Commonwealth v. Turner

421 A.2d 1057, 491 Pa. 620, 1980 Pa. LEXIS 872
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 31, 1980
Docket80-1-44
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 421 A.2d 1057 (Commonwealth v. Turner) 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. Turner, 421 A.2d 1057, 491 Pa. 620, 1980 Pa. LEXIS 872 (Pa. 1980).

Opinion

OPINION

LARSEN, Justice.

. Clement Turner, appellee, was arrested and charged with criminal homicide in the death of Irwin Liggins, Jr., age 21 months. A non-jury trial was held before the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County. At the close of the prosecution’s case-in-chief, the trial judge sustained appellee’s demurrer to the evidence and discharged the appelleedefendant. The Commonwealth then appealed to this Court.

The test to be applied in ruling on a demurrer is whether, accepting as true all of the prosecution’s evidence and all reasonable inferences therefrom, it is sufficient to support a finding by the fact-finder that the defendant is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Commonwealth v. Duncan, 473 Pa. 62, 65 n.2, 373 A.2d 1051, 1052 n.2 (1977). Applying that standard, the following facts appear of record.

Barbara Ann Miklos and the infant son, Irwin, were visiting appellee, Ms. Miklos’ boyfriend, at his home in Pittsburgh. Early in the afternoon of June 10, 1979, the child began to misbehave by throwing some food. Appellee hit the child with his hand three or four times on the buttocks. When the child continued to misbehave, appellee escalated his discipline.

Later that afternoon, appellee beat the child about the legs and back with a belt which had a heavy buckle and a zipper pouch. Later still, after the boy spit some food on the floor, appellee again beat the child several times with the belt, finally stopping at Ms. Miklos’ insistence. After the child had placed his fingers near an electric fan, appellee beat him three or four times with his shoe, and apparently feeling this discipline insufficient to modify the young child’s behavior, appellee continued to beat him with a one-inch thick wooden stick against his buttocks, legs and *623 bare back. These multiple beatings raised numerous welts and bruises upon the child’s legs, buttocks, chest and back.

Ms. Miklos decided to return to her own home that night, and together with her son and appellee, walked to the bus stop. However, as she had missed the last bus, she returned with appellee to spend the night at his apartment. Ms. Miklos placed the boy on the couch which was approximately 15 inches from the floor to the cushion, in appellee’s bedroom then went to bed at approximately 1:30 a. m. At that time, Ms. Miklos noticed no injuries or marks on Irwin’s head or face.

At about 3:45 a. m., Barbara Miklos was awakened by appellee’s shouts that Irwin was not breathing. The child was lying on his back beside the couch. Ms. Miklos then noticed bruises on his head. Neither paramedics nor hospital personnel could revive the child and he was pronounced dead at 4:12 a. m.

Death was attributed to cerebral edema, or a swelling of the brain. This was caused by neurogenic shock which resulted from blunt force injuries sustained by the victim. The autopsy revealed numerous injuries to the chest, buttocks, back, and legs, and at least fifteen separate areas of contusions about the head of the child. Both the coroner, Dr. Steven Goldblatt and the chief forensic pathologist, Dr. Joshua Perper, testified that the child’s death was due to the combination of the trunk and head injuries.

Pursuant to defense stipulation, evidence was received that blood stains found on the bedspread covering the couch cushions near where the child’s head lay as he slept, and a towel also found on the couch, were consistent with the blood of the victim. No blood stains were found elsewhere in the apartment.

Appellee demurred to the above evidence. The lower court granted the demurrer. The reasoning was two-fold: first, the court noted no direct evidence had been introduced to show that appellee struck the victim in the head, and found the circumstantial evidence was as consistent with *624 self-inflicted, accidental injury as it was with homicide. Second, the court found that the below-head injuries were not shown to have been, of themselves, the cause of death and therefore, in the absence of direct proof of above-head beatings by appellee, ruled that the requisite causation element had not been established beyond a reasonable doubt. We find the lower court’s reasoning faulty.

We are unable to comprehend, after examining the record how the lower court could conclude that the inferences arising from the evidence were as consistent with self-inflicted, accidental head injuries as they were with homicide. The reasonable inferences arising from the evidence overwhelmingly negate the possibility of accidental head injuries.

While Dr. Goldblatt acknowledged the remote possibility that a contusion to the child’s head could have been caused by a fall, he discounted that possibility. The following exchange took, place between the defense counsel (on cross-examination) and Dr. Goldblatt:

Q When you use the term blunt force injury, does that necessarily mean that one person striking another with an object or with their hand or something like that?
A No. One could get a blunt force injury from a fall.
Q You could fall and get a contusion?
A Striking something.
Q Are you able to state with some medical certainty the manner of blunt force injury which caused the injury to the head?
A Whether an object struck the head or whether the head struck an object?
Q Right.
A With a reasonable probability by the number and location of the blow, the only way it could happen, it’s mostly something striking the head. If it were to occur from the head striking the object, it would have to be on multiple occasions, repeated by at least from *625 the location of the injury. There would have to have —the head would have to strike something else probably at least ten different times, (emphasis added)

Notes of Testimony at 121-122.

In spite of this testimony, the trial court concluded “it is just as logical ... to believe that the child could have fallen off the couch and sustained the injuries to his head .... Likewise, it is just as logical to argue that this child could have gotten down off that couch, wandered around in this darkened, cluttered room and fallen over something, injuring his head.” These possibilities are fantasy — did the child fall off the 15 inch-high couch 10 times? Did he stumble and fall 10 times? Of course not. This Court has never required the Commonwealth to disprove every possibility of accidental death or to prove that a hypothetical event did not take place. Commonwealth v. Green, 477 Pa. 170, 175, 383 A.2d 877, 879 (1978). In light of appellee’s earlier vicious beatings of the child, and in light of the

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Bluebook (online)
421 A.2d 1057, 491 Pa. 620, 1980 Pa. LEXIS 872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-turner-pa-1980.