Opinion by
Mr. Chief Justice Horace Stern,
Shortly after seven o’clock on the morning of June 2, 1954, John T. Neelans, a 62 year old- attendant at a gasoline station located at Reedsdale Street and Ridge Avenue in the City of Pittsburgh, was struck on the head, shot in the chest, and robbed, by someone who stepped out from the side of the station; he died a few minutes later. The crime thus committed was murder in the first degree, the only question being the identity of the assailant: Thé defendant, Earl Richard Saunders, a lad not quite 16 years of age at the time, of the crime, was charged with the murder, tried, convicted, and sentenced-in pursuance of - the tecommendation of [151]*151the jury to life imprisonment, the court having denied him a new trial.
The record is extraordinarily voluminous. No trial could have been conducted with more meticulous care and judicial fairness, nor did counsel for the defendant overlook any point helpful to his client. A careful reading of the testimony does not support appellant’s contention that the evidence in regard to the identification of the perpetrator of the crime was not sufficiently clear and convincing to justify the conviction.
A witness named Smaltz, a workman who happened to emerge at the time of the occurrence from a steel supply company where he was employed and which was in close proximity to the gasoline station, saw the scuffle between the robber and his victim. He testified as to the cap, shirt or jacket, and jeans worn by the assailant, the gray or white mask which covered part of his face, that he was a colored man, that there was something unusual about his gait — “he had sort of a gangling walk”- — and that he ran up Fulton Street. Smaltz further testified that he attended a line-up in the police station two days after the murder where he picked out Saunders by Ms posture, the way he was built and the manner in which he walked. However, at the coroner’s inquest and at the trial he stated that he could not “positively” identify him, as he had not had a good look at his face.
Another witness named Grainer, employed as a truck driver for an express company, saw the man running up the street with a white mask covering the lower part of his face; his height was about five feet, ten inches; he wore a pair of blue jeans.
A witness named Wenzelburger, employed as a milk driver for a dairy company, testified that he was not able “positively” to identify the man; he saw him run[152]*152ning up Fulton Street and turning left into Medley Street; lie noticed that as he ran “he sort of held his arms away from his body”; he saw him “sort of adjust” his mask as he turned into the latter street. At the police line-up Wenzelburger identified defendant on his “general appearance as it looked to me the morning I saw the crime,” — on his color, his height, his build and the way he carried his arm.
Arizona Nicholson, a clergyman, testified that the assailant was a colored man, that he was partially masked, and that he was approximately five feet, eight inches tall. He identified the defendant at the police line-up but could not now “swear to it” not having been able to see his face clearly, but he “believed” that defendant was the man he had seen with the mask; he resembled the fellow he saw bending over the man.
The principal witness for the prosecution was a ten-year old lad named Edward Hargrove, whom the trial judge, in the court’s opinion denying a new trial, characterized as a “bright lad,” saying that “It was obvious to the court, to the jury and to the spectators that young Edward was telling the truth. He handled himself so intelligently, so quietly and so effectively on cross-examination that no one could doubt the sincerity of his story.” This young negro boy was on friendly terms with defendant; they had known one another very well for from three to five years; their houses were only five doors apart, they attended adjoining schools, and they saw one another practically every day. Hargrove testified — not aggressively nor venomously but with laudable caution and restraint — that he happened to be standing with his little sister that early morning in front of the defendant’s house at Fulton and Medley Streets when he saw the gas-station attendant come down Ridge Avenue to open the station door. He saw someone wearing a mask come out from the side of the station [153]*153and attack the attendant, and he heard the victim’s screams. He saw the robber go through the man’s pockets and then run up Fulton Street still wearing his mask, but when he came to the corner of Fulton and Medley Streets, right across the 24 foot wide street from where Hargrove was standing, the mask slipped for a moment, Hargrove got a good look at his face and immediately recognized the defendant. He told his mother and stepfather what he had seen and that it was the defendant who had committed the crime, and he identified defendant at the police line-up. He testified at the trial that he was sure it was the defendant, that he had “never doubted it,” that he had had a good look at his face and had recognized him also by his arm which “was kind of bent out” of all the boys he knew none looked like the defendant. Hargrove was well acquainted with defendant, he saw his face clearly even though briefly, his identification of him was without reservation, and his testimony was not weakened in the slightest by cross-examination.
