Commonwealth v. Peronace

195 A. 57, 328 Pa. 86, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 616
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 27, 1937
DocketAppeals, 331 and 332
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 195 A. 57 (Commonwealth v. Peronace) 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. Peronace, 195 A. 57, 328 Pa. 86, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 616 (Pa. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Schaefer,

Appellant stands convicted of two homicides, the killing of his wife and his father-in-law, Vito Mariello. The two indictments were tried together. The jury decided that the murders were of the first degree and that the penalty should be death; appellant was accordingly sentenced.

Differences had arisen between the condemned and his father-in-law and his wife. She was living apart from her husband in her father’s house. On the day of the tragedy, about noon, the father-in-law, the wife and her small brother, aged eleven, left the house in which *89 they resided and proceeded to that of appellant, which was close by. Their mission was to interview him about the removal of some furniture from his house. Arriving at his residence, after some parleying, they were admitted. Within the house, an altercation took place between the two men, in which the father-in-law applied opprobrious terms to appellant and struck or pushed him. Appellant testified that the father-in-law, while in the house, threatened to shoot him. There is no evidence beyond appellant’s statement that the deceased was armed. No weapon was exhibited in the house or found upon his body immediately after he was killed.

Following the controversy in the house the three persons left by the front door, crossed the porch and descended steps which led to the street. The father and daughter started in the direction of home, the boy in the opposite direction. After proceeding some little distance, the father turned and retraced his steps, the daughter endeavoring to persuade him not to do so. He said something in Italian to the appellant, who was on the porch, and advanced to the gate, whereupon appellant entered the house, procured a revolver, opened the door and began shooting. He fired at least eight bullets into the body of the father-in-law, one of them through his heart, and four into his wife’s body. The two fell on the opposite side of the street, fifty-three feet from appellant’s house, the daughter on top of her father. He was pronounced dead by the doctor, who arrived on the scene a few minutes after the shooting. The wife lived for several hours but did not regain consciousness. Her death was caused by a bullet which passed through her brain.

A neighbor of appellant, a woman, entirely disinterested, testified that her attention was attracted by the two men arguing in Italian, which she could not understand. She walked to the rear of her lot and saw the wife and her father coming out of the gate leading to appellant’s house, appellant was on the porch. The ar *90 gument was continuing. The witness turned and walked into her garden, where, a few minutes later, she heard two shots. Quickly running back she saw the father-in-law, lying down “east” of appellant’s house, his daughter trying to pick nim up. Continuing her recital, she said appellant “stood right by him [the father-in-law] and he [appellant] fired about five shots . . . right at the body” as “it lay right on the ground.” She said the daughter was screaming “Oh, my God! Help! Help!” and “she held her father and said ‘Don’t shoot, don’t shoot.’ She left her father go and was jumping all around, and she came close to her husband, and he pushed her and she fell, and he fired the last shot and she fell and was quiet, and he didn’t fire any more.” Three exploded shells from the revolver were found on the father’s body, indicating that appellant must have been close to where he lay when he discharged the shells from the revolver. Other exploded cartridges were found near the bodies. Later four empty shells and an additional magazine clip were found in the yard of appellant’s house. The story of the foregoing witness was corroborated in some of its main particulars by the boy before mentioned, particularly as to appellant having come down from the porch and crossed over to where the man’s body was lying and there shot his wife. This witness further said that after appellant finished shooting he said to him, “Go tell your mother and see how she likes it.” There was also corroboration in particulars by other eyewitnesses.

Appellant pleaded self-defense and his version of the killings varied materially from that of the eyewitnesses. He contended that for years he lived in fear of his father-in-law, who had made threats against his life. He attributed his matrimonial difficulties to Mariello’s conduct towards him. He stated that on the day of the killing his father-in-law and his wife entered his home to remove a bedroom suite of furniture, that when Mariello entered he called him vile names and threat *91 ened to shoot him with a revolver, which he said Mariello stated he carried in his pocket. Continuing his narration, he said after his wife and Mariello left he returned to the kitchen to prepare his lunch, and after a short lapse of time, glancing out the window, he saw Mariello turn back and open the front gate of his home and proceed up the steps leading to the porch. He noticed his wife attempting to restrain him. As Mariello walked up the steps appellant stated he threatened to kill him. Appellant then became terrorized, secured his gun, proceeded to the front door of his home and shot Mariello, who was then standing on the porch. He admitted firing some eight or nine shots from the porch but denied any knowledge of killing his wife.

Counsel for appellant filed thirty-two assignments of error, all of which are without merit; many of which are trivial in nature. The first five relate to the court’s refusal to sustain challenges to certain prospective jurors for cause. It appears that before the jury was chosen appellant was forced to exhaust his peremptory challenges, some of which were utilized to remove prospective jurors after the court had refused challenges for cause. Under these circumstances had the challenges for cause been improperly refused, reversible error would have been committed: Com. v. Vitale, 250 Pa. 552, 95 A. 724. The rulings of the trial judge, however, were entirely proper. One of the jurors, Viola Halman, was challenged on the ground that she heard a story of the killings from the father of a boy who had witnessed them, and who was later called as a witness for the Commonwealth. On voir dire examination she denied she had formed any opinion of the guilt or innocence of the accused. The mere fact that a juror has heard a portion of the Commonwealth’s evidence is insufficient to disqualify, where the juror denies having formed an opinion on the guilt of the accused: Com. v. Roddy, 184 Pa. 274, 39 A. 211. The other challenges, in the main, were based on the fact that the jurors were either rela *92 tives of the county detective, who was the active prosecutor in the case, or political allies of the district attorney. All of the jurors stated they had formed no opinion on the case. No sound reason was shown for excluding them. “The test of disqualification is the juror’s ability and willingness to eliminate the influence of his scruples and render a verdict according to the evidence, and this is to be determined by the discretion of the trial judge, based upon the juror’s answers and demeanor. . . . Nothing short of a palpable abuse of discretion justifies a reversal in passing on a challenge for cause”: Com. v. Gelfi, 282 Pa. 434, 437, 128 A. 77, 79; Com. v. Bentley, 287 Pa.

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Bluebook (online)
195 A. 57, 328 Pa. 86, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-peronace-pa-1937.