Commonwealth v. Pasco

2 A.2d 736, 332 Pa. 439, 1938 Pa. LEXIS 797
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 29, 1938
DocketAppeal, 325
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 2 A.2d 736 (Commonwealth v. Pasco) 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. Pasco, 2 A.2d 736, 332 Pa. 439, 1938 Pa. LEXIS 797 (Pa. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Barnes,

Defendant was convicted by a jury of the murder of his wife, Antonette Pasco, with the penalty fixed at life imprisonment. He appeals from the judgment and sentence entered upon the verdict.

He lived with his wife and four children in three rooms at No. 1724 Railroad Street, in Coal Township, Northumberland County. Residing in the same house were his father-in-law and his wife’s sister. Other relatives of his wife lived on the third floor of the house. Defendant quarreled frequently with his wife and her relatives.

Prom our review of the testimony it appears that on the evening of October 14, 1937, the defendant returned to his home from work and engaged in an altercation with his wife concerning some money received from the relief authorities. Defendant demanded the money and his wife refused to give it to him, whereupon he took her pocketbook and said that he was going out to spend the money. His wife insisted upon accompanying him. As they were leaving the house the defendant was heard to utter threats against his wife. She bade good-bye to her children and she said to them that she might not *442 come back again. The defendant remarked that he would not kiss his children good-bye because he knew that he was coming hack. As they left the house he said to his wife “this is the last ride you are going to get.” About ten o’clock p. m. defendant, with his wife seated in the front seat of the automobile, drove away from the house. There is evidence that he was under the influence of liquor at the time.

About midnight defendant returned home with his wife, and said to members of the family that she was intoxicated. He secured a blanket which he placed over her while she remained outside in the automobile, apparently asleep. After conversing briefly with his eleven-year-old son, he went to the car and again drove away with his wife, proceeding in the direction of Shamokin, and thence to an isolated mountain section of the county where he stopped the car and drank bottles of beer which he had purchased. Again he drove the automobile to his home, arriving there about three o’clock in the morning. He entered the house, while his wife remained in the front seat of the automobile. Defendant’s sister-in-law and his son went to the car in an endeavor to persuade her to come into the house and go to bed. They were unsuccessful in their efforts to awaken her. The son reported that she was breathing hard and would not talk. Thereupon defendant went to bed and slept until about six o’clock in the morning, at which time he aroused his son and directed him to awaken his mother. When the son reached the automobile he observed that his mother’s lips were blue, and he suggested to his father to drive her to the home of a doctor in Shamokin. They did so, and when the.doctor examined the wife he pronounced her to be dead. While the automobile was parked before the doctor’s residence the defendant was observed by his son to take something from his pocket and place it behind the cushion of the front seat of the car. After defendant’s arrest the police found a black *443 jack, admitted to be the property of defendant, back of the cushion where he was seen to have placed it.

The medical testimony revealed that the wife died as a result of a fractured skull and a brain hemorrhage produced by the application of external force. There was a wound about the size of a half dollar at the base of her skull behind the right ear, which appeared to have been inflicted by a blunt instrument. There were no other marks of violence upon her body.

The defendant asserts that his wife received the injury that caused her death as the result of striking her head on the concrete highway when she jumped or fell from the automobile shortly before midnight during their first automobile ride that evening. The defendant states that while he was driving his car at a speed about twenty-five miles an hour, between Shamokin and Mount Carmel, looking into the mirror he saw his wife fall out of the car and land on her back in the center of the concrete highway, immediately behind the automobile. Three witnesses testified that they assisted defendant to lift his wife, who weighed over two hundred pounds, into his automobile. One of the witnesses testified that she was unconscious at the time. The defendant insists that his wife spoke to him and said that she was all right and did not wish to go to a doctor.

It is argued on behalf of defendant that there was not sufficient evidence of his commission of the crime to sustain a conviction. It is fundamental that when a charge of crime is based upon circumstantial evidence, the facts and circumstances must not only be consistent with and point to the guilt of the accused, but they must be inconsistent with his innocence. See Com. v. Bardolph, 314 Pa. 579; Com. v. Benz, 318 Pa. 465, 472; Com. v. Bone, 64 Pa. Superior Ct. 44. The application of this established principle of law does not stand in the way of conviction in the present case. While the Commonwealth’s evidence is largely circumstantial, it is, in our opinion, sufficient to sustain the guilt of the defendant.

*444 The defendant many times threatened the life of his wife, and it is not disputed that they quarreled on the evening in question, as well as on numerous prior occasions. It is conceded that he owned a blackjack, capable of inflicting the wound that caused her death. That it was in his possession during the night in question is established by the testimony of a witness to whom he exhibited it in a saloon, as well as by the testimony of the police officers who found it in the automobile, and by his son who saw him place it there shortly before the doctor pronounced his mother dead. Moreover, it appears that the wound inflicted upon her was caused by a weapon of this character. That defendant had the disposition to commit the crime is evidenced by the numerous threats directed against his wife. These facts point to a wilful, deliberate and premeditated killing. They harmonize with the conclusion of the defendant’s guilt, and are at variance with his contention that her death was accidental: Com. v. Coonts, 288 Pa. 74; Com. v. Lockhard, 325 Pa. 56. In our opinion the testimony was sufficient to sustain the jury’s verdict, and it is well settled that in such cases the judgment of this Court will not be substituted for that of the jury: Com. v. Wendt, 258 Pa. 325; Com. v. Thompson, 321 Pa. 327.

The defendant complains of the manner in which the trial judge (1) supervised the selection of the jurors, (2) his rulings on the admission of evidence, and (3) portions of his charge to the jury. All of his contentions are without merit, and some of them are trivial in nature.

It is asserted that the court below abused its discretion in excusing ten jurors of the original panel from jury service because of illness, before the case was called for trial, and in failing to state in open court that such excuses had been made. This objection of defendant cannot be sustained. It is not the right of the defendant to require that the whole jury panel be in court at the *445 time liis case is called lor trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 A.2d 736, 332 Pa. 439, 1938 Pa. LEXIS 797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-pasco-pa-1938.