Defendant denied his guilt, and several members of his family testified, by way of an alibi, that they saw him in bed at various times between six-thirty and eight o’clock A.M., two of them — a ten-year old brother and an eight-year old nephew — at about the time of the occurrence of the crime. Some of them said that he was in bed that June morning under the covers with his clothes on, including a pair of blue jeans, from which the jury might well have believed that he had but recently and hurriedly slipped into bed, although his family testified that it was his habit to sleep with his clothes on.
[154]*154This brings us to one of the principal issues in the case which arises from the so-called “recantation” of the Hargrove boy’s testimony. It appears that some five months after the trial, in an examination in the office of defendant’s counsel,2 he stated: “I was going to change my mind because it could be somebody else who looks like Richard [the defendant] and I don’t think it was him now.” Because of this development the court itself examined Hargrove in connection with the argument on the motion for a new trial. At that hearing Hargrove insisted that he had told the truth when he testified at the trial, but that he had had “bad dreams” and “something kept telling me it wasn’t him.” The court came very definitely to the conclusion that it was not “something” but more likely “somebody” who “kept telling” him. He gave his testimony this time under obvious stress, tension and emotion and occasionally with tears. While he insisted that it was because of the “bad dreams” that he came to believe that it was not the defendant whom he had seen, it appeared that the boys in the neighborhood, friends of the defendant, would no longer play with Hargrove as they had been wont to do, nor talk to Mm except to call Mm names and charge him with having told a lie at the trial; some of them told him they weren’t allowed to play with him because of his having “told on Richard.” There were other manifestations of pressure, brought to bear upon Mm to get him to retract Ms identification which he had made so positively at the trial.
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Opinion by
Mr. Chief Justice Horace Stern,
Shortly after seven o’clock on the morning of June 2, 1954, John T. Neelans, a 62 year old- attendant at a gasoline station located at Reedsdale Street and Ridge Avenue in the City of Pittsburgh, was struck on the head, shot in the chest, and robbed, by someone who stepped out from the side of the station; he died a few minutes later. The crime thus committed was murder in the first degree, the only question being the identity of the assailant: Thé defendant, Earl Richard Saunders, a lad not quite 16 years of age at the time, of the crime, was charged with the murder, tried, convicted, and sentenced-in pursuance of - the tecommendation of [151]*151the jury to life imprisonment, the court having denied him a new trial.
The record is extraordinarily voluminous. No trial could have been conducted with more meticulous care and judicial fairness, nor did counsel for the defendant overlook any point helpful to his client. A careful reading of the testimony does not support appellant’s contention that the evidence in regard to the identification of the perpetrator of the crime was not sufficiently clear and convincing to justify the conviction.
A witness named Smaltz, a workman who happened to emerge at the time of the occurrence from a steel supply company where he was employed and which was in close proximity to the gasoline station, saw the scuffle between the robber and his victim. He testified as to the cap, shirt or jacket, and jeans worn by the assailant, the gray or white mask which covered part of his face, that he was a colored man, that there was something unusual about his gait — “he had sort of a gangling walk”- — and that he ran up Fulton Street. Smaltz further testified that he attended a line-up in the police station two days after the murder where he picked out Saunders by Ms posture, the way he was built and the manner in which he walked. However, at the coroner’s inquest and at the trial he stated that he could not “positively” identify him, as he had not had a good look at his face.
Another witness named Grainer, employed as a truck driver for an express company, saw the man running up the street with a white mask covering the lower part of his face; his height was about five feet, ten inches; he wore a pair of blue jeans.
