Commonwealth v. Robinson

24 A.2d 694, 148 Pa. Super. 61, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 13
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 7, 1941
DocketAppeal, 295
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 24 A.2d 694 (Commonwealth v. Robinson) 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. Robinson, 24 A.2d 694, 148 Pa. Super. 61, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 13 (Pa. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Ehodes, J.,

Defendant was convicted as an accessory before and after the fact to burglary. His motion for a new trial having been refused and sentence imposed, this appeal was taken.

The assignments of error are directed to alleged errors in the charge of the court and to the admission of evidence.

The questions raised do not require a detailed review of the voluminous record, as the sufficiency of the evidence to support the conviction is not questioned by appellant. The Commonwealth proved that on March 31, 1941, the building of the Clearfield Taxidermy Company, in Clearfield, Pa., was broken into and entered, and that forty-eight fur coats were stolen from its stockroom. Within a few days thereafter most of these coats were found on the premises occupied by one Edgar Swartz in the vicinity of Altoona, Pa. Thereafter confessions were obtained from Swartz, Harry Walls, and William Kelley, wherein they admitted that they had committed the crime. All of them pleaded guilty, and appeared as witnesses for the Commonwealth in the case at bar. There was ample testimony from which it could be found that appellant had been acquainted with these men, especially Swartz and Walls, for several months prior to the burglary; that appellant had inspected the premises of the Clearfield Taxidermy while on a purported business visit, and later suggested to Swartz the feasibility of stealing fur coats therefrom; that appellant had entered into an agreement with the thieves for a division of the proceeds of the crime; and that subsequent to the theft of the furs appellant had sought to aid them in secreting and disposing of the *64 stolen goods. Appellant admitted his acquaintance with Swartz, Walls, and Kelley, but denied that his contacts with them had been for the purpose, or as numerous, as shown by the evidence of the Commonwealth. He contended that his meetings with them were few, and limited to legitimate business transactions or attempts on the part of one or more of these men to sell him merchandise, which he refused to buy because he thought the circumstances suspicious under which it was offered. As to his collaboration with them subsequent to the crime, appellant testified that everything he did was induced by fear, and because one of the men threatened him with a gun. It is not surprising that the jury apparently refused to accept appellant’s explanation in view of the fact that after his arrest he first gave the police a statement in which he denied that these men had come to him for the purpose of concealing and disposing of the furs immediately following the perpetration of the crime, and later on the same night gave the police another statement in which he admitted that the thieves had sought his assistance, which he had rendered under compulsion and fear. Appellant also admitted at the trial that on the night of the burglary, after the thieves had come to his place of business in Curwensville, they had all driven to the place of one Kranitz, in DuBois, twenty miles away, and that he used his own car and was followed by the thieves in theirs. Appellant admitted that his car could have out-distanced easily the one in which the thieves were riding, which was a much older model and in poorer condition than his. Another factor which undoubtedly reacted unfavorably upon the credibility of appellant’s story was his testimony to the effect that several days after the crime he was visited by a man whom he did not know, and that he claimed to have been sent to him by Walls and stated that he had been in jail with the latter.. Appellant testified further that this man demanded $500 in cash, that he produced a message from *65 Walls, which he said was smuggled out of the jail in his shoe, wherein Walls requested appellant to provide bail for the three thieves; that he ordered this man out of his store, whereupon the visitor threatened appellant with a revolver. In rebuttal the Commonwealth produced George E. Punk, a member of the state police force for more than twelve years. He had been identified by appellant as the unknown emissary about whom he had testified. Funk testified that he had been placed in prison with Walls by prearrangement with the police, and that after conversing with Walls he had received from him the message to take to appellant at Curwensville. The note was produced and admitted in evidence. Funk stated that he went to Curwensville and delivered the message; that he had no gun with him, as it had been removed previously by a fellow officer; that in his conversation with appellant the latter had told him that the boys had stolen too many furs, that they were hard to dispose of at that time of year, that he would not go their bail, that he should tell them not to write or call, as it would invite detection, and that he would like to help them but his property was not held in his own name, and consequently he was unable to give bail.

Appellant complains in the first assignment of error that the charge was insufficient as it related to the burden of proof. The jury was told: “In this, as in.all criminal cases, a person charged with a crime comes into court with the presumption of innocence. In other words, the law presumes a man to be innocent until he is proved to be guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.” The trial judge instructed the jury on the doctrine of reasonable doubt, and he also described in detail what constitutes one an accessory before the fact and an accessory after the fact, and pointed out the essential facts which it was necessary for the Commonwealth to prove beyond a reasonable doubt in order for the jury to be justified in finding appellant guilty on either count *66 in the indictment. It is not ground for reversal that the trial judge did not say in express words that the burden of proof never shifted from the Commonwealth (Com. v. Arcurio, 92 Pa. Superior Ct. 404, 408), and he was not required to explain the meaning of the term in the absence of a request so to do (Com. v. Conroy and Kline, 109 Pa. Superior Ct. 274, 282, 167 A. 407). From an examination of the charge ofl the court in its entirety, we are convinced that the issues were clearly presented to the jury, that there could be no misconception as to the burden of proof being on the Commonwealth to establish the charges in the indictment beyond a reasonable doubt, and that the jury could not have had any difficulty in comprehending the questions they were to decide or the rules of law to be applied in doing so. See Nathan v. McGinley, 342 Pa. 12, 19 A. 2d 917.

Appellant contends (fourth assignment of error) that the trial judge erred in his instructions concerning the consideration to be given the testimony of accomplices. In substance, the jury was charged that this presented a special question of credibility; that the testimony of accomplices must be scrutinized with particular care, but if, after so considering it, the jury found it to be true, such testimony would support a conviction. The trial judge indicated that there was other evidence which corroborated the testimony of the accomplices in some respects. His exhaustive review of the evidence, concerning which no complaint is made, could not have failed to aid the jury in distinguishing the points of corroboration and contradiction. The instructions were sufficient, especially in the absence of a request to amplify them.

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Bluebook (online)
24 A.2d 694, 148 Pa. Super. 61, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-robinson-pasuperct-1941.