Commonwealth v. Samson

196 A. 564, 130 Pa. Super. 65, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 86
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 13, 1937
DocketAppeals, 236-242
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 196 A. 564 (Commonwealth v. Samson) 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. Samson, 196 A. 564, 130 Pa. Super. 65, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 86 (Pa. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Baldbige, J.,

On the night of December 19,1936, a three-story brick dwelling situate at 519 South 15th street, Philadelphia, conducted by the appellant as a tenement house, collapsed, carrying with it adjoining premises No. 517. A fire immediately followed and seven lives were lost. Seventeen people were in building No. 519, fourteen of whom lived there. Samson, the appellant, was indicted on seven bills, each charging involuntary manslaughter, was tried, and convicted. These appeals followed.

The appellant’s assignments of error relate principally to (1) failure of the court to direct a verdict of not guilty; (2) admission of certain testimony; and (3) refusal to grant a new trial.

The appellant leased No. 519 for a term of three years from January 1,1937, as a rooming house for colored people. The lease, dated August 6, 1936, provided that, in consideration of the low rental of $20 per month, Samson was to take the premises “as is,” and, at his own cost, put and keep the interior in good order and repair, *68 “as well as to make improvements......The Lessee in addition to making all necessary repairs required by reason of his ‘as is’ obligation, expressly agrees to have at his own cost and expense, the hereinbelow listed repairs done and completed by November 1st, 1936.”

The appellant took possession of the property and made the specific repairs, consisting of certain carpenter work, plastering, painting, etc., which were completed by November 1,1936, thus giving him an opportunity to reimburse himself for part of the expenses incurred. We think the terms of the lease clearly disclose that, in consideration of the low rental and obtaining possession of the building before the time he was to pay rent, lessee was not only to make interior repairs, but he was to take the building “as is” and also make such improvements as were required so that it would be safe in general for the purpose for which it was rented. This he did not do.

Samson did not apply for a license to conduct these premises as a tenement house, as required by the Act of June 7,1907, P. L. 441 (53 PS §4051 et seq.), which provides for an inspection of a building by the duly constituted health authorities, compliance with certain standards, and payment of a fee. He was aware of the legal requirements to conduct a tenement house, as he had one on 13th street for which he had applied for a license. If he had made application for a license for the 15th street property, it is reasonable to assume it would not have been granted, as an inspection would have disclosed that the building, its facilities, and the manner of its occupancy did not meet the requirements of the Act of June 11,1915, P. L. 954 (53 PS §3851 et seq.). Under the 31st section thereof (53 PS §3943), the Chief of the Division of Housing and Sanitation may require the vacation of buildings which are being operated in violation of law or which are unfit for human habitation or dangerous to life and health. One of the important purposes of this legislation is to protect poor people living in tenements from unsanitary and overcrowded conditions; another is to require *69 that buildings be made safe and habitable, so as to prevent such a disaster as occurred here.

Under the Commonwealth’s proof, these premises were in such a dangerous and defective condition as to be unsafe for habitation. The tenants testified that the walls of the building bulged; brick and mortar were missing, thereby causing gaping holes; plaster was falling; water ran from floor to floor; the baseboards were six inches from the walls and exposed the bricks; appellant visited the premises three or four times a week; his attention was called to the conditions prevailing and he promised to make repairs.

Elijah Bellony, a carpenter, testified that when he inspected the building, in pursuance of a request to give appellant an estimate on fixing the windows, doors, and cellar steps, he found the entire house in a badly dilapidated condition; that when he called appellant’s attention to the condition of the walls he told the witness to “forget it.”

Another carpenter, Abraham Biley, testified that upon an inspection he made he saw a five or six-inch bulge in the side, or alley wall, from which bricks and mortar were missing.

Acting Fire Marshal Ebald testified that he reached the scene of the collapse shortly after the fire broke out, and upon investigating he found the four walls had collapsed. He attributed the cause thereof to their defective condition and the overloading of the premises. Other officers of the fire department gave testimony to the same general effect.

George Siegrist, Supervisor of the Bureau of Building Inspection, stated that from an examination he made after the destruction of the building, he was of the opinion that the foundation of the party wall had proved defective, which caused the other walls to drop. His testimony was not in entire accord with that of other Commonwealth witnesses who testified that the *70 middle of the party wall had buckled and first gave way.

The testimony offered upon the part of the Common^ wealth was categorically denied by the defendant. He disclaimed knowledge of the structural weakness of, or other defects in, the building, and denied that the appearance of the walls indicated a possibility of a collapse, or that he was aware of the number of people in the building, or that complaints had been made by the tenants to him of the condition of the premises. He maintained that the actual cause of the collapse was the disintegration of the foundation of the party wall, for which he was not responsible^ He was corroborated to some degree concerning the condition of the building by the artisans who did the plumbing, painting, plastering, etc. A number of these witnesses, however, stated they had made no special observation of the walls or structural conditions of the property, but merely performed the duty of making the repairs for which they had been employed.

The Commonwealth offered ample evidence to submit to the jury the questions concerning the condition of the walls, appellant’s knowledge thereof, and the cause of the building’s collapse. The issues of fact were clearly presented to the jury in a charge to which only a general exception was taken by appellant.

The defendant argues strenuously that his omission to obtain a license, although an unlawful act, was not malum in se, but merely malum prohibitum, and that it was not the proximate cause of death, or, in other words, that there was no causal connection between the act and the deaths; and, further, that there was no proof that he was guilty of gross and culpable negligence.

The distinction between malum in se and malum prohibitum was not raised in the court below or discussed by the judge in his charge. No case has been cited, and we have found none, which holds, unqualifiedly, that to constitute involuntary manslaughter the unlawful act must be malum in se and not merely malum prohibitum. There *71 is an historical basis for the distinction between these offenses, but modern decisions recognize little, if any, difference.

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Bluebook (online)
196 A. 564, 130 Pa. Super. 65, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-samson-pasuperct-1937.