Commonwealth v. McLean

564 A.2d 216, 387 Pa. Super. 354, 1989 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2679
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 31, 1989
Docket2209
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 564 A.2d 216 (Commonwealth v. McLean) 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. McLean, 564 A.2d 216, 387 Pa. Super. 354, 1989 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2679 (Pa. 1989).

Opinion

OLSZEWSKI, Judge:

Following a conviction by a trial jury for rape and false imprisonment and concurrent sentences of four to ten years and six months, to one year incarceration respectively, appellant now asks us to vacate his sentence and order a new trial. We take up the following issues: (1) whether the trial court erred when it (a) precluded questions concerning the relationship between appellant and victim, when it (b) charged the jury on the requisites for common-law marriage, and when it (c) opined as to the sufficiency of some of the evidence; (2) whether the trial court erred in allowing alleged hearsay in the form of a police radio call; (3) whether the prosecutor made prejudicial statements in his closing; and (4) whether there was ineffective assistance of prior counsel for failing to object to a supposedly improper statement during the trial court’s jury charge. Because we find merit insufficient to honor appellant’s request, we affirm the trial court’s judgment of sentence.

Trial counsel was able to make contemporaneous objections concerning the alleged trial court error asserted here. *357 Appellant also included the issues raised here in his post-verdict motions and his supplemental post-verdict motions. Therefore, appellant has successfully preserved these issues on appeal.

On an early morning in November 1987, appellant used scissors to threaten complainant Alicia Vaughn (“Vaughn”) to have sexual intercourse with him in his apartment in Philadelphia. After appellant penetrated Vaughn and climaxed, he drove her back to her sister Chiquita Vaughn’s (“Chiquita”) house where she had been living. Earlier, around midnight, appellant had confronted Vaughn on the street outside her sister’s home and after a brief exchange, grabbed her, pulled her, hit her on the face, took her car keys, got her car, threw her into the car while she resisted, and drove to his apartment. Once there, appellant alternately pulled and dragged Vaughn into the row home and up the stairs to his bedroom.

At 1:00 a.m., Chiquita contacted the police to report her sister missing. Officer Jacobs was dispatched to inquire and advised Chiquita as to the proper procedure. An hour or so earlier, Officer Jacobs had been summoned to an area near Chiquita’s house to respond to a radio call that a woman was screaming.

After appellant dropped her off at Chiquita’s house, Vaughn contacted the police and reported the incident. Officer Jacobs again responded and took down Vaughn’s complaint. The police, pursuant to a warrant, on entering appellant’s apartment, found appellant threatening to kill himself. For six and one-half hours, appellant held off the police until they used force to overcome him.

For five years Alicia Vaughn and appellant had an intimate relationship which produced two children. During that time, Alicia Vaughn for months at a time lived either with appellant at his apartment or with Chiquita. Two months before the incident, Vaughn had ended the relationship and “moved out” of appellant’s apartment back to her sister’s house. (N.T. 3/3/88, 96).

During trial, appellant’s counsel asked certain questions in an effort to bring out the nature of the relationship *358 between appellant and Vaughn. His purpose was to show that a common-law marriage existed between them. Such a marriage would preclude application of the rape statute which excludes spouses from its purview. 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 3121 (see discussion below). On cross-examination of Vaughn, he asked:

[APPELLANT’S COUNSEL] Now, when you said you were close to his family, did they treat you as if you were married to him?
THE COURT: I don’t know what that means____ I don’t know what you’re trying to do here. I don’t understand that, “Did they treat you — ____
[APPELLANT’S COUNSEL]: This goes to the elements of the crime.
THE COURT: Elements of what crime? Proceed, please. This is way off target.

(N.T. 3/3/88, 136-137).

On cross-examination of Chiquita, he asked:

[APPELLANT’S COUNSEL]: How long have you known him?
A: Personally, it really was just the last few months. I know of him. I knew that [he] was my sister’s boyfriend, but we wasn’t really close.
Q: Were you [sic] he and your sister living together what they call common-law?
A: Was him and my sister living together?
Q: Yes.
[COMMONWEALTH]: I’m going to object to that question.
THE COURT: I’ll sustain the objection.
[APPELLANT’S COUNSEL]: Were they living together as husband and wife?
THE COURT: She’s already testified, and she knew them as a boyfriend/girlfriend.

(N.T. 3/3/88, 196-197).

On cross-examination of Phinezeze Jones (“Jones”), appellant’s landlord, he asked:

*359 [APPELLANT’S COUNSEL]: Do they live in that room as man and wife?
A: Yes.
[COMMONWEALTH]: Objection.
THE COURT: Sustained. That’s stricken.
[APPELLANT’S COUNSEL]: It’s an element of the crime, sir.
THE COURT: I said sustained.
[APPELLANT’S COUNSEL]: Yes, sir.

(N.T. 3/4/88, 24).

Finally, in this same area of inquiry, during cross-examination of Vaughn, he asked whether she had received payments to support their children. He asked a similar question during cross-examination of Chiquita. The trial judge prevented such questioning because it was irrelevant. (N.T. 3/3/88, 169-170, 201-202).

The trial court in its charge defined common-law marriage for the jury as follows:

All right, there has been some argument to you on the question of whether or not the defendant was the spouse of the complainant, and there have been allegations to you that there was a common-law relationship between them that constitutes under the law common-law marriage.
Well, let’s look at what the law says about what common-law marriage is. Common-law is effected by agreement of the parties without the benefit of formality of a license or of any ceremony, plus cohabitation and reputation that they live as such and present themselves to the world, not just to a group or a few of us, but to the world as husband and wife, that they transact business in that name and for that purpose.
The basic element of common-law is the present agreement to marry. The law says there must be a present verbalization of it: “I take you,” for instance, “as my wife. I take you as my husband.”
*360 It must be verba de praesenti,

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Bluebook (online)
564 A.2d 216, 387 Pa. Super. 354, 1989 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-mclean-pa-1989.