Commonwealth v. Vivian

222 A.2d 739, 208 Pa. Super. 330, 1966 Pa. Super. LEXIS 846
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 15, 1966
DocketAppeals, Nos. 371 to 375
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 222 A.2d 739 (Commonwealth v. Vivian) 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. Vivian, 222 A.2d 739, 208 Pa. Super. 330, 1966 Pa. Super. LEXIS 846 (Pa. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

Opinion by

Jacobs, J.,

Howard Vivian appeals from the judgment of sentence imposed on five bills of indictment, one of which (Bill 667) charged assault and battery, aggravated assault and battery, and assault and battery with intent to murder, and the other four of which (Bills 712, 751, 752 and 754) charged assault and battery. Five youths [333]*333were the victims, all on different dates. The twenty-two year old Vivian plead nolo contendere to the four assault and battery bills and was found guilty by the Hon. Edmund B. Spaeth, Jr., sitting without a jury, on the fifth bill, which involved six year old Joseph Carfagno, who was beaten on the head with a stick and pulled by means of a belt around his neck in a wooded area near his home in northeast Philadelphia. The lower court sustained demurrers to nine other bills, charging corrupting the morals of a minor and solicitation to commit sodomy.

Appellant raises four constitutional arguments, the first three of which apply only to Bill 667, the Carfagno beating. We reject all four arguments and affirm the lower court.

I.

Appellant argues that his confession should not have been admitted into evidence because he “was interrogated in total disregard of his constitutional right to counsel and without being warned of his right to remain silent.” A rather detailed statement of the facts is necessary to adequately understand the circumstances surrounding the confession. ,

The beating occurred in the early afternoon on Monday, May 10, 1965. The victim, six year old Joseph Carfagno, was admitted to the hospital, where, on Wednesday morning, May 12th, he identified a picture of appellant as his assailant. After this identification, at about 10:30 a.m., Detective Mullin, with other detectives, went to appellant’s home and told his mother that the police were investigating the Carfagno beating and that they wished to speak to her son. Appellant was not home so Mullin requested Mrs. Vivian to call them when he came home. After the detectives left, Mrs. Vivian telephoned the family attorney and told [334]*334him that, the police were looking for her son in connection with the Cqrfagno beating. The attorney told her “not to worry about it . . . it. was just a routine, investigation.”- -

In the meantime Mullin and his fellow officers found appellant at the Torresdale Country Club waiting for a caddying job. They told him what they , were investigating and asked him to accompany them. He did, stating that he knew nothing of the beating. The police took.him to the Nazareth.Hospital, where the Carfagno boy was hospitalized, and there they allowed appellant to make a telephone call pursuant to his request to call his lawyer or his mother.,. It was .about 11:3.0 a.m. at this time. Mrs. Vivian,, to whom her son had placed this call, talked to him and then, told one of the policemen (who said that he was Mullin but was not) that she was going to call her lawyer “and would they wait there until I called back, which would be about five or ten minutes.” Mrs. Vivian again called'her attorney who advised her that the police had a' right to take her son to the hospital and that they “would either have to book him or let him go.” He also again advised her, “Don’t worry about it.” Mrs. Vivian tried to call the police back at- the hospital and after about a half hour reached another policeman at the hospital who informed her that Mullin was upstairs. Mullin was-conducting a lineup in the Carfagno boy’s hospital room.

' After the lineup, at which, appellant was identified, Mullin took him to police headquarters. At about .12:45 p.m. Mrs. Vivian telephoned Mullin who asked her if shé had the clothes worn by appellant on Monday. She said that she did and would turn them over to him. After getting a search and seizure warrant, three police officers went to the Vivian home- and brought the clothes and Mrs. Vivian back- 4o pólice' headquarters, arriving there about 3 p:m. - -;

[335]*335. Mrs. Vivian waited in an outer office for a few minutes while Mullin spoke to appellant alone. Mullin then came out to Mrs. Vivian who was “very nervous”. She told him that her son “was down here before and he had gone through this” and that she knew “all about the police and that she wasn’t going to let him sign anything and that she was going to get him a lawyer.” Told by Mullin that “she had all the right in the world .to have a lawyer for her son”, Mrs. Vivian went into the interrogation room and in Mullin’s presence cautioned her son several times not to give any written statements. She and her son were alone in the room for about a half hour while Mullin got a warrant to arrest appellant for beating the Carfagno boy. Up to the time of this conference between mother and son, no incriminating statements had been made.

Shortly after 4 p.m. Detective Walter Fleming arrived at the police station, whereupon Mrs. Vivian recognized him and introduced herself to him, naming a mutual friend who had introduced her to him. Mrs. Vivian told Fleming why she was there and that her son said he knew nothing about the beating. Fleming, who was not assigned to this case, told her that Mullin had said that there was sufficient evidence to indicate that appellant was guilty. Fleming testified that Mrs. Vivian agreed that he should speak to her son and try to learn exactly what happened. Fleming identified himself to the appellant and told him that his mother had -asked Fleming to speak to him. During the discussion appellant first denied committing the beating. When Fleming informed him that there was evidence to the contrary and told him that “if he was guilty; ahd only, he knew,, that he should tell the police be^ cause it would be on his conscience and he' would have t on Jive- with 'this- tiling”, .appellant hit the table and said,.:“All right. I did it.” Fleming then asked him What he had done and appellant replied: “Well, I was [336]*336walking along the road. I saw this boy. He said something to me. I walked over and I hit him.” In response to Fleming’s questions, appellant remembered hitting the boy with his fist but couldn’t remember anything more. Fleming then brought Mrs. Vivian into the room and asked appellant to tell his mother what he had told him. Whereupon appellant said to his mother, “I did it, Mom; I did it,” and broke down. Mullin was then called into the room and Fleming left.

By now, it was about 5:30 p.m. Mullin then questioned appellant and obtained a fuller statement which appellant refused to sign. When Mullin came out of the interrogation room, Mr. Vivian had arrived and was waiting, angry and shouting that he was going to get a lawyer. He had already called the family attorney, who was out. Mr. Vivian was ordered out of the police station when he refused to calm down. He returned and, with his wife, talked to their son for about 15 minutes. Shortly afterwards, appellant was taken to the 7th District Station and “slated” at 7:40 p.m. At no time up to then had appellant asked for an attorney; nor had an attorney called or appeared at the police station. The two oral admissions, one made to Fleming sometime between 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. and the other, consistent with the first, made to Mullin at about 5:30 p.m., are the statements appellant claims should have been excluded.

We agree with the lower court that the oral statements were properly admitted. Judge Spaeth perceptively analyzed this question in his opinion, written before the most recent United States Supreme Court decisions, Miranda v.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Channell
484 A.2d 783 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1984)
Commonwealth v. Silverman
266 A.2d 794 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1970)
Commonwealth v. Vivian
231 A.2d 301 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1967)
Commonwealth v. Reginelli
222 A.2d 605 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
222 A.2d 739, 208 Pa. Super. 330, 1966 Pa. Super. LEXIS 846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-vivian-pasuperct-1966.