Commonwealth v. Woodward

7 Pa. D. & C. 775, 1926 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 405
CourtMontgomery County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedJanuary 18, 1926
DocketNo. 95
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Pa. D. & C. 775 (Commonwealth v. Woodward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montgomery 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. Woodward, 7 Pa. D. & C. 775, 1926 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 405 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1926).

Opinion

Williams, J.,

Clarence Woodward, the defendant, living at No. 332 Walnut Street, in the Borough of Jenkintown, this county, having been convicted by a jury of a violation of the Act of Assembly of June 30, 1919, P. L. 678-701, section 23, P. L. 692, paragraph 4, as amended by the Acts of May 16, 1921, P. L. 582-613, section 10, P. L. 603-4, and June 14, 1923, P. L. 718-50, section 20, P. L. 745, through his counsel, moves1 for a new trial and, in support of the motion, sets forth the single reason that “the verdict of guilty of the charge of failure to render assistance was against the law and the evidence.”

At the trial, William I. Bowden, the prosecutor—in appearance a high class gentleman—residing at No. 416 Olney Avenue, in the City and County of Philadelphia, this State, where he holds the responsible position of Supervising Engineer for the American Engineering Company—testified, under oath, that, on Sunday, the 15th day of March, last year, about 2.45 P. M., while out for a drive and accompanied by Mrs. Bowden, he had been operating, at a rate of speed not exceeding one mile in three minutes, his dark blue, one-seated, Model 59, Cadillac roadster westerly and as close as possible to the right-hand side of the highway along Church Road in the Township of Springfield, this county; that, as thus he was coming near to the village of Enfield, a Lincoln sedan, driven by the defendant at a rate of speed not less than one mile in one and a half minutes, had approached from the rear; that, when the Lincoln reached a point only forty feet away from the Cadillac, the defendant had turned the sedan toward the southern gutter and then, although more than half of the road was open to him, had so quickly and sharply swerved to the north that the right part of the rear fender of the Lincoln came in contact with the left portion of the front fender of the roadster, whereby the protector of the latter was broken and the Cadillac was knocked into the northern ditch; that, notwithstanding the motor-vehicle of the prosecutor was damaged by the defendant, for hundreds of yards the latter had kept on going westerly on Church Road until he reached a dirt road intersecting the road on which he was speeding from the scene of collision; that, at [776]*776the intersection of the highways, the defendant had forsaken Church Road and selected as the avenue of his escape the road to .his right and leading to the north; and that then he had continued several hundred yards farther along the dirt road until eventually he passed “out of sight” of the prosecutor.

Now it so happened that on this Sunday afternoon there was proceeding westerly on Church Road and about one-fourth of a mile back of Mr. and Mrs. Bowden, Leo Walsh, of No. 5214 Morris Street, Germantown, Philadelphia, who was operating his black 1925 Buick light six touring-car. With him in the Buick were two male friends, Hugh Lynch and James Reeves, and two young ladies and their chaperone, the mother' of one of the girls. Lynch was seated on the front seat to the right of Walsh.

When called as a witness for the Commonwealth, young Mr. Walsh, who prior to the Sunday in question had never heard of, much less known, either the prosecutor or defendant and who was, therefore, no doubt as disinterested in reality as he appeared on the witness-stand, testified that, at a time he was traveling at the rate of thirty-six and two-thirds feet a second, the defendant had gone around him so fast that the Buick seemed to be “standing still;” that, finding the Cadillac roadster, when he came up to it, in the right ditch and the prosecutor out in the road, he had taken Mr. Bowden in the touring-car and given chase to the fleeing defendant, finally located a half-mile from . Church Road; that, when Lynch handed the prosecutor a pencil for the purpose of taking the license number on the rear of the Lincoln, the defendant had demanded the instrument of writing; that there had been a strong smell' on the breath of the defendant, who talked and acted as if he had been drinking and was still under the influence of liquor; that, in fact, the defendant had been “half-loaded;” that the defendant had said to Walsh that, if he should interfere in the fight already precipitated by the drunken companion of the defendant with the prosecutor, he, the defendant, would “hit” Walsh, at the same time modestly imparting the warning that he, the defendant, could “lick” Walsh, “too;” and that the defendant, apparently braver then than when haled before the bar of the court he seemed to be, boldly offered to fight not only Wálsh but Lynch and Reeves as well.

Hugh Lynch swore that the defendant, going fifty miles an hour, had missed collision with the Walsh car “by an inch;” that the Lincoln sedan, without apparent diminution of speed, had then swung around the Bowden roadster “on two wheels;” and that the defendant, when found by the pursuing party, had “choked” and “dragged” his words and been “half-stewed.”

Reeves testified that the defendant had talked “thick” and conducted himself in “anything but the way a sober man would act.”

In the Lincoln with the defendant was a man whose condition was described by Bowden as having been “under the influence of liquor” and by Lynch as having been “stewed.” When this comrade in the wild ride of the defendant took the witness-stand to help his pal, he admitted, albeit quite unwittingly of the damage he was doing to the cause of his friend, that, after the collision and before leaving Church Road, he had told the defendant of the striking by him of the roadster of Mr. Bowden.

Although the defendant testified at length and in great detail on his own behalf, he sedulously avoided a denial of the clear, positive and explicit evidence on the part of the Commonwealth that, at the hearing before William Urban, a justice of the peace of the Borough of Ambler, this county, he had stated to the justice that he, the defendant, “was in wrong by going away.”

[777]*777The above bare recital of a few of the facts established by the testimony taken at the trial makes it entirely clear that the second ground asserted in the one reason assigned for the granting of a new trial, namely, that the verdict was against the evidence, is wholly insufficient and inadequate to sustain the motion. Hence, there remains for consideration the sole inquiry: Was the verdict against the law?

In many Anglo-Saxon jurisdictions, there have been enacted statutes— varying in form it is true but all shaped, nevertheless, by a common purpose—requiring an automobilist, upon causing injury to the person or property of another traveler, to stop his machine and furnish his name, or other means of identification, to the traveler so injured, or to a police officer, and, if circumstances require, to give assistance to the one sustaining injury in person or property: Rex v. Hankey, 93 L. T. N. S. 107 (Eng.); State v. Verrill, 112 Atl. Repr. 673 (1921), Spear, J. (S. Jud. C. of Me.), 674; Stewart v. Com., 247 S. W. Repr. 357 (1923), Clarke, J. (C. of A. of Ky.), 358; and Bitgert v. State, 248 S. W. Repr. 1073 (1923), Lattimore, J. (C. of Crim. A. of Tex.). In fact, so serious a matter is the flight of an automobilist after causing injury to another regarded by intelligent and enlightened legislators moved solely by the aim of bettering public welfare that in some of the most progressive and forward looking American jurisdictions the offence has been made a felony: People v. Rosenheimer, 209 N. Y. 115 (1913), Cullen, Ch. J., 118; People v. Finley, 149 Pac. Repr. 779 (1915), (Dist. C.

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112 N.E. 54 (New York Court of Appeals, 1916)
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Bluebook (online)
7 Pa. D. & C. 775, 1926 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-woodward-paqtrsessmontgo-1926.