Commonwealth v. Pitts

580 A.2d 352, 397 Pa. Super. 387, 1990 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2627
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 30, 1990
Docket00358
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 580 A.2d 352 (Commonwealth v. Pitts) 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. Pitts, 580 A.2d 352, 397 Pa. Super. 387, 1990 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2627 (Pa. 1990).

Opinion

HESTER, Judge:

This is an appeal from the February 15, 1990 order denying appellant relief without a hearing under the Post-Conviction Relief Act. Since we conclude there there is no dispute that the issues raised in this appeal are not cognizable under the PCRA, we affirm.

Resolution of the issues raised in this appeal requires a comprehensive review of the evidence introduced at the trial of appellant, Kendall Pitts. Appellant was convicted by a *389 jury on June 5, 1987, of carrying an unlicensed gun and of first degree murder in connection with the shooting death of nineteen-year-old Derrick Mahaffey on June 22, 1986, in a public housing development in Pittsburgh known as the Garfield Projects. Appellant shot Derrick from the automobile that appellant was driving. Five eyewitnesses testified at trial, including the two passengers in appellant’s car.

Sylvia Johnson, one eyewitness to the shooting, testified as follows. She lives across from the apartment of the victim’s grandmother and was the victim’s best friend. She had dinner with Derrick and his grandmother on the evening of June 22, 1986. After dinner, she, the victim, Sylvia’s sister, and Sylvia’s niece went outside to sit on lawn chairs and talk. Approximately five minutes later, she noticed an automobile drive past and then back up. The car was a small, blue station wagon, and one of the occupants whom Sylvia could not see asked Derrick his name and accused him of “making faces” at him. Notes of Testimony, 6/2-5/87, at 47. The victim denied that he had made faces and stood up from his chair. Sylvia said that Derrick was shot immediately. She heard three shots, in quick succession. Sylvia panicked, grabbed her young niece, and ran.

Sylvia was firm that she heard three shots and that all three were fired immediately after the victim stood up. Although she ran as soon as she heard the first shot, Sylvia soon turned to look at the victim. She saw the victim walk toward the car, lean on it, and then place his hands inside the driver’s window. The car drove away slowly. Sylvia stated that no further shots were fired either while the victim was approaching the car or while he was at the car. After Sylvia saw the car drive away, she returned to the victim, who collapsed in her arms.

Sharee Johnson, Sylvia’s sister, was thirteen when the shooting occurred. At trial, she acknowledged that she was more concerned with her own well-being than observing the events of the shooting and that she ran as soon as the first shot was fired. Although she confirmed her sister’s version *390 of events prior to the shooting, her testimony was that one shot was fired at the victim when he stood up and that two shots were fired while he was leaning against the car.

A third eyewitness, Charles Woodward, who also lived in the Garfield Projects, observed the shooting from across the street. He did not hear the verbal exchange between the victim and the driver of the car, but he did not flee or turn his head when the shots were fired. He testified that three shots were fired in rapid succession as soon as the victim stood up from his chair. He stated that the victim did not lean against the light blue station wagon, which had driven away, but instead, leaned against a car parked along the street. Woodward’s unshaken testimony was that Derrick was shot three times immediately after he stood up and before he started to walk toward the car. Woodward did not see the occupants of the blue station wagon, which drove away after the shooting.

Derrick Webb testified as follows. He was one of the two passengers in the car and is on friendly terms with both the other passenger, Todd Blackman, and appellant. Webb was sitting next to appellant and observed him shoot Derrick. Webb also was with appellant during the evening hours prior to the shooting when he and appellant had been driving around and drinking a moderate amount of beer. They picked up Blackman later in the evening, just prior to the shooting. Webb noted that appellant did not mention the victim’s name or indicate that he was angry with anyone at any point during the evening.

When the three men started driving through the Garfield Projects, they drove past the victim and his friends. Webb heard someone “scream out,” and appellant backed up his car, stopping in front of the victim. Id. at 162. Webb said that appellant then asked the victim, “What’s Up?” several times. Id. The victim stood up and started to walk toward the car, and appellant shot him three times. The victim kept walking toward the car, which drove away. Webb testified that the victim never had his hands inside appellant’s car. When asked by the Commonwealth whether *391 there was a motive for the shooting, Webb responded that he observed absolutely no reason for appellant to shoot Derrick. Id. at 171.

Todd Blackman also testified for the Commonwealth. He is appellant’s first cousin and was raised as his brother. Blackman also knew the victim and Sylvia Johnson. Black-man confirmed that he, appellant, and Webb were driving through the Garfield Projects and drove past Derrick. He also heard the gun fired three times which he described as occurring when Derrick was “coming toward the car.” Id. at 230.

Aletta Curry was appellant’s girlfriend, and she testified that approximately two weeks after the shooting, appellant told her that he shot Derrick because the “guy was talking stuff on him; and he didn’t like what he was saying, so he shot him____” Id. at 263.

Both Sylvia Johnson and Derrick Webb testified that there was no weapon in Derrick Mahaffey’s hands at any point during the exchange between appellant and Mahaffey. It also was established at trial that appellant was not licensed to carry a gun at the time of the shooting and that he owned a light blue station wagon. Derrick died of one gunshot wound which penetrated his heart.

We summarize the evidence as follows. All of the eyewitnesses agreed that the first shot was fired as soon as the victim stood up and started to walk toward the car, which had backed up to come parallel to the victim. Four witnesses, including appellant’s cousin, said all three were fired as soon as the victim stood up. Only the young witness, who admittedly was not paying attention, said that the other two shots were fired when the victim was leaning against a car. There was a conflict about which car the victim leaned against, but the two witnesses who did not turn away agreed that it was not appellant’s car. The victim was unarmed, and the motive, established by appellant’s own admission as well as eyewitness testimony, was that the victim called appellant names. The fact that appellant pulled the trigger is established by Webb and by appellant’s *392 statements to his girlfriend. Although appellant’s cousin did not say that appellant pulled the trigger, the cousin admitted all of the other relevant facts and did not state that either Webb or he shot the gun. Succinctly, the evidence offered by five eyewitnesses, including appellant’s cousin, refutes any inference that the appellant acted in self-defense.

The .jury returned a verdict of guilty of first degree murder.

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Bluebook (online)
580 A.2d 352, 397 Pa. Super. 387, 1990 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-pitts-pa-1990.