In re Edwards

54 Pa. D. & C. 601, 1945 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 31
CourtCambria County of Juvenile Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 54 Pa. D. & C. 601 (In re Edwards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cambria County of Juvenile Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Edwards, 54 Pa. D. & C. 601, 1945 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 31 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1945).

Opinion

McKendrick, J.,

On the night of September 5, 1945, the dead body of Phyllis Jean Epperson, aged three, was found on the river bank at South Fork, Cambria County, Pennsylvania. Death resulted from injuries to the head, which appeared to have been crushed in several places by stones, Lloyd James Edwards was taken into custody by the police and he admitted that he had struck the deceased several times with large stones. Lloyd James Edwards accompanied the State and county police to the scene of the killing and reenacted the events in which he admittedly had participated. A charge of murder was made against Lloyd James Edwards and he was committed to the Cambria County jail to await action by the proper authorities.

Lloyd James Edwards was born May 16, 1936, and therefore is past nine years old. After conferences between the representatives of the district attorney’s office, the State police, and members of the court, it was decided that the charge of murder against the minor delinquent should be withdrawn and the case referred to the juvenile court for hearing and determination.

[602]*602The Juvenile Court Law gives jurisdiction to the juvenile court in all proceedings affecting delinquent, neglected and dependent children under the age of 18 years except where the offense charged is murder. Where one is charged with murder it is necessary that an indictment be found by the grand jury, and the cause is then triable in the court of oyer & terminer by a jury. Where, however, a defendant pleads guilty to murder generally, the court itself has power to fix the degree of the crime and the punishment therefor. In this particular proceeding we are confronted with a most extraordinary and unusual circumstance. At common law a child under the age of seven years is conclusively presumed to be incapable of committing a crime. Between the ages of seven and fourteen, the law deems a child incapable, but only prima facie so, and evidence may be received to show a criminal capacity. Over the age of fourteen, a child, like all other persons, is considered prima facie capable of committing crime; and the one who alleges his incapacity to eommit crime must prove it.

Lloyd James Edwards, who is of the age of nine, comes within the class of children who are prima facie incapable of committing crime; but if the evidence shows the capacity of the mind to distinguish between right and wrong and to appreciate and understand the quality of the act, one may be held culpable and subjected to the punishment which the law prescribes for murder.

The problem facing the court and the district attorney was whether with the knowledge of the facts as they were developed by the minor’s admissions, and by subsequent investigations, a prosecution for murder should be instituted and prosecuted to its completion, or whether the case should be disposed of in the juvenile court.

The juvenile court has power to commit offenders to institutions for training and reformation, or it may [603]*603place an offender upon probation until he reaches the age of 21 years and thus is in a position to supervise the minor and those persons in whose custody he may be.

Some practical difficulties presented themselves, and after mature and deliberate consideration it was decided to institute proceedings in the juvenile court. The district attorney, with the approval of the court, has discretion in the conduct of his office, and under all the circumstances acted wisely in referring the matter to the juvenile court.

All homicide, or the killing of a human being, is not necessarily murder within the technical meaning of that term. We take it, that the murder referred to in the Juvenile Court Law as being a crime excepted from the jurisdiction of the juvenile court, is a formal murder charge based upon indictment and not upon the mere fact that the arresting officers made an information before a magistrate charging the crime of murder. There being no formal murder charge by indictment, which would be necessary for the purpose of trial in the court of oyer & terminer, the district attorney was within his rights in appealing to the juvenile court to determine the offense and the proper punishment. We therefore conclude that the juvenile court has jurisdiction to try the minor as a delinquent child.

The Juvenile Court Law of June 2,1933, P. L. 1433, defines a delinquent child as “a child who has violated any law of the Commonwealth or ordinance of any city, borough or township”. The alleged minor in this proceeding has, of course, violated the law of the Commonwealth, and is therefore subject to the jurisdiction of the juvenile court. A petition, therefore, was filed in the juvenile court on September 24th by Sergeant V. F. Bunch of the Pennsylvania State police. After the filing of the petition the probation office attached to the juvenile court made a most thorough and exhaustive examination and investigation of the matters [604]*604deemed pertinent to the proper determination of the case. We had trained psychiatrists and psychologists examine Lloyd James Edwards and submit their findings and recommendations to the court. The preliminary investigations made by the State police and county officers, together with the reports of the examining physicians, were studied previous to the hearing of the minor involved.

On October 19, 1945, the case was heard in the juvenile court. At the hearing, John M. Bennett, Esq., assistant district attorney of Cambria County, and Sergeant V. F. Bunch of the State police, together with the chief probation officer, Mrs. Lola Bennett, appeared. Mrs. Emma Sikorski, mother of Lloyd James Edwards, was also present at the hearing, which was stenographically reported by Francis J. Leahey, official court stenographer. Lloyd James Edwards testified at the hearing and revealed in minute detail the occurrences which resulted in the death of the Epperson child. The story, as revealed in juvenile court, was substantially that previously related by him to the police and the assistant district attorney. The fact that Phyllis Jean Epperson came to her death at the hands of Lloyd James Edwards has been established beyond all doubt. The minor delinquent, in our opinion, is able to distinguish between right and wrong. He is apparently a boy of average intelligence, with nothing unusual about his appearance except that he is undersized and not well developed for a boy of his age. He has had a fairly good school record, but is repeating the third grade. There are, however, some unusual aspects in the case. The minor delinquent seems to be without the emotions which one would expect to find in a normal child. He does not talk freely and is inclined to hesitate to give details which are within his knowledge. It has been our experience in handling a large number of juvenile cases that children talk freely, and where they are willing to admit the doing of the thing for which [605]*605they are brought into court, they do not hesitate, but seem anxious to make a clean breast of the whole thing, and seem to feel better when it is over. The minor in this case was rather reluctant to tell all that he knew, and, therefore, never volunteered to disclose anything unless he was asked about it specifically. We are satisfied that the home conditions and environment in which this boy was compelled to live were not conducive to his best moral interests, and we have also learned of some occurrences in his lifetime which would ndicate a sadistic or cruel attitude.

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Related

Mont Appeal
103 A.2d 460 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
54 Pa. D. & C. 601, 1945 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-edwards-pajuvctcambria-1945.