Commonwealth v. Page

65 Pa. D. & C. 424, 1948 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 295
CourtPhiladelphia County Court of Oyer and Terminer
DecidedAugust 13, 1948
Docketno. 403
StatusPublished

This text of 65 Pa. D. & C. 424 (Commonwealth v. Page) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Philadelphia County Court of Oyer and Terminer primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Page, 65 Pa. D. & C. 424, 1948 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 295 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1948).

Opinion

Guerin, J.,

— The sole question involved in this motion for a new trial is the sufficiency of the Commonwealth’s evidence to sustain the conviction. Defendant waived a jury trial. At the conclusion of the Commonwealth’s case, defendant rested, and the court found defendant guilty of manslaughter.

Defendant is a sailor in the United States Navy, attached to the U. S. S. Spokane, berthed in the Brooklyn Navy Yard. On July 2, 1948, he and another sailor, Gene C. Harris, left the ship on liberty at 4:30 p.m. They procured defendant’s automobile, a four-door 1941 Pontiac sedan, and drove about New York for a short time, meeting another sailor and a girl companion, whom they drove uptown. After leaving them, defendant and Harris “had about four shots of whisky”, sometime between 9 and 11 p.m. They rejoined their sailor friend and his girl companion, drove them to her home in the Bronx, and remained there until sometime between 2 a.m. and 3 a.m. Defendant and Harris then drove the third sailor to the Holland Tunnel, where they left him, and proceeded to drive to Philadelphia. Harris fell asleep on the rear seat, and never [425]*425woke up until the car hit the telegraph pole on the Roosevelt Boulevard at 6:45 a.m. (D. S. T.), that morning, July 3rd.

Park Guard Raymond P. Vecchione testified that he was on duty on the Roosevelt Boulevard at Southampton Road, when he observed what later proved to be defendant’s car up against a post on the lawn on the southwest side of the intersection, about two feet from the curb on Southampton Road, and about 15 feet from the curb of Roosevelt Boulevard. He proceeded toward Philadelphia in search of the occupant of the car and had gone about a mile when he observed a tow truck traveling from Philadelphia toward the scene of the accident. Upon stopping the truck, he found defendant in it, and Harris was following in a car which was giving him a ride. Defendant admitted he was the driver of the Pontiac, whereupon the officer entered the truck and proceeded to Southampton Road, where his superiors assumed charge. Page was taken to the hospital for treatment of his eye, injured by a piece of glass, and was later removed to the guard house, together with Harris. On their way back in the tow truck, Page told the officer that he and Harris had been told by a couple of people that they hit somebody up the road, but they said they thought the people were kidding.

Park Guard detective Richard Toppi testified that as the result of a report, he and Sergeant Grace went to the Byberry Hospital grounds, on the Roosevelt Boulevard, on the Philadelphia side of the county line. There, they found the deceased on the lawn on what was the driver’s right, looking toward Philadelphia, lying about six feet beyond the curb line. This point was about four fifths of a mile north (or toward New York) of the point where defendant’s car crashed against the pole. In picking up the body they found pieces of glass and a piece of metal. One piece of glass, [426]*426generally triangular in shape, about three inches across the base, and about four inches in altitude, was enveloped in deceased’s clothing and fell out when the body was removed. The glass was fitted by the witness to a broken section of the window of the right rear door of defendant’s sedan, and the metal strip was applied to a missing section of the moulding at the bottom of the same window. Both the glass and metal strip were produced and offered in evidence by the Commonwealth.

On the right side of defendant’s car, toward the rear of the right door, were heavy brush marks. On the grass plot where deceased’s body was found were brush marks where the grass had been scarred into the dirt. These began at the point where a black smudge resembling shoe polish was on the vertical side of the curb, and went in a line from this mark to where the body was found, a distance of approximately 20 feet. The witness questioned defendant an hour and a half later and defendant told him he didn’t know he had struck anyone, as he had been dozing at the wheel.

Dr. Charíes J. Swalm, coroner’s physician, stated that deceased died of multiple injuries. He sustained a fractured skull, subdural and subarachnoid hemorrhage, contusion of the brain, fracture of sternum, fractures of both legs, multiple fractures of the ribs, hemorrhages of both pleural cavities, lacerations of left femur and lower throat. There were contusions over the right shoulder, forearm and hand, and a sharp-edge laceration, 2% inches long; large contusions of the back of the head and neck, down over the back.

Although our appellate courts have not been presented with this precise set of facts, viz., the criminal responsibility of the driver of an automobile who sleeps at the wheel, nevertheless they have clearly established the principles which govern the consideration of such a question.

[427]*427In Commonwealth v. Aurick, 342 Pa. 282 (1941), the present chief justice said (p. 287) :

“To make out a case of involuntary manslaughter, it must be proved that the death of a human being was caused by another’s unlawful act. It is immaterial whether the unlawfulness of the act is inherent in its very nature and purpose or arises only from the manner of performing an act which in its inception and aims is not unlawful.
“The law nowhere countenances careless, negligent and reckless conduct when that conduct menaces the physical well-being of others. Such conduct is therefore unlawful. It may not be unlawful if it menaces only the well-being of the reckless individual himself. It becomes so when others are brought within its compass. In Bisson v. Kelly, 314 Pa. 99, 110, 170 A. 139, this court said: ‘It is a primary social duty of every person to take thought and have a care lest his action result in injuries to others. This social duty the law recognizes and enforces, and for any injury resulting from any person’s lack of elementary forethought, the law holds that person accountable. A normal human being is held to foresee those injuries which are the consequence of his acts of omission or commission which he, as a reasonable human being, should have foreseen.’ ”

At page 288 the opinion continues:

“In Com. v. Gable, 7 S. & R. 422, at 427, this court, in an opinion by Chief Justice Tilghman, said: ‘Involuntary manslaughter is, where it plainly appears that neither death nor any great bodily harm was intended, but death is accidentally caused by some unlawful act, or an act not strictly unlawful in itself, but done in an unlawful manner and without due caution.’ ”

Continuing at page 290:

“On the other hand, the proof of negligence to support a charge of involuntary manslaughter need [428]*428not be proof of acts or omissions exhibiting reckless, wicked and wanton disregard of the safety of others. Negligence of that high degree will support a charge of murder in the second degree, as this court recognized in Commonwealth v. McLaughlin, 293 Pa. 218.”

And at page 291:

“If the appellant in the instant case ran his car in a manner which was rash and reckless at the time and place in question, he was guilty of an unlawful, act, for he was doing something the law forbids.”

In Commonwealth v. Dellcese, 155 Pa. Superior Ct. 120 (1944) it was said, at page 124:

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

Related

Commonwealth v. McLaughlin
142 A. 213 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1928)
Commonwealth v. Aurick
19 A.2d 920 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1941)
Bisson v. John B. Kelly, Inc.
170 A. 139 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1933)
Commonwealth v. Dellcese
38 A.2d 494 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1944)
Commonwealth v. Holman
50 A.2d 720 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1946)
Commonwealth v. Stosny
31 A.2d 582 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1943)
State v. Olsen
160 P.2d 427 (Utah Supreme Court, 1945)
Commonwealth v. Micuso
117 A. 211 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 Pa. D. & C. 424, 1948 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-page-paoytermctphila-1948.