Commonwealth v. Peterson

380 A.2d 872, 251 Pa. Super. 462, 1977 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2941
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 2, 1977
Docket1843
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 380 A.2d 872 (Commonwealth v. Peterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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. Peterson, 380 A.2d 872, 251 Pa. Super. 462, 1977 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2941 (Pa. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

PRICE, Judge:

On June 12, 1975, following a jury trial, appellant was found guilty of robbery 1 and conspiracy. 2 Post-trial motions *463 were filed, argued and subsequently denied by a court en banc. This appeal raises the single issue of the sufficiency of the evidence. Our review of the record convinces us that the evidence was indeed sufficient to support the convictions, and we therefore affirm the judgment of sentence.

The charges against appellant stemmed from the December 17, 1974, armed robbery of J’s Submarine Shop in Easton, Pennsylvania. David Forker and Betsy Kels, employees at J’s, described the robbers as two black males. The victims were later able to identify Robert Johnson 3 as one of the perpetrators. Officer James T. Serfass of the Easton police was assigned to cruise downtown Easton on the night of December 17. Within a period of approximately one hour prior to the robbery, Officer Serfass observed appellant on two occasions at locations within eight blocks from J’s. At 9:25 p. m., the officer saw appellant, whom he knew by name, walking with Robert Johnson. At 10:15 p. m., Officer Serfass observed appellant seated in a parked 1961 green Chevrolet with three other blacks. The officer noted the car’s license number and continued on his way. Officer Stephen Homoki, also on patrol, noticed appellant with Robert Johnson and two other black males at 9:30 p. m. within the same eight block area.

Two witnesses testified regarding separate incidents involving a green, 1961 Chevrolet and occurring in the immediate vicinity of the robbery. Robert Parvin noted a greenish or turquoise colored 1961 Chevrolet on 11th Street near J’s at about 10:30 p. m. The car was double-parked with its lights off, and its sole occupant was the black male driver. As Parvin pulled his car into an alley to turn around, the Chevrolet’s parking lights were turned on and it proceeded down 11th Street at a high rate of speed.

C. Randall Murray, a newspaper reporter, was informed of the robbery by phone and drove to the scene in his automo *464 bile. Around 10:30 p. m., as Murray turned his car down an alley in the vicinity of J’s, he saw a green 1961 Chevrolet without lights coming rapidly toward him. The car had at least two occupants, the driver and a person in the back seat.

Officer Stephen Vincent, on patrol in a nearby section of Easton, received a radio call concerning the robbery at about 10:29 p. m. He proceeded north on Seventh Street toward J’s and soon passed a green 1961 Chevrolet being driven in the opposite direction at an inordinately rapid rate. The car hád four black occupants. Officer Vincent identified appellant as the driver of the car, although he stated that he could not be positive because the driver was wearing a dark, large brimmed hat.

Donald Trumbauer, dispatcher at Easton’s central fire station, located near Sixth and Northampton Streets, monitored police radio calls regarding the robbery. He was aware that the escape vehicle had been identified as a green Chevrolet. Around 10:30 p. m., Trumbauer saw a green-1961 Chevrolet come north on Sixth Street and turn into the alley beside the firehouse at a reckless speed.

Fireman Steven Kohler heard a car turn into the alley at what sounded like high speed. Although he did not see the car pull into the lot across from the fire station, Kohler did see a stationary green car and three black males leaning over an open door of the. vehicle. The three men subsequently walked toward Northampton Street and mounted steps to the rear of an apartment house. The men attempted to enter but the door was locked. They knocked on the door and an adjacent window. After a. short time one of the men left the other two at the door and retraced his path down the steps. A police car pulled into the lot and the two men at the door ducked. Shortly thereafter they were admitted into the apartment house.

Another fireman' Robert Reese, saw three black males leave the green Chevrolet and enter the walkway leading to the apartment house. Although the men were momentarily out of his sight as they ascended the stairs, Reese was again able to observe them at the rear door of the apartment *465 house. Reese also saw one of the men leave the apartment building area and return to the green Chevrolet where he was apprehended by the police. At trial, Reese identified appellant as that man.

Officer Serfass was the first policeman to arrive at the lot next to the firehouse. He found appellant standing by the green Chevrolet and arrested him. Officer Serfass recognized the car as the same one he had seen earlier in the evening. The car’s license number matched his previous notation, and its engine was still warm.

Appellant cites three decisions.of our Supreme Court in support of his contention that the evidence in this case was insufficient to support his conviction. In Commonwealth v. Roscioli, 454 Pa. 59, 309 A.2d 396 (1973), Philadelphia police responded to a radio call regarding a burglary in progress at a restaurant. When officers arrived on the scene, the appellant and two other people were standing around a phone booth immediately in.front of the restaurant. The appellant and his companions began to move rapidly away but were halted by police. The front door of the restaurant was found to be unlocked, and upon entering, police officers discovered two men and several bags of collected loot. The pane of one of the restaurant windows, located about a foot from the phone booth, was missing. It was later found leaning against a wall in the rear of the building. In finding the evidence insufficient to support Roscioli’s conviction of burglary, the Supreme Court noted that, there was no proof that the appellant had removed the window pane; there was nothing to indicate, the appellant was aware of the ongoing burglary inside the restaurant; the hasty departure of appellant and his companions from the vicinity of the phone booth was explained at trial as an attempt to ascertain whether a holdup had occurred at a bar across the street; and, finally, although the appellant admitted knowing the two captured burglars from the neighborhood, there was no showing that he had been with them on the night of the crime or that he was in any way associated with the criminal enterprise.

*466 Commonwealth v. Bailey, 448 Pa. 224, 292 A.2d 345 (1972), is the second case advanced in support of appellant’s argument. In Bailey, an employee saw a man take a box of hosiery from the loading dock of his employer’s warehouse. The thief threw the box over a wall surrounding the premises and then climbed over the wall himself. The employee gave chase in his automobile, but he was unable to locate the thief on the adjoining street. About three minutes later, however, the employee spotted the thief seated in the back of a 1964 Chevrolet located about a block and a half from the warehouse. Five other males were in the car, which Bailey was driving.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Gordon
477 A.2d 1342 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1984)
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443 A.2d 1185 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1982)
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414 A.2d 361 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1979)
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Bluebook (online)
380 A.2d 872, 251 Pa. Super. 462, 1977 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-peterson-pasuperct-1977.