Commonwealth v. Ross

152 A.2d 778, 190 Pa. Super. 145, 1959 Pa. Super. LEXIS 634
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 3, 1959
DocketAppeals, 215 to 218
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 152 A.2d 778 (Commonwealth v. Ross) 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. Ross, 152 A.2d 778, 190 Pa. Super. 145, 1959 Pa. Super. LEXIS 634 (Pa. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

Opinion by

Ervin, J.,

Appellant appeals from judgments and sentences imposed by the court below on four bills of indictment charging him with conspiracy to commit rape, rape, conspiracy to rob and aggravated robbery. The facts are fairly stated in the opinion' of the court below as follows: “On May 12, 1956, at about 3 :QQ a.m., the prosecutrix, a young white- girl of 16, and her escort, William Device, were parked in Ms car near Edgley ball field, close to the 33rd and Diamond Street entrance to Fairmount Park, in PMladelphia. They had attended a party in Wynnefield and had stopped in the park on their way home. Suddenly the doors of their car were pulled open and two young colored men got in. One was Samuel Ross, the defendant. He had a revolver in his hand. His companion was holding in his hand either a piece of lead pipe or a blackjack.

“Ross got in-on the passenger side and made Device get out of the front and into the back of the car. Then Ross climbed over the prosecutrix into the driver’s seat. Device was made to kneel on the floor in the back of the car with his head down and away from Ross’s accomplice, who sat over him holding in Ms hand the *149 blackjack or piece of a lead pipe. Ross then drove further into the park toward a wooded area.

“Device was terrified. He thought the two men wanted his car or his money. He pleaded with them, ‘Don’t harm us,’ and offered his wallet, which they took from him.

“After the car was driven a short distance to a more secluded area, Device was ordered to take his car and drive away. He did so and reported to the police station at 22nd and Hunting Park Avenue. With the police, he subsequently drove back to the Park and searched for the prosecutrix. They found her shoes and handbag and signs of a struggle.

“Ross, meanwhile, had pulled the prosecutrix from the car and further back from the road. She screamed and struggled, and hit the defendant with her handbag. She fell and Ross and his accomplice dragged her. Then Ross hit her arid threw her to the ground. The accomplice held her down. Ross pulled up her skirt, ripping it. He forced her legs apart and had intercourse with her, ejaculating within her. Then Ross held her and the other man had intercourse with her and also ejaculated within her.

“Meanwhile, She was screaming, but Ross had put his hand over her mouth. She bit his fingers, and he then forced his fingers down her throat.

“When she finally managed to get up, after both men had raped her, they threatened to kill her if she continued to scream. They ran further into the Park and disappeared. She struggled out to a road. A car coming along stopped for her. She was hysterical. The young man and woman in that car took her to the Woman’s Hospital. Her clothes had been ripped and torn and she had lost her handbag and shoes in the Park. They were found later that night by the police.

*150 “The young man and woman, who picked her up after the incidents above described, testified that, when they saw the prosecutrix at the roadside, she was hysterical and hollering for help. She told them She had been raped by two colored men who had chased away her escort. They took her to a hospital. Her clothes were torn, she had no s'hoés or handbag, and her hair was wild. Her face was red and she had black and blue marks on her.

“Park Guard Howell that night went to the described area and drove back to the wooded portion. There he found her handbag and saw signs of a struggle.

“Sergeant Brosius of the Park Guards found the shoes of the prosecutrix about 250 yards further from the road. At the spot where the shoes were found, he saw that the grass had been trampled down in an area about six feet square.

“Detective Kates of the Park Guards at 3:30 a.m. that night saw the prosecutrix at the Woman’s Hospital. She was hysterical. There were marks on her left breast and on her cheek. They appeared to him to be bite marks or bruises.

“The testimony of Dr. Kianorri at a previous trial was read into evidence by agreement, due to the fact that prior to the second trial she had returned to her home in Persia. This doctor testified that she examined the prosecutrix when she was brought into the hospital at 3:30 a.m. Some of her clothes were torn off and she had no shoes. She was very excited and emotional. Her genitals were irritated. Her upper legs showed trauma. A vaginal smear showed sperm in her vagina; in fact, her vagina was full of sperm. She complained of pains in her body. There was trauma on her face and her whole body. Her face showed biting and abrasions.”

*151 The principal question concerned the identity of the defendant. Prior to defendant’s arrest, the police had shown prosecutrix a large number of photographs of young negroes and she picked out and identified a police photograph of the defendant. It was on the basis of that identification that the police arrested the defendant. Thereafter she twice picked him out in police line-ups. On each occasion she called attention to his eyes as being unusual. In the cell room she said: “This is the man.” The defendant remained silent. The defendant attempted to prove an alibi. His only witness was a sister. She testified that defendant and one of his brothers slept in the same room and that she didn’t know of his going out any night in May of 1956. She admitted that she would not have known if the defendant had gone out after she went to sleep unless he awakened her in doing so. The sister and her husband, the defendant and his two brothers and the defendant’s father all slept in adjoining bedrooms on the second floor of the small house in which they resided. Her husband and the defendant’s two brothers, one of whom slept in the same room with defendant, were not even brought to the trial by defendant. His father, who slept in an adjoining room, was in the court and was not called as a witness.

The appellant’s arguments will be disposed of in the same order in which they were presented by him in this Court.

Appellant first contends that the court below unduly interfered with his counsel’s cross-examination. We have carefully reviewed the record and find no substance to this contention. On cross-examination leading questions may be asked but misleading questions may not be asked. Setting verbal traps for a witness is not a legitimate branch of the art of cross-examination: DiBona, Admr. v. P. T. C., 356 Pa. 204, 208, 51 A. 2d 768.

*152 It is also claimed that the court below created sympathy for the prosecutrix. In support of his contention, appellant points to an occasion When defense counsel raised the point of the victim’s emotional state while testifying at a previous trial and the court said: “What would you expect of any person on the witness stand under these circumstances? Would she be entirely calm, in your opinion?” We are in accord with Judge Oliver’s disposition of this contention, as follows : “This question obviously was directed at the fact that any young prosecuting witness in any rape case, whether or not in fact

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 A.2d 778, 190 Pa. Super. 145, 1959 Pa. Super. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-ross-pasuperct-1959.