Commonwealth v. Petritus

9 Pa. D. & C. 565
CourtLuzerne County Court of Oyer and Terminer
DecidedJuly 1, 1927
DocketNo. 87
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Pa. D. & C. 565 (Commonwealth v. Petritus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Luzerne 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. Petritus, 9 Pa. D. & C. 565 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

Coughlin, J.

The defendants, George Petritus, Zig. Chumetski and Joseph Pigarella and one Joseph Bush, who is a fugitive from justice, were indicted as follows: “First count, rape; second count, attempt to rape; third count, assault and battery.” Sept. 16, 1926, three of the defendants, George Petritus, Zig. Churnetski and Joseph Pigarella, who were tried jointly, were found guilty as indicted.

The case of the Commonwealth developed that, upon June 30, 1926, Mary Rushkowski, of Ashley, Pa.-, a suburb of Wilkes-Barre, Pa., a married woman with a large family, the oldest of whom is nineteen years, between the hours of 9 and 10 P. M., stood at the corner near Hazle and Blackman. Streets, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., hailed a passing automobile containing four men and asked them to drive her to Wilkes-Barre, from whence she was going to Plains or Miners Mills to meet her husband. She was admitted to the automobile, which turned off of Hazle Street, however, going into Hanover Township, Luzerne County, Pa.

She was subsequently pulled from the automobile into the woods and TRe four occupants of the automobile there and then assaulted her and raped her. The time of the rape was approximately 1.30 A. M., July 1st.

She was then put back in the automobile, taken out a second time, ran away, and made her way to a farmhouse some distance away.

She went to the door of the house, aroused the people therein, but returned to the road on seeing a passing automobile. She begged a ride and was taken to a garage in Ashley, where the police were summoned, as well as a doctor. Her slippers were gone, sixty dollars which she had on her person was missing, her corset, silk shawl, pocket-book, containing a pin, 50 cents and a handkerchief, were likewise missing. She was thence taken to the hospital about daybreak. Her physical and mental condition at the time were pitiable.

All four of the defendants indicted were arrested at 1.30 the same night or morning in Hanover Township, not far from the place of assault. They were traveling toward Ashley and away from the place of the assault when arrested by the Ashley police because of excessive speed. They were taken at once to police headquarters, a record made of the number of their car, their names and addresses, and then dismissed.

Subsequently learning of the assault of Mary Rushkowski, three of the defendants were re-arrested, one being a fugitive from justice.

[566]*566The Commonwealth maintains that upon the clothing of one of the defendants there were blood-stains, and called a chemist, who testified that the bloodstains were similar to those upon the clothes of Mary Rushkowski, and were human blood. The defendant accounts for the blood-stains by alleging injury to his finger.

A pin identified by Mary Rushkowski as hers was shown to have been taken from the pocket of one of the defendants. As to which one, the evidence is conflicting. One of the police officers testified that it was taken from the coat of one of .the defendants, while the defendants introduced testimony that he was arrested without having on any coat.

The Commonwealth produced two witnesses, one, Nicholas Fetchik, and one, Anthony Galardi, present at the time Mary Rushkowski got into the car on Hazle Street. Anthony Galardi gave the number of the car as 982,168, being the number taken by the police at 1.30 the night of the assault as the number of defendants’ car. Galardi testified that Fetchik took down the number, and he memorized it. Fetchik claimed Galardi took down the number and he, Fetchik, gave it to a Mr. Casey, who was not called. Both witnesses testified four men were in the car at the time. Two witnesses, Fetchik and Galardi, could not identify the defendants. The testimony of Mary Rush-kowski was unsatisfactory on the subject of identification. She identified them, but in parts of her testimony stated her inability to do so.

The defence was an alibi accounting for the four defendants up to about 11.20 on the night of June 30th, at which time they allege they were in Sugar Notch, and traveled from thence in their automobile to a pool-room in Carey’s Patch, in Hanover Township, not a great distance from where the assault took place.

The evidence of the defendants as to their movements before 11.20 was as follows: George Petritus, driving the machine, left home about 9.15, June 30th, driving alone from Askam to Warrior Run, a community adjoining Hanover Township, there meeting another one of the defendants, Joseph Pigarella.

They thereupon left Warrior Run, traveling through Sugar Notch up the Ashley plane to Drums, Luzerne County, Pa.; turned back because of tire trouble, arriving at Sugar Notch again at approximately 11.20 or 11.30. There they met the other two defendants, Churnetski and Bush, and proceeded to the said pool-room at Carey’s Patch. They left about 1 o’clock A. M., and were arrested for speeding, as alleged' by the police.

Many witnesses testified in behalf of the defendants, showing Churnetski to have been at Sugar Notch as late as 11.20.

Many witnesses were examined as to the good character of the defendants, more particularly Churnetski. The proprietor at Carey’s Patch corroborated defendants’ testimony as to their presence in his pool-room.

The defendants having been promptly convicted, moved for a new trial, assigning as error (1-3) the admission and subsequent refusal to strike out the testimony of Noah Parker, the farmer at whose farmhouse Mary Rush-kowski first stopped in a deplorable condition seeking aid. The testimony objected to was the complaint that Mary Rushkowski made to the witness as to what had happened to her. Similar objection was made to what Mary Rushkowski said when arriving at the garage, stating to the doctor and police summoned as to what had happened to her.

We believe the evidence complained of was properly admissible under the doctrine of res gestss and as corroborative testimony. In prosecutions for rape, the fact of complaint of ravishment, freshly made by the alleged vie-[567]*567tim, herself called and examined as a witness against the accused, is always admissible, and the absence or delay thereof ordinarily goes to discredit her testimony in support of the charge. See Stevick v. Com., 78 Pa. 460; Com. v. Bardino, 20 Dist. R. 478, and the numerous authorities cited therein.

Further reasons (4-14) for a new trial consist of alleged errors in the court’s charge to the jury. These errors, in the main, consist of exceptions to the charge on the subject of an alibi as a defence, and on the subject of reasonable doubt, and also that the court erred in accentuating the main features of the Commonwealth’s case.

We have reviewed the charge of the court carefully and are of the opinion that it was proper and fair to the defendants, taken in its entirety. Furthermore, the defendants’ points on the subjects of reasonable doubt and alibi were affirmed, they being in harmony with the court’s charge. The defendants’ counsel were permitted to draw the court’s attention to facts concerning which they wished further review by the court, and those facts were thereupon reviewed. Counsel were asked if there was anything further to which they desired the attention of the jury drawn, to which they made no response. We are unable to see that there was any over-emphasizing of the Commonwealth’s case.

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Related

Stevick v. Commonwealth
78 Pa. 460 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1875)

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Bluebook (online)
9 Pa. D. & C. 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-petritus-paoytermctluzer-1927.