Commonwealth v. Vassar

88 A.2d 725, 370 Pa. 551, 1952 Pa. LEXIS 378
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 26, 1952
DocketAppeal, 132
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 88 A.2d 725 (Commonwealth v. Vassar) 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. Vassar, 88 A.2d 725, 370 Pa. 551, 1952 Pa. LEXIS 378 (Pa. 1952).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Musmanno,

On January 13, 1951, Beatrice Vassar, 55 years of age, shot and killed her husband, 71 years of age, in *553 New Kensington, Westmoreland County. She was indicted, tried, and convicted of murder in the first degree; and sentenced under the finding of the jury, to life imprisonment. Her motion in the lower Court for a new trial was refused and an appeal has been taken to this Court.

A new trial could possibly bring to the defendant ill omen because, on the evidence presented by the Commonwealth and defense itself, another jury could quite reasonably return a first degree murder verdict with the death penalty attached. Although a horrible crime has been committed and the defendant now faces the dismal fate of freedomless days for all the years yet remaining to her, we can appreciate, in behalf of the respect for human life, the urging of the able district attorney of Westmoreland County, joined in by the assistant district attorney who capably tried the case, that the judgment of the lower court be affirmed, for in the event of another trial: “. . . there is a great possibility that under the uncontradicted facts of this case, another jury might recommend the death penalty for Beatrice Yassar.”

However, regardless of possibilities, the case is before us for a full review on all features involved and will be so considered.

The record covers a story as sordid as any coming out of an Algerian Kasbah, but revulsion at its gross details will not lessen in any way the guarantee of a fair trial which is the defendant’s right under the Constitution and the laws of our Nation and Commonwealth.

Beatrice Vassar was only 16 years of age when she began her career in harlotry, assisted by the man she was later to marry and to slay. Married in Jacksonville, Florida, they travelled into various cities and states and finally took up permanent residence in New *554 Kensington, Pennsylvania. Partners in shame, the husband Newton Yassar acter as procurer in their abased trade. With side excursions also into gambling and other vice, punctuated by occasional incarceration for their transgression of law, Mr. and Mrs. Yassar, eventually, now advanced in life, settled down with a house of their own, to carry on as proprietors in the business of sin. They employed three women to eater to their customers, and this profligate trio was present on January 13,1951, when the partnership was liquidated by the shooting, of which the defendant now stands convicted.

Owing to the peculiarities of the enterprise which kept the occupants of the house occupied most of the night, the Vassar establishment did not ordinarily begin the day’s activities until afternoon. On this particular day the defendant got up at about noontime, attended to some household functions and then aroused her workers at 4:30 p.m. for trade which had arrived. Her husband, who had somewhere acquired the sobriquet of “Ten Nights,” had adjusted himself in a large easy chair in the living room, stretched out his feet on a hassock and prepared to pass away the time playing solitaire. The defendant, after serving supper to the trio of inmates, picked up in the kitchen a 32 calibre Colt revolver, which she had deposited there earlier, and advanced with it through the dining room. The girls leaped up from the table and scurried for safety. Witness Sheppard testified that one of the girls remonstrated with the defendant: “What are you going to do? Don’t do that.” Witness Harris testified she said to the defendant: “Oh, Miss Bee, what are you going to do with that gun?” The defendant’s only reply was: “I’m tired.” Then passing through the dining room to the living room she pointed the weapon at her husband' and .pulled the -trigger four'times, each bullet finding* *555 its mark. The only exclamation heard from the decedent was: “Oh, my Lord.”

When the police arrived, they found the dead body of Newton Vassar still in the easy chair, one foot still on the footstool and the cards still in the position of the game, except those which had fallen to the floor as the player’s arms fell lifelessly to his sides.

These facts spell out first degree murder according to the standard of any criminal code, and specifically under our murder statute and decisions.

The defendant pleaded self-defense and she testified: “A. Well, I went in the kitchen, and they sat down to eat, so I had taken the gun out of the drawer to carry it back upstairs,' and when I come through there, I got in, started in the door, see, he started towards' me, and when he started towards me, I thought he was going to take the gun away from me, and I just pulled the trigger. Q. Do you know how many times you pulled the trigger? A. I couldn’t say, three or four times. Q. Where were you, as nearly as you can tell us, when you pulled the trigger? A. Oh, I think I was about that far inside the door, out from here over there. Q. That would be about two and three feet inside the living room door? A. The living room door. Q. Then you— and where was he, I’ll ask you. A. He was over right straight in front of me, right over in that big chair, but he got up when he started toward me, see, when he started I thought he was going to' take the gun away from me, he shot me once before, and I thought he was -going to take the gun and shoot me, and I just pulled the trigger.”

She also testified that the decedent lunged toward her, with the remark: “Bitch, you’re -drunk. I’ll kill you- in here.” But no one of the persons present corroborated- her in this ■ statement. All of- the witnesses testified that there was no argument, no exchange.'-of *556 words between the defendant and decedent, and no movement on the part of the decedent. The position of the decedent’s body, which admittedly no one touched before the arrival of the police, categorically refutes the defendant’s assertion of any aggressiveness on the part of Newton Yassar.

The defendant testified at length to the shortcomings of her dead husband: he took the profits of the trade, he was shiftless, he argued with her, he beat her, once he stabbed her and another time he shot her (thirty years before) and this wound had disabled her arm. Although the decedent was a small, frail man and the defendant a fairly large person, it is not difficult to assume that the decedent was as lacking in physical restraint as he was wanting in moral discipline. However, no previous victimization justifies the taking of human life.

Police Officer Buckner testified that when he arrested the defendant she said: “I shot him. He’s in there. I was tired of it all. I was tired of him nagging at me.”

This was unquestionably the whole purpose of the evil deed. She was tired of her aged husband and wished to be rid of him. She was also tired of the business in which they were engaged and assumed that in some way the elimination of the man with whom she had started down the path to Sodom and Gomorrah would transport her to some undefined happier state. It was not until after the killing that she realized she had made matters infinitely worse, and, in preparation for the trial, she wove from the loom of mendacity the story of self defense.

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Bluebook (online)
88 A.2d 725, 370 Pa. 551, 1952 Pa. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-vassar-pa-1952.