Commonwealth v. Robinson

157 A. 689, 305 Pa. 302, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 585
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 28, 1931
DocketAppeal, 150
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 157 A. 689 (Commonwealth v. Robinson) 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. Robinson, 157 A. 689, 305 Pa. 302, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 585 (Pa. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

William Robinson, colored, aged twenty-one years, was tried for the murder on June 7, 1930, of his wife, *304 aged nineteen years, and the jury found him guilty of murder of the first degree and fixed his punishment as life imprisonment. During their married life of nine months they quarreled frequently. They separated on March 21, 1930. The wife remained with her parents. The defendant lodged with another colored man a short distance away. There was evidence that the defendant on several occasions threatened to kill his wife.

Shortly before the homicide the defendant purchased a revolver. The man with whom the defendant lodged removed the cartridges from the revolver and placed the revolver in a dresser drawer. The night before the homicide the defendant called his wife on the telephone. The wife’s mother informed him that her daughter was out for the night. She then notified her daughter that the defendant had called and wished to see her. The following forenoon the wife went to her husband’s room and found her husband and the other lodger in bed. The lodger got up and dressed and left the defendant and his wife alone. Some time before the wife came to the defendant’s room the defendant had reloaded the revolver and placed it in the dresser drawer. When the deceased was in the defendant’s room and before the other lodger had left, the relations between her and her husband appeared friendly. What occurred in the room when the defendant and his wife were alone is known only to the survivor. According to his testimony, no altercation took place between them. He said his wife went through the drawer of the “ehifferobe,” and he explained that “she did that every time she came over because every job I was on I found novelties and she would look to see if I had anything.” In the course of her exploration, so he testified, she pulled out the right hand dresser drawer and picked up the gun and said, “I am going to keep this little gun,” and he said, “No, you ain’t.” She put it in her coat and started out of the room. He said she went to the door and he called her back into the room and she had the gun in her *305 hand and pulled the trigger. He told her to “put it away quick, that it was loaded”; then he tried to take it from her. He said it had a hair trigger and the slightest little jar would make it go off. In the tussle for the gun he said he felt himself slipping off the bed and his arm running down her arm, and he let go of her arm and grabbed the bed and the gun went off. He said at no time did he have hold of the revolver. After the gun was discharged Mrs. Robinson fell backward against the door, dropping the gun on the top of the dresser, where it was later found. An autopsy revealed that the bullet entered her body at a point four inches above and one inch to the left of the left nipple, and the bullet took a downward and backward course, passing through one of the ventricles of the heart, causing instant death. There were no powder marks, burns or smudges on the clothing or body of the deceased, while the ballistic expert testified that such smudges and burns would be present if the muzzle of the revolver was less than twenty-one inches from the body when fired. All this happened between eleven and twelve o’clock in the morning. About 2:30 P. M., the deceased’s brother, who had been looking for the defendant, found him at a carnival ground and said, “You shot my sister.” To this accusation the defendant made no immediate reply, but after walking about fifty feet, asked, “Is she dead?” His defense was that the fatal wound was accidently self-inflicted by his wife. This defense the jury rejected.

The proposition on which the appellant chiefly relies for a new trial in this case is that the trial judge committed reversible error in failing to charge that even though the Commonwealth proved the commission of murder in this case the presumption was that the murder was murder of the second degree and the burden was upon the Commonwealth to offer proof raising the crime to first degree.

*306 It is the long-established law of Pennsylvania that in a case of felonious homicide if the Commonwealth proves only a malicious killing it is the duty of the jury to find the defendant guilty of no higher degree of crime than murder of the second degree. By long usage it has been customary to charge the jury on this point substantially as follows: “If you find a wilful, unlawful killing of a human being, the law presumes that that killing is malicious, that it is murder and not manslaughter. This presumption however goes only as high as murder of the second degree. The burden is upon the Commonwealth to raise it from the second degree to the first degree by proof beyond a reasonable doubt of the specific intent in the mind of the defendant to take life”: Com. v. McMurray, 198 Pa. 51; Com. v. Van Horn, 188 Pa. 143.

Justice Agnew in his oft-quoted opinion in Com. v. Drum, 58 Pa. 9, 17, expresses this idea in this language: “The presumption against [the defendant] rises no higher than murder in the second degree......It therefore lies on the Commonwealth to satisfy the jury of those facts and circumstances which indicate the deliberate intention to kill and the cool depravity of heart and conscious purpose which constitute the crime of murder in the first degree.” See also Com. v. Morrison, 193 Pa. 613.

The important thing to be considered in examining the charge of a trial judge is the idea of the law which its language conveys to the jury rather than the form of words and phrases used in conveying it. Charging a jury in Pennsylvania has not yet become merely a matter of remembering and repeating stereotyped (even if time-honored) phrases. The trial judge must be allowed some latitude of expression. The function of a charge is to instruct the jury accurately as to the law and to clarify the issues of fact. This duty the trial judge in the case at bar fully performed. When he concluded his charge no attentive juror should have had any doubt as to the burden which rested upon the *307 Commonwealth. This is proved by the following excerpts from the charge: “You must be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt, growing out of the evidence, of the existence of each and every element of the crime of which you convict......The legislature of our state, considering that there is a distinction in the degrees of guilt in murders, where a specific intent to take life existed at the time the murder was committed and where no such intention did exist, but where the person doing the killing only intended to do grievous bodily harm, and the injury resulted in death, divided the crime of murder into two degrees, murder of the first degree and murder of the second degree, and it is for the jury to say in their finding, if they find the defendant guilty of murder, of which degree of murder he is guilty......The Commonwealth contends in this case that on the 7th day of June of this year, the defendant, William Eobinson, did feloniously and intentionally, unlawfully, premeditatedly and with malice aforethought, kill and murder Loraine Eobinson. That is the contention of the Commonwealth......The ingredients or elements of murder in the first degree are that the killing must have been unlawful, wilful, deliberate and premeditated, and with malice aforethought.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 A. 689, 305 Pa. 302, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-robinson-pa-1931.