A witness named Wenzelburger, employed as a milk driver for a dairy company, testified that he was not able “positively” to identify the man; he saw him run[152]*152ning up Fulton Street and turning left into Medley Street; lie noticed that as he ran “he sort of held his arms away from his body”; he saw him “sort of adjust” his mask as he turned into the latter street. At the police line-up Wenzelburger identified defendant on his “general appearance as it looked to me the morning I saw the crime,” — on his color, his height, his build and the way he carried his arm.
Arizona Nicholson, a clergyman, testified that the assailant was a colored man, that he was partially masked, and that he was approximately five feet, eight inches tall. He identified the defendant at the police line-up but could not now “swear to it” not having been able to see his face clearly, but he “believed” that defendant was the man he had seen with the mask; he resembled the fellow he saw bending over the man.
The principal witness for the prosecution was a ten-year old lad named Edward Hargrove, whom the trial judge, in the court’s opinion denying a new trial, characterized as a “bright lad,” saying that “It was obvious to the court, to the jury and to the spectators that young Edward was telling the truth. He handled himself so intelligently, so quietly and so effectively on cross-examination that no one could doubt the sincerity of his story.” This young negro boy was on friendly terms with defendant; they had known one another very well for from three to five years; their houses were only five doors apart, they attended adjoining schools, and they saw one another practically every day. Hargrove testified — not aggressively nor venomously but with laudable caution and restraint — that he happened to be standing with his little sister that early morning in front of the defendant’s house at Fulton and Medley Streets when he saw the gas-station attendant come down Ridge Avenue to open the station door. He saw someone wearing a mask come out from the side of the station [153]*153and attack the attendant, and he heard the victim’s screams. He saw the robber go through the man’s pockets and then run up Fulton Street still wearing his mask, but when he came to the corner of Fulton and Medley Streets, right across the 24 foot wide street from where Hargrove was standing, the mask slipped for a moment, Hargrove got a good look at his face and immediately recognized the defendant. He told his mother and stepfather what he had seen and that it was the defendant who had committed the crime, and he identified defendant at the police line-up. He testified at the trial that he was sure it was the defendant, that he had “never doubted it,” that he had had a good look at his face and had recognized him also by his arm which “was kind of bent out” of all the boys he knew none looked like the defendant. Hargrove was well acquainted with defendant, he saw his face clearly even though briefly, his identification of him was without reservation, and his testimony was not weakened in the slightest by cross-examination.
Defendant denied his guilt, and several members of his family testified, by way of an alibi, that they saw him in bed at various times between six-thirty and eight o’clock A.M., two of them — a ten-year old brother and an eight-year old nephew — at about the time of the occurrence of the crime. Some of them said that he was in bed that June morning under the covers with his clothes on, including a pair of blue jeans, from which the jury might well have believed that he had but recently and hurriedly slipped into bed, although his family testified that it was his habit to sleep with his clothes on.
[154]*154This brings us to one of the principal issues in the case which arises from the so-called “recantation” of the Hargrove boy’s testimony. It appears that some five months after the trial, in an examination in the office of defendant’s counsel,2 he stated: “I was going to change my mind because it could be somebody else who looks like Richard [the defendant] and I don’t think it was him now.” Because of this development the court itself examined Hargrove in connection with the argument on the motion for a new trial. At that hearing Hargrove insisted that he had told the truth when he testified at the trial, but that he had had “bad dreams” and “something kept telling me it wasn’t him.” The court came very definitely to the conclusion that it was not “something” but more likely “somebody” who “kept telling” him. He gave his testimony this time under obvious stress, tension and emotion and occasionally with tears. While he insisted that it was because of the “bad dreams” that he came to believe that it was not the defendant whom he had seen, it appeared that the boys in the neighborhood, friends of the defendant, would no longer play with Hargrove as they had been wont to do, nor talk to Mm except to call Mm names and charge him with having told a lie at the trial; some of them told him they weren’t allowed to play with him because of his having “told on Richard.” There were other manifestations of pressure, brought to bear upon Mm to get him to retract Ms identification which he had made so positively at the trial. Never[155]*155theless, while he insisted upon the “bad dreams,” he would not admit that what he had testified to at the trial was a lie. The court was unanimous in its finding that Hargrove had told the truth at that time and that it was the “recantation” that “rang false.” This, therefore, is not a ease of an essential witness admitting that he had committed perjury, in which event a new trial should be granted (Kvaternik v. Yochim, 360 Pa. 387, 389, 61 A. 2d 815, 816); on the contrary, as was said in Commonwealth v. Palarino, 168 Pa. Superior Ct. 152, 155, 77 A. 2d 665, 666, quoting from 16 C.J. 1188, §2715, “. . . recanting testimony is exceedingly unreliable, and it is the duty of the court to deny a new trial where it is not satisfied that such testimony is true.” Certainly the court below cannot be held to have been guilty of an abuse of discretion in refusing a new trial in view of the little faith it placed in Hargrove’s so-called recantation.
