrepancies between the testimony of Coast as delivered from the witness stand and the contents of his prior signed statement (Cornu’s Ex. B) there was no valid reason, at that stage of the trial, for any reference whatever by the representative of *297 the Commonwealth to the statement. The district attorney, however, produced it, directed Coast to examine it, and had him admit he had signed and sworn to it before a magistrate.

Gilmore and appellant were represented by the same attorney. When . Coast. was turned over to him for cross-examination, he produced another and contradictory statement purporting to have been signed by Coast and also by Gilmore in the presence of the attorney and two other witnesses. It was also dated May 2, 1935, and in it Coast and Gilmore declared that to the best of their knowledge appellant had nothing to do with the burning of the house, nor did he advise them to burn it. This statement was marked “Defendants’ Exhibit No. 1.” Coast admitted he had signed the paper while confined in the county jail,, but asserted from the stand that he did not know what he was signing and denied positively that its contents were true.

After a detailed cross-examination of Coast upon the facts to which he had testified in chief, appellant’s counsel handed him the statement produced by the Commonwealth (Com.’s Ex. B) and asked him whether he had read that paper before he signed it. When the witness replied in the affirmative, counsel directed him to read aloud the opening paragraph—apparently for the purpose of testing his ability to read. In the concluding part of his cross-examination, Coast declared he had not told counsel for appellant the truth at their interview in the jail, but that his testimony as given in court was the truth.

Upon redirect examination, Coast was asked some additional questions relative to the preparation and execution, of “Commonwealth’s Exhibit B.”

Counsel for appellant then asked Coast whether he understood that statement when it was read to him in the office of the district attorney, to which the witness replied he not only understood it when it was read to him but had since read it himself.

*298 Over the objection of counsel for appellant, the district attorney whs then permitted to read the statement to the witness paragraph by paragraph and have him state at the conclusion of each that he had made the several statements and that they were true. At the conclusion of the reading, appellant’s counsel moved to strike out all the matter read into the record by the district attorney from the statement upon the ground that it was incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial; the motion was overruled and an exception granted appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
188 A. 407, 124 Pa. Super. 293, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-martin-pasuperct-1936.