Commonwealth v. Snyder

55 Pa. D. & C. 445, 1946 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 229
CourtJuniata County Court of Oyer and Terminer
DecidedMarch 12, 1946
Docketnos. 1, 2 and 3
StatusPublished

This text of 55 Pa. D. & C. 445 (Commonwealth v. Snyder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Juniata County Court of Oyer and Terminer primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Snyder, 55 Pa. D. & C. 445, 1946 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 229 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1946).

Opinion

Rice, P. J.,

At the January sessions, 1946, defendant was indicted and tried on four bills, charging him with rape in two counts and incest in three counts against and with his daughter Margaret. The four indictments were tried jointly before one and the same jury, by consent of the district attorney and the counsel for defendant and by direction of the court. At the close of the case of the Commonwealth, on motion of the counsel for defendant, the court agreed to instruct the jury to find defendant not guilty on the two counts for rape, but the case proceeded on the three counts charging incest and, after the addresses of the counsel and the charge to the jury, [446]*446defendant was found guilty of incest on all three counts.

Defendant has now made a motion for a new trial, giving nine reasons in support of the motion, which reasons may be classified or grouped as follows: (1) the verdicts were against the law, the evidence, the weight of the evidence and the charge to the jury; (2) the court should have affirmed defendant’s points for the binding instructions in his favor; and (3) the court should have granted defendant’s motion to quash the indictments filed to nos. 1 and 3, January sessions, 1946. We will consider the first and second groups of reasons together, since they require an evaluation of the testimony, its credibility, weight and sufficiency. No complaint has been made as to the correctness or adequacy of the charge to the jury, but there is a question whether the verdicts are consistent with the court’s instructions.

The direction of the court to the jury to find verdicts of not guilty of rape eliminated from the case the questions whether defendant used force to accomplish his purpose to have intercourse with his daughter, whether she resisted him or made any outcry of complaint, and whether the intercourse was had with or without her consent. Of course, it was left to the jury to find whether or not defendant had carnal knowledge of his daughter. There was no controversy whether or not Margaret Snyder was the daughter of defendant, and that reduced the questions for the jury to decide whether or not defendant did, on the dates specified in the bills of indictment, have carnal knowledge of his daughter, Margaret. This rendered it unnecessary for the court or jury to consider the testimony of certain witnesses for the Commonwealth called to prove that Margaret, soon after the last act of alleged rape, made complaints to other persons. Therefore, eliminating all charge of rape, indictments nos. 1, 2 and 3, January sessions, 1946, charge the defend[447]*447ant with committing incest with his daughter, Margaret, on August 14, 1945, October 8, 1945, and January 28, 1944, respectively.

Margaret Snyder testified that defendant, her father, had, in the home of defendant in Port Royal, Juniata County, where she and other children of defendant lived with him, sexual intercourse with her on the said three dates and at other times, about 300 in all, between the first and last of the said three dates, and that on occasions he had intercourse with her as many as four times in a day. She testified in particular to the circumstances of these sexual acts. She testified that her mother, the wife of defendant, died on January 14, 1944, and that two weeks later her father came to her bedroom, where she was in bed ill, took off his pants and had intercourse with her. She testified that he would come into her bedroom, where two younger sisters, Mary, aged 12 years, and Virginia, aged nine years, slept in another bed, and take her out of her room into his own bedroom, where he would have intercourse with her, and that this happened on August 14, 1945, V-J Day. She testified also that, on October 8,1945, he came into a lower room, where she was ironing clothes, after locking the two outside doors of the house, and took her upstairs to his room and had intercourse with her. By way of corroboration, Mary and Virginia, the two younger sisters, testified that on V-J Day their father came into the bedroom of the three sisters after they were all in bed and took Margaret out of the room. Also, Dr. P. H. Shelley, of Port Royal, testified that, on October 10,1945, he made an examination of Margaret Snyder and found that she had a ruptured hymen.

Defendant was a witness in his own behalf and denied that he ever had intercourse with his daughter Margaret. He said that Margaret was subject to epileptic fits, that, after his wife died, when Margaret had or was about to have a fit, he would by means of [448]*448a syringe, inject a certain medicine he had procured into her rectum, and that he might, on occasions, have gone into her bedroom at night when she was in bed and taken her out, but that, if he did so, it was for the purpose of giving her the medicine.

The court instructed the jury that as to the charge of incest Margaret Snyder was an accomplice of defendant and that it was the duty of the jury to scrutinize, analyze and weigh very carefully her testimony and that they should not convict defendant unless they were convinced, beyond a reasonable doubt, that she had told the truth. We will not quote from the charge but make reference to it as transcribed. No complaint has been made by counsel for defendant as to the correctness or adequacy of the charge on the subject of the testimony of an accomplice. The jury were also instructed as to the importance of corroboration of the testimony of an accomplice.

In his address to the jury and his argument to the court later on the motion, counsel for defendant argued strongly against the credibility of Margaret Snyder on account of her testimony as to the number of times her father had intercourse with her from January 28, 1944, to October 8,1945, and as to the number of times he had intercourse with her on some days. He also contended that it was altogether likely that, if defendant had intercourse with his daughter as often as she said, she, being a young woman from 17 to 19 years old, would have become pregnant. We think these were matters exclusively for the jury to decide. They were men and women of general knowledge and experience in the affairs of life, and we venture the assertion that nearly all of them were or had been married. There was no medical testimony in support of the contentions of counsel. It is common knowledge that not all men have the same sexual power and that some are capable of very frequent sexual acts. Also, it is common knowledge that not all women of child-bearing ages are able [449]*449to bear children. What right would a judge have to pretend that he knew more about such matters than 12 men and women sitting as a jury? One of the purposes of trial by jury is to have the benefit of the common sense, general knowledge and experience of 12 “sober, intelligent and judicious” persons to decide questions of fact, and we are of the opinion that all questions of credibility of Margaret Snyder were properly left to the jury. Both defendant and Margaret could not have told the truth as to the sexual acts; one of them falsified. The jury were not obliged to believe defendant and disbelieve the daughter, but they had the right also to pass upon the credibility of defendant. If his explanation of his presence in the bedroom of the three daughters, Margaret, Mary and Virginia, at night was deemed by the jury to be incredible they had a right to consider that as a factor in favor of the credibility of Margaret. And there are arguments against his credibility.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 Pa. D. & C. 445, 1946 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-snyder-paoytermctjunia-1946.