Commonwealth v. Winkelman

12 Pa. Super. 497, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 269
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 16, 1900
DocketAppeal, No. 130
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 12 Pa. Super. 497 (Commonwealth v. Winkelman) 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. Winkelman, 12 Pa. Super. 497, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 269 (Pa. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Opinion by

Kick, P. J.,

Whether or not Jennie Hunter was “pregnant or quick with child,” and an instrument was used to procure her miscarriage in consequence of which she died were questions of fact, which, no matter how strong the evidence of the commonwealth may have been, it was the duty of the court to submit to the jury. We do not see how an intelligent and unbiased jury could have come to any other conclusion from the evidence than that these facts were proved; nevertheless the questions were for them. As the defendant’s counsel correctly say, convincing proof that the wound revealed upon the post-mortem examination was the cause of death would not, of itself, compel the conclusion that it had resulted in a miscarriage. Hence, if the judge had instructed the jury that, if they found it was the cause of death, the only other question for their determination was whether it was inflicted by the defendant, he would have committed error. It is contended that this was the effect of the instructions complained of in the first and second assignments of error, but the ■earnest and able arguments of the defendant’s counsel have •failed to convince us that such is the case. The evidence that the female was pregnant was undisputed and overwhelming, and the evidence that an abortion had been produced, either by her own act or the act of some other person, was almost equally .strong, even if her dying declarations be left out of consideration. It was undisputed, also, that the wound would produce .an abortion; it was the theory of the defendant as well as of the commonwealth that it was inflicted in an attempt to accomplish that result; and it is scarcely supposable that it was inflicted for any other purpose. Under these circumstances it was not error for the judge to express even a very strong opinion that, if the testimony of the physicians was to be credited, an abortion had been produced either by the woman herself or by some other person, and that this was the cause of death. This was the entire effect of the instructions complained of, whether taken by themselves or read, as they ought to be, in connection with the context. It is often permissible and sometimes advisable for a judge in his charge to the jury to express an opinion upon the facts, provided he does it fairly and does not give a binding direction or interfere with the province of the jury. Many of the civil cases where this is recognized are col[512]*512lecfced in Ginder v. Bachman, 8 Pa. Superior Ct. 405. Amongst the criminal cases may be mentioned Johnson v. Com., 115, Pa. 369, Com. v. Orr, 138 Pa. 276, Com. v. Van Horn, 188 Pa. 143, and Com. v. McGowan, 189 Pa. 641. Such comment as is here complained of is particularly unobjectionable where it simply leads the minds of the jurors up to the substantial matter of controversy, but without binding them to accept the judge’s views as to the matters of fact concerning which there is no real conflict of evidence. Having expressed his opinion as to these latter matters of fact the learned judge stated the whole question fairly and adequately as follows : “ If you determine that an abortion was committed by somebody, and that this was the cause of death, it then becomes necessary to determine by whose agency that result was accomplished.” There was no expression of opinion upon the pivotal question, namely, whether it was produced by the pregnant female herself or by some other person, nor was the former hypothesis excluded from the consideration of the jury either expressly or inferentially. On the contrary, they were told more than once that if the deceased produced the abortion there could be no conviction, no matter what the defendant may have done afterwards. These assignments are overruled.

In the excerpt from his charge complained of in the third assignment the learned judge was strictly accurate except possibly as to the time when the alleged declarations were made. He did - not intimate, either there or elsewhere in his charge, that the attempts spoken of had been unsuccessful, but only that Bertha Fair had testified that the deceased had so declared. Nor did his subsequent correction of his statement as to the time of these declarations call for any modification, which would have been favorable to the defendant, of his instructions contained in the fifth assignment. Indeed, it is not accurate to speak of these remarks as instructions; they were simply inquiries fairly arising out of the testimony and properly suggested for the jury’s consideration. They were as pertinent in view of the testimony of Bertha Fair as actually given as they would have been if her testimony as to the time of the declarations had been as the judge first stated it. It is difficult to see how the slight inaccuracy in stating the time when the declarations were made to Bertha Fair could have been prejudh [513]*513cial to the defendant; it is impossible to' see how it could have been after it was corrected. None of the cases cited by the defendant’s counsel in support of these assignments sustain their contention that such a mere slip as this in the recital of evidence was an error of so great magnitude that it could not be cured. And, after a somewhat extended examination we feel warranted in saying that no well considered case can be found in which a general rule is laid down, or a precedent established which does sustain it. The third, fourth and fifth assignments are overruled.

Though the presumption that a witness has testified to the truth may be repelled by contradictions in his testimony, or may be removed by proof that he has made contradictory statements, yet as the jury have the exclusive right to weigh the testimony and to determine the facts, the question of his credibility must, notwithstanding discrepancies and apparent contradictions, be submitted to them. “Apparent inconsistencies and even contradictions in the testimony of witnesses do not necessarily imply wilful falsehood. As a general rule it is the safer and better course to instruct the jury that it is their duty to reconcile such discrepancies and contradictions, if it can be fairly and satisfactorily done, as it can in a great majority of cases. Failing in that, it is their duty, from all the light before them, to determine whether the witness should be believed by them or not. In other words, it is the province of the jury to pass upon the credibility of witnesses who testify before them: ” Fullara v. Rose, 160 Pa. 47. The same general rule applies to dying declarations (Com. v. Mika, 171 Pa. 273), and with added force where the apparent discrepancies may have resulted from differences in recollection of the persons who heard them, and where as to the main fact the statements are consistent. The rule was" correctly applied in the present case in the instructions complained of in the sixth assignment, which should be read in connection with what immediately precedes them, and with the answer to the defendant’s fifth point. It was not the duty, nor within the province of, the court to declare that the two statements of Jennie Hunter were so inconsistent and irreconcilable in material particulars that neither was entitled to credence in any particular. It was the duty of the judge to [514]*514decide as to the admissibility of the declarations; it was the province of tne jury to pass on the credibility of the declarant.

Nor would the judge have been justified in saying to the jury that the testimony of the experts called by the defendant conclusively proved that it was impossible that the conditions described by Jennie Hunter in her two statements to her father and Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 Pa. Super. 497, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-winkelman-pasuperct-1900.