Commonwealth v. Sykes

45 A.2d 43, 353 Pa. 392, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 253
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 26, 1945
DocketAppeal, 162
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 45 A.2d 43 (Commonwealth v. Sykes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme 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. Sykes, 45 A.2d 43, 353 Pa. 392, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 253 (Pa. 1945).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr, Justice Horace Stern,

Defendant, a young woman 20 years of age, was the perpetrator of an extremely cruel, cold-blooded and atrocious murder. She had gone to an employment agency, where, by fraudulently impersonating one of’her acquaintances and giving a false reference, she succeeded in being directed to the home of Mrs. Freda S. Wodlinger, who was in search of a maid. Mrs. Wodlinger, a public school teacher, was a woman 45 years of age. Two days after entering her service defendant took from the kitchen a carving knife, 12 inches long'with an 8 inch blade, wrapped it in a dust-rag, went upstairs where Mrs, Wodlinger was dressing and stabbed her viciously in the chest, back, head and face, causing deep wounds and such severe hemorrhages that her victim died almost immediately. She then wrenched from Mrs. Wodlinger’s finger a diamond engagement ring and a wedding band and took from an adjoining room furs, another ring and $50 in cash. She was arrested several *395 days later. Pleading mot guilty, she was tried before a jury and convicted of murder in the first degree with the penalty of death. •

The facts of the case were practically all admitted by defendant, her counsel frankly stating at the trial that his only object was to save her from the death penalty. For this purpose reliance was placed upon two “defenses” — one, that she was pronounced by the psychiatrists who examined her to be a constitutional psychopathic inferior, and, according to her school records, she had a mental age of 7 years 9 months at a time when she was in fact nearly 13 years old; the other, that she had been living during the preceding six months with Jaycee Kelly, a notorious bootlégger with a long criminal record, who had induced her. by overpowering influence, dominance, threats and intimidation, to engage hérself at Mrs. Wodlinger’s for the purpose of stealing whatever valuables she could find there and turning them over to him; she therefore claimed that she did not act as a free agent in the perpetration of the crime. These alleged facts were presumably' considered by the jury, but, as the verdict indicates, to no avail as far as defendant was concerned.

Several assignments of error on the present appeal are based upon complaints that defendant’s counsel was interrupted from/time-to time in his closing address to the jury either by the assistant District Attorney who tried the case or by the court, and that in several such instances the remarks of the latter seriously prejudiced counsel’s presentation of his client’s cause. Thus, counsel was stopped by the court while engaged in arguing to the jury that capital punishment had not proved itself a deterrent to the commission of crime, that it had been entirely discarded by several States and made optional in others, and that the Pennsylvania legislature at that very time had under consideration a bill to abolish it altogether. The court was justified in prohibiting stich a discussion. The law of the State must be administered as it presently exists, and it still provides for capital *396 punishment as a penalty in appropriate cases. In cautioning counsel in reference to his argument on this subject the court said, “If you emphasize this point I will have to speak about it to the jury. I will have to tell the jury about a life sentence.” 1 Presumably what the court had in mind was that persons sentenced to life imprisonment are frequently paroled after serving a number of years; to have stated this to the jury would have been of doubtful propriety, but as the court’s announced “threat” was not carried out no harm could possibly have resulted. 2 .

On another occasion the address of defendant’s counsel was halted when he waved a book in front of the jury, told them its author was Lewis E. Lawes, a former warden at Sing Sing prison, and that it was shown in this book that the number of murder cases had decreased in States which had abolished capital punishment. It was within the discretion of the court to rule out such a reference to Mr. Lawes’ views, and we cannot say that that discretion was abused. Counsel relies upon a statement by Mr. Justice (now Chief Justice) Maxey, in Commonwealth v. Brown, 309 Pa. 515, 522, 523, 164 A. 726, 728, 729, that “The judge in his charge and counsel in their arguments have the right to use illustrations from history or literature or any other stock of common knowledge.” 3 Obviously, the “illustrations from history, *397 literature or any other stock of common knowledge” were meant to refer only to universally recognized and accepted works of literature or science, a limitation which would scarcely include treatises such as that of Mr. Lawes.

Defendant’s counsel was interrupted again when he told the jury that if defendant were placed in an institution for the rest of her life “we will never ... ask any tribunal for any mercy.” Such a promise, however sincerely intended, was clearly not a proper one to present to the jury for the purpose of influencing their decision. The court was also justified in rebuking counsel for stating to the jury “you have probably read in the papers certain evidence in the case” and in correcting him when he spoke of the jury’s exercising “the prerogative of taking human life,” the court declaring that “The jury doesn’t take human life; they impose a penalty.”

Counsel told the jury that the court would charge them in regard to any reasonable doubt on their part concerning the penalty. The court thereupon interjected: “The question of reasonable doubt does not go as to the matter of punishment.” This was a correct statement of the law: Commonwealth v. Curry, 287 Pa. 553, 558, 135 A. 316, 317.

There are assignments of error complaining of observatipus made by the learned trial judge in his charge to the jury. One such remark, obviously in jocular vein, ridiculed some of the evidence which had been presented as to defendant’s mental backwardness during the years of her childhood; another was in reference to testimony that her limited mentality was such as could not likely be developed, the court saying: “If punishment ... is to be considered from the angle of. the reformation of the person who commits the crime, then you may consider what reform is possible, even in a penal institution, of a person who cannot be developed.” There was justification for the court’s cautioning the jury not to be im *398 pressed too readily by tbe evidence as to tbe low grade of defendant’s mentality, for, from the very inception of the crime to its-consummation, she displayed siieh cunning and ingenuity in carrying out' her wicked purpose as fairly to overcome the attempt to represent her as psychopathic or mentally sub-normal.

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Bluebook (online)
45 A.2d 43, 353 Pa. 392, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-sykes-pa-1945.