Commonwealth v. Wheatley

89 Pa. D. & C. 261, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 398
CourtBucks County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedFebruary 5, 1954
Docketnos. 59, 60 and 61
StatusPublished

This text of 89 Pa. D. & C. 261 (Commonwealth v. Wheatley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Bucks County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Wheatley, 89 Pa. D. & C. 261, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 398 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1954).

Opinion

Satterthwaite, J.,

Three bills of indictment against this defendant were tried together. Two thereof, September term, 1953, nos. 59 and 60, charged him respectively with the offenses of assault and battery with intent to kill and attempt with intent to kill upon the person of George Caldarelli, a State Police officer. The third, September term, 1953, no. 61, charged .him with aggravated assault and battery upon the person of one Walter Leonhauser. Defendant was convicted by a jury on all three bills of [263]*263indictment and his motions in arrest of judgment and for a new trial are presently before the court for disposition.

The shootings which formed the subject of these indictments were an aftermath of a dispute arising out of the failure of defendant and his son to obtain the right to tow away an automobile disabled in an accident on the Lincoln Highway in Middletown Township, Bucks County, Pa., in the early morning hours of May 30, 1953. This dispute developed into a verbal argument between the son and Mr. Caldarelli, a State Police officer assigned to investigate the accident, and ultimately resulted in a physical altercation between young Wheatley and the officer in the course of which the officer was forced physically to subdue the young man by striking him over the head with a multi-celled flashlight, and placing him under arrest. His case has been otherwise and.separately disposed of. Defendant, who had been present throughout this incident, then left the scene in the tow truck, went to his home a short distance away and, after an interval in excess of five minutes, returned in his passenger car in the glove compartment of which he carried a revolver in a holster. After he had parked his car at the scene and placed the firearm in his belt, he walked across the highway, called to the officer and, as the latter approached, drew the gun and fired it point blank at him, inflicting an abdominal wound which almost proved fatal. Other shots were also fired, both by defendant and by the officer, one of which struck a bystander, Walter Leonhauser, and inflicted an injury to both his ankles.

Although defendant contended that the shooting was either accidental or in self-defense, inasmuch as the officer, according to him, had threatened to give him the same treatment that he had previously given the son, it is apparent that the jury gave no credence to this [264]*264story. Totally unexplained was the reason for defendant’s removing the gun from the glove compartment of his car and placing it upon his person as he admittedly did. The record is overwhelming that defendant’s purpose was solely one of revenge and resentment against the prior action of the State Police officer. Significantly, counsel at the argument made an attack upon the sufficiency of the Commonwealth’s evidence to justify the conviction of the assault upon the person of Caldarelli, apparently abandoning one of the stock reasons assigned for the motion for new trial in that the verdict was against the evidence.

Defendant’s first argument challenges the action of the trial judge in submitting to the jury both indictments nos. 59 and 60, charging defendant, respectively, with assault and battery with intent to kill, and attempt with intent to kill, and the verdict of guilty on both thereof, contending that as a matter of law the two offenses merged and defendant could not be guilty of both. While it is unquestionably true that the attempt charged would be included within and merged into the completed offense if there were but one shot fired by defendant, the undisputed testimony in this case discloses that defendant fired at least three shots and possibly more at Caldarelli. The first caused the serious abdominal wound previously mentioned. Others respectively pierced the officer’s leg, and struck the paving near his shoulder after he had fallen from the impact of the first. On this state of facts, defendant, in our opinion, assuming the other elements present, became guilty of an attempt with intent to kill each time that he pulled the trigger of the gun and therefore would be properly found guilty of this offense as to each of such of those shots as did not merge into and become a part of the completed felonious assault. He is fortunate in being charged with only one such offense under the circumstances.

[265]*265The next matter urged by defendant in support of his motion for a new trial is the failure of the trial judge to take from the jury the question of defendant’s guilt on indictment no. 61 charging him with aggravated assault and battery upon the person of Walter Leonhauser, a bystander, to whom injury was inflicted by a bullet from either defendant’s or the officer’s gun. Unquestionably, defendant is correct in asserting that from the evidence it was impossible to tell beyond a reasonable doubt which firearm caused this bullet wound. If that question necessarily had to be answered, defendant’s demurrer to this charge should have been sustained.

However, the trial judge believed that it was unnecessary for the jury to attempt to resolve this question under the circumstances and submitted this indictment for determination under express instructions that the conduct of defendant must be found to have been the legal cause of the injury to Leonhauser, i.e., that defendant’s conduct was such that it set off a chain of circumstances which, even though indirectly, naturally and probably resulted in the injury by provoking retaliatory gunfire from the officer in the performance of his duties as such or in self-defense. The jury was further told that if this injury was accidental or the officer was not so justified in firing the shots he did, then defendant should be acquitted of this charge.

This instruction was fully justified by the opinion of the Supreme Court in Commonwealth v. Almeida, 362 Pa. 596, which definitely established the proposition that civil law concepts of proximate cause not only may, but should, be carried over into criminal cases. We are not convinced that the principles' enunciated in the Almeida case are confined to murder prosecutions.

In any event, even if the trial judge were in error in submitting bill no. 61 to the jury, it is manifest that [266]*266such action had no bearing upon the jury’s deliberation as to defendant’s guilt or innocence on bills nos. 59 and 60. This was expressly conceded by defense counsel at the oral argument.

The remaining contentions made on defendant’s behalf go to the propriety of the instructions given by the trial judge in defining “intention to commit murder”.

Section 710 of The Penal Code of June 24, 1939, P. L. 872, 18 PS §4710, defines assault and battery with intent to kill as follows:

“Whoever . . . stabs, cuts or wounds any person, or by any means causes any person bodily injury, dangerous to life, with intention to commit murder, is guilty of felony.”

Section 711 thereof, 18 PS §4711, defines attempt with intent to kill, as follows:

“Whoever . . . attempts to cut or stab or wound, or shoots at any person, or, by drawing a trigger or in any other manner, attempts to discharge any kind of loaded arms at any person, . . . with intent to commit the crime of murder, although no bodily injury is effected, is guilty of felony.”

Both of these offenses require as an essential element that the conduct of defendant be accompanied with intention to commit murder.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Bozzi
82 A.2d 303 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1951)
Commonwealth v. Berardino
153 A. 687 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1931)
Commonwealth v. Almeida
68 A.2d 595 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1949)
Commonwealth v. Berardino
100 Pa. Super. 58 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1930)
Commonwealth v. Vanchaski
42 Pa. Super. 294 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 Pa. D. & C. 261, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-wheatley-paqtrsessbucks-1954.