Commonwealth v. Viscosky

83 Pa. Super. 96, 1924 Pa. Super. LEXIS 71
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 10, 1924
DocketAppeals, 141, 142, 143, 144 and 145
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 83 Pa. Super. 96 (Commonwealth v. Viscosky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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. Viscosky, 83 Pa. Super. 96, 1924 Pa. Super. LEXIS 71 (Pa. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, J.,

Appellants were jointly charged with having maliciously destroyed a railroad bridge belonging to the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company. The indictment contained two counts; the first charging a felony under the Act of May 9, 1913, P. L. 186; the second a misdemeanor under the Act of March 31, 1860, P. L. 382, pi. 147. They were convicted on both counts, but sentenced on only the first. Sentence on the second count was suspended, and the assignment as to that count need not be considered: Com. v. Mellon, 81 Pa. Superior Ct. 20, 22.

*99 The bridge was blown np by the use of an explosive on July 17,1923, while a coal strike was in progress. It formed part of the railroad company’s spur to a nonunion mine which was being operated during the strike. The accused were all union strikers. The only direct evidence of their participation in the crime was furnished by John Goodisky, also a striker, an accomplice, whose testimony implicated all of the appellants, but placed the more active direction of the outrage on Viscosky, Kulchek and Eamsell, the last-named the secretary of the local union. Most of the numerous assignments of error filed relate to the examination of this witness and the charge of the court concerning his testimony.

The trial judge allowed the defense the widest latitude in the cross-examination of this witness as respects any promise, inducement or reward offered him in connection with his evidence. He was fully interrogated as to the circumstances under which he made his statement to the officials who arrested him, where it was made, who were present, who paid his expenses to Pittsburgh and return, and while there, whether any money was paid him by anybody or any promise made directly or indirectly if he would tell the story of the dynamiting; who furnished his bond for him, where he had been living since, who paid his hotel bills and expenses while attending court, with whom he had discussed the story, and whether anything was said indicating that he would be treated leniently if he told such a story — in short, he was most searchingly examined. After having elicited all the facts from which a jury might infer the state of the witness’s mind and determine whether he was telling the truth in denying that any money, reward, promise, immunity or leniency had been offered him for testifying in the case, counsel for the defendants asked him whether he expected any leniency or to be treated any different than the defendants because of the testimony he was giving. This was objected to by the Commonwealth and *100 was excluded by the court “until facts have been produced under this cross-examination upon which expectations might be based.”

It is unquestionably the law in this State that a very wide latitude is permitted in the cross-examination of an accomplice and the most searching questioning is allowed in order to test his veracity, show his feeling or animus against the defendants, disclose his interest, and discover whether any promise, reward, immunity or leniency has been held out, offered or indicated to him in return for his evidence: Kilrow v. Com., 89 Pa. 480, 485; Com. v. Emmett, 74 Pa. Superior Ct. 86, 89. But after all this has been done, without eliciting any personal hostility to the accused or discovering any promise of reward or leniency to the witness, we have no decision by our Supreme Court which holds that, in circumstances like the present, the witness may be asked as to his undisclosed expectations, resting upon no just or substantial ground of hope. It is true that Prof. Wigmore in his work on Evidence, (2d ed., vol. 2, section 967, p. 351) says: “It bears against a witness’ credibility that he is an accomplice in the crime charged and testifies for the prosecution; and the pendency of any indictment against the witness indicates indirectly a similar possibility of his currying favor by testifying for the State; so, too, the existence of a promise or just expectation of pardon for his share as accomplice in the crime charged.” But in all the cases cited by the learned author, and relied upon by appellants, (Stevens v. People, 215 Ill. 593, 74 N. E. 786; Territory v. Chavez, 8 N. M. 528, 45 Pac. 1107; State v. Nelson, 59 Kan. 776, 52 Pac. 868; State v. Kent, 4 N. D. 577, 62 N. W. 631; People v. Hare, 24 N. W. 843 (Mich.); Allen v. State, 10 Ohio St. 288), as supporting the proposition that the witness may be interrogated as to his expectation of leniency, the facts elicited in the case furnished some basis for a just or reasonable expectation of leniency or pardon; such as ■¡that the witness had not been informed against, or in- *101 dieted, or prosecuted or preliminarily examined, or tried, or that he was the recipient of other special favor or treatment supplying him with “inducements and influences for hope”; whereas in the present case the accomplice was promptly informed against, and indicted and had pleaded guilty and was at the time awaiting sentence, and the examination had disclosed no promise, hint or indication of reward, immunity, leniency or pardon given him directly or indirectly. Everybody knows, —and this includes the jurors trying a case, — that an accomplice testifying against his former associates does so either from (1) penitence or (2) personal animosity, (3) the promise of reward, or (4) the hope of leniency; and the jurors hearing the testimony and having before them the facts adduced relative to what occurred both prior to and since his confession are able to judge which is the predominating motive for his evidence and are not helped very much by his being interrogated as to his undisclosed mental processes which are not capable of test, trial or proof. In Kilrow v. Com., supra, the court below refused to allow the defense to show by cross-examination of the accomplice that while he was in Canada, he was told “that if he remained there he would, get ten years for the offense; that if he came back they would let him off easier; and that he came back in part because of this inducement.” This was error, because it related to a concrete fact reasonably likely to induce a hope or expectation of leniency and not merely an unsupported and undisclosed mental attitude; but the Supreme Court refused to reverse on this ground and said: “While great latitude is allowed in the cross-examination of an accomplice, and the most searching questions are permitted, in order to test his veracity, still this testimony was not important enough to warrant a reversal on the ground of its rejection. Preston’s position was defined with sufficient clearness. He had been guilty of the original crime. He was in jail. And his motive in appearing as a, witness against the defendant, in order to secure *102 leniency to himself, was already obvious,” (p. 485). So here, the jury were in possession of all the facts, upon which a hope or expectation of leniency might be based. The refusal of the question as to his mental attitude, disclosed to nobody, even if error, — which we do not decide — , was not important enough to warrant a reversal of the case. The third and fourth assignments are overruled.

The second, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth assignments may be considered together and must be overruled.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 Pa. Super. 96, 1924 Pa. Super. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-viscosky-pasuperct-1924.