Commonwealth v. New

47 A.2d 450, 354 Pa. 188, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 324
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 15, 1946
DocketAppeal, 111
StatusPublished
Cited by156 cases

This text of 47 A.2d 450 (Commonwealth v. New) 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. New, 47 A.2d 450, 354 Pa. 188, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 324 (Pa. 1946).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Maxby,

For a long period prior to June 24th, 1945, Lee Joe, * a Chinaman aged 70 years at that date, conducted a laundry at a small one-story dwelling at 2616 West 3rd Street, Chester. At 9:15 A.M. Sundayj June. 24th, he, clad only in an undershirt, was found lying in a pool of blood on his bedroom floor. He had three lacerations at the right side of his head and one in the middle-of the back of his head. The cause of his death was multiple fractures of the skull. On the floor were cigarette butts, an: over-turned ash-tray and a hammer handle. The bloody hammer which fitted the handle was found on a shelf. No finger marks were found on the hammer or the hammer handle. No finger marks of the defendant were found on any object in the victim’s house. The.pockets.of the victim’s clothes were turned inside out. On the bed was an empty purse and a brown hat With a small red feather in it. In the kitchen a money box was found pried open. A half empty bottle of beer was found. At 2 :00 P.M. on June 23rd, a colored girl, Ethel M. Williams, who- worked for Lee Joe, saw him. as he gave her her wages, with a roll of money “one inch thick” and which contained “some fives and twenties, fifties : and a one-hundred”. The only money found on his premises was in a barrel and it amounted to $123.00.

Woong Knee New, (usually referred to as Knee New), also a Chinamap, now agéd 41 years, had visited Lee Joe once or twice a week for fourteen months.' They were friendly and called each other, respectively, “Son” and “Pop”. - Knee New had been in the. United. States *192 about two years and had worked in the Sun Shipbuilding Yards for about eighteen months. His last day at work was Monday, June 18th, 1945. He then quit work because the immigration authorities were seizing Chinese at the plant for deportation to China. Two years earlier, Knee New had come from Singapore; within a day after the murder he was arrested in New York by immigration agents as an “illegal entry” and was lodged at Ellis Island for deportation. Earl H. Allen, a Delaware County Detective, who interviewed Knee New at Ellis Island on Tuesday, 1 June 26th, testified that the defendant told him that he left Chester Sunday morning, June 24th. The detective again saw Knee New at Ellis Island, in company with Detective Horris and Croak of the New York City Force, and Francis Holt, of the Chester Police. He said the questioning was done by Detective Horris because the defendant “seemed to understand him better than anyone else”. The conversation was in English and no stenographic notes were taken. The defendant, in reply to questions, told the officers (so it is alleged) that he had left Chester at 10:30 A.M. June 24th and reached New York at 12:30 P.M. and went to his cousin’s home at 316' Mott Street, that he had worked at the Sun Shipbuilding Yard for 18 months and that he had 4 days’ pay coming to him. Detective Holt asked Knee New if he had any money. He answered “No”. He was searched and a few dollars were found. Then Detective Holt raised his shirt and amoney belt which contained $1212 was found. None of this was ever identified as Lee Joe’s money. The officers asked him if he would go back to Pennsylvania and he said he would. The next day the officers took him to the New York City Police Department. He was then questioned for the first time about the murder of Joe Lee. He was asked:, “When did you see Lee Joe last?” He replied: “Last Saturday night, Sunday morning.” In reply to further questionings, he said: “I was with Lee Joe until 4:00 A.M.” and that he had “a glass of beer”. He was then asked: “What was Lee Joe doing?” *193 and lie replied: “He was ironing clothes and I wet clothes to help him.” Holt then asked : “What was Lee Joe doing when you left him on Sunday morning?” : The defendant then put his hands on his stomach and said: “I sick; I sick; no more questions.” The detective said: “That was the last of the conversation.”

On June 19th, 1945, the defendant- had withdrawn from a Chester Bank $308.16, including three $100 bills. On. the following day, he went to New York and withdrew from a Bank eight $100 bills and a $50 bill. This was proved by his own testimony and by the bank records and by bank officers. These withdrawals were allegedly due to the fact that he was afraid he was about to be deported to' China. He said: “Immigration office pick, up somebody else and then I was so afraid'that I didn’t dare to go to work.” He had $47.29 coming to him from the Sun Shipbuilding Company. When asked why he didn’t draw that money out, he.answered: “I didn’t dare to take money out”, indicating thereby that' he didn’t dare go where the immigration authorities were. On Thursday, June 20th, according to his testimony,-he Avent back to Chester-and sent from there by parcel post to New York some bags of personal belongings and then-he visited a sick friend, Tee Soy, in the Chester hospital. This friend paid him $10, which he owed him. The defendant testified that he left Chester for New York at 1:05 A. M. Friday, June 22, 1945, and did not return until after his arrest.- • ■

The Commonwealth claimed that he was in Chester on June 23rd and 24th. He refused to return to Chester voluntarily and he -was extradited after proceedings in New- York City on July 28,-1945, when he also denied being in Chester on June 23rd and 24th.. He was indicted and after trial he Avas convicted of murder in the first degree and-the jury fixed the penalty at life imprisonment. The motion for a new trial was overruled; this appeal followed.

-. To . obtain a conviction the Commonwealth : relied upon - circumstantial evidence. Such evidence is . legal *194 evidence and it may be of great probative value. All circumstantial evidence is based in part upon “positive''’ or direct evidence, or what Wigmore calls “testimonial evidence”. The circumstances from which the major fact in issue is to be inferred have to be proved chiefly by testimonial or positive evidence. If the so-called “positive” evidence is erroneous or merely conjectural, no reliable inference can be drawn from it. So-called “positive” evidence is often based in fact upon inferences, i.e., circumstantial evidence, as Chief Justice Gibson pointed Out in Com. v. Harman, 4 Pa. 269, 272.

“Each class [of evidence] has its special dangers and its special advantages”. Wigmore on Evidence, 3rd Ed., Sec. 26, p. 402. In Com. v. Webster, 5 Cush. 295, 311, Chief Justice Shaw said: “The disadvantage [of positive evidence] is, that the witness may be false and corrupt, and that the case may not afford the means of 'detecting his. falsehood. . . . The disadvantages [of circumstantial evidence] are,- that a jury has not only to weigh the evidence of facts, but to draw just conclusions from them; in doing which, they may be led by prejudice or partiality, or by want of due deliberation and sobriety of judgment, to make hasty and false deductions; . . .” In Com. v. Libonati, 346 Pa. 504 (a murder case), this court said, p.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 A.2d 450, 354 Pa. 188, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-new-pa-1946.