We find no merit in appellant’s contention that the court committed error in permitting the witnesses Smaltz, Wenzelburger and Nicholson, to testify that they had identified the defendant at the police line-up. In many respects identifications made immediately after the occurrence of a crime are more reliable than when testified to at a later trial. As pointed out in 70 A.L.R. 911, the majority of jurisdictions have decided in favor of the admission of such so-called “extrajudicial identification” both as substantive and corroborative evidence. It must be borne in mind that wé are dealing here, not with the hearsay testimony of witnesses who merely heard- such identifications being -made, but with testimony given by those who themselves made the identifications at the line-up.
Appellant’s criticism of the court’s charge to the jury on the ground' that .it did not sufficiently call; at[156]*156tention to the failure of the witnesses, other than the Hargrove boy, to make a positive identification of the defendant at the trial, is wholly unwarranted. The charge carefully summarized the testimony of each of these witnesses and instructed the jury that it was their duty to evaluate the testimony, the opportunity there had been for identifying, and whether a proper identification was made. While it was said in Commonwealth v. Kloiber, 378 Pa. 412, 424, 106 A. 2d 820, 826, 827, that, where the accuracy of the identification is doubtful the court should warn the jury that the testimony as to identity must be received with caution, it was there also pointed out that where the opportunity for positive identification is good, and the witness — as here Hargrove — is positive in his identification, such testimony need not be received with caution and may be treated even as the statement of a fact. Incidentally, it is there further stated that “a positive, unqualified identification of defendant by one witness is sufficient for conviction even though half a dozen witnesses testify to an alibi.” (citing many cases).
There was admitted into evidence a shoe which had been taken from defendant the day after the commission of the crime and which had on it a smudge of blood. Defendant was not harmed by this exhibit because the witness who testified in regard to it, the Director of the County Crime Laboratory, admitted that there was nothing to show that the blood on the shoe was that of the decedent, nor the length of time that the blood had been there, nor how it got there.
•' ■ The cómpláint that the court refused to admit testimony offered by 'defendant that some two to three months after Iiis arrest he had expressed Ms willingness -to take-a .polygraph or “lie detector” test — it being argued that tMs showed consciousness .of innocence — is [157]*157likewise without merit. Since it is uniformly held that such a test is not judicially acceptable (see Commonwealth ex rel. Riccio v. Dilworth, 179 Pa. Superior Ct. 64, 67, 115 A. 2d 865, 866), it is obvious that neither a professed willingness nor a refusal to submit to such a test should be admitted. Defendant’s offer was merely a self-serving act or declaration which obviously could be made without any possible risk, since, if the offer was accepted and the test given, the result, whether favorable or unfavorable to the accused, could not be given in evidence.
Distressing as is the conviction of a sixteen-year old boy of the crime of murder there is nothing in the record of the trial in this case nor in any of the proceedings in connection with it that would have warranted the court below in granting a new trial. Not only is defendant’s complaint unfounded that the charge of the court was prejudicial, but, on the contrary, if the trial judge displayed any leaning at all it was in defendant’s favor, evidencing an earnest desire to safeguard and protect his every right.
The judgment of sentence is affirmed.