DocketNumber: Appeal, 201
Citation Numbers: 30 A.2d 229, 151 Pa. Super. 431, 1943 Pa. Super. LEXIS 306
Judges: Kjsnworthey, Keller, Cunningham, Baldrige, Stadteeld, Rhodes, Hirt, Kenworthey
Filed Date: 11/16/1942
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
Argued November 16, 1942. Indictment charging defendant with knowingly transporting a female for the purpose of prostitution. Before McCLUSKEY, P.J.
Verdict of guilty and judgment and sentence thereon. Defendant appealed. Appellant was convicted of knowingly transporting a female for the purpose of prostitution. Act of June 24, 1939, P.L. 872 § 517, 18 PS 4517. He concedes the evidence was sufficient to support the verdict. He seeks a new trial because of alleged errors in the admission of certain evidence and in the court's charge to the jury.
The commonwealth's evidence, with the exception of that which is alleged to have been inadmissible, consisted exclusively of the testimony of the prostitute. She testified that some time in April, 1941 appellant drove her in his car from Allentown to Scranton where he secured employment for her in a bawdy-house for which services he received a fee. It was conceded at the trial that the girl at the time was a confirmed prostitute and the charge that appellant had induced, enticed or compelled her to become a prostitute was dropped.
At the meeting, appellant made no "admissions" of any kind andall the questions, with the insignificant exception that at the beginning of the proceedings appellant was asked whether he knew the girl, were addressed to her.
This proof was allowed because appellant sat through the meeting in silence, on the theory that the jury might infer, from his silence, that he assented to the truth of the statements.
The doctrine of assenting silence has its roots in the postulate that: "The crystallization of the experience of men shows it to be contrary to their nature and habits to permit statements tending to connect them with actions for which they may suffer punishment to be made in their presence without objection or denial by them unless they are repressed by the factthat the statement is true." Wharton's Criminal Evidence (11th ed.) § 656, p. 1092. (Italics supplied). This principle, in the original English tradition, was applied as a working rule that whatever was said in a party's presence was receivable against him as an admission because presumably assented to. Wigmore, Evidence (10th ed.) § 1071, p. 70. But it is to be observed that in this simple and comprehensive form the rule ignores some inherent qualifications of the principle. There are multitudes of circumstances under which an accused person may be "repressed" other than "by the fact that the statement is true." The rule, to be sound in application to particular cases, must be critically examined in the light of the peculiar circumstances of each case by judges who assume somewhat the role of clinical psychologists. And that the courts have long recognized their responsibility is manifest from the early and numerous deliverances tending to dislodge or qualify it. Mr. Justice DUNCAN in Moore v. Smith, 14 S. R. 388, 393, said: "Two men at this rate, might *Page 435
talk a third out of his whole estate, with a witness! Nothing can be more dangerous than this kind of evidence. It should always be received with caution; . . . . . ." In Vail v. Strong,
Because an attempt to analyze them all would unduly prolong this opinion, suffice it to say our own decisions *Page 436
reveal two characteristics, (1) that our courts have never hesitated to refuse to apply the rule whenever they felt an accused person's silence was explainable, and (2) they have carefully avoided broad generalities as to its application except in the clearest categories. See Com. v. Karmendi,
It has been held, for example, that the rule has no application where the accusing statements were made in the course of a judicial proceeding, Com. v. Zorambo,
The aspects of the present case which, in our opinion, bear on the question whether appellant's silence during the meeting in the district attorney's office was admissible as proof of his assent to the statements there made are, (1) the meeting was deliberately staged for the purpose of procuring evidence, (2) the meeting was a relatively formal proceeding, (3) appellant had been charged with the crime and was under arrest, (4) he was present at the meeting under guard and under compulsion, (5) the only persons present were hostile to him, and (6) he was not asked any questions until after the meeting had been concluded.
In Wharton's Criminal Evidence (11th ed.), § 660, p. 1099, it is stated: "A practice popular among police officials of a means of obtaining evidence by means of tacit admissions is that of reading detailed statements of the crime purportedly made by a co-defendant or companion in the crime with a view towards eliciting either a complete confession or an admission by silence, *Page 438 to be used against the defendant to whom the statement is read. Such statements have been held to be inadmissible when sought to be introduced upon the ground that they were tacitly admitted. The reason for the holding has been that there was no necessity for denying or answering the statement read."
The formality of the proceedings was not without significance. Although the district attorney was not represented and there was no judge or magistrate present, all the other persons in the room were hostile with the exception of the district attorney's secretary who was there to record the proceedings. What was held in the early Alabama case of Bob v. State,
The fact that appellant was taken to the district attorney's office under guard and compelled to remain while the statement was being taken is of prime importance. He was not there voluntarily; he did not voluntarily hear the statements. Appellant was not advised that an incriminating statement was about to be made in his presence, that he was at liberty to go or remain as he wished, and that if he remained either anything he said or his silence might be used against him; evidence thus obtained is subject to many of the objections of an involuntary confession.
The fact that appellant was not asked any questions at the meeting, by itself and under different circumstances, would perhaps not be of great importance. *Page 439 Under the present circumstances it was at least an aggravation. It was undoubtedly important to the police that he not be asked any questions. He would undoubtedly have denied them on the spot. And if he had, the whole purpose of the meeting would have failed.
In our opinion, the proof of what transpired at the meeting was wholly inadmissible. And since there was virtually no other corroboration of the commonwealth's principal witness, it undoubtedly carried great weight with the jury and was prejudicial to him; in this respect the case is distinguishable from such cases as Com. v. Sydlosky,
Appellant called as a witness William McLaughlin. He was the manager of the Hotel Carlton in Scranton. Prior to the trial he had been interviewed at the hotel by appellant's counsel and, ostensibly because it was thought his testimony would be favorable to appellant, a subpoena was served on him by a constable and he appeared at the trial. He was in court during the first day. On the second day, when counsel for appellant sought to introduce his evidence, his name was called. There was no response. Counsel for appellant then, having undoubtedly been informed of what had happened, asked the court to send for the district attorney and to compel him to explain the witness' absence. It then developed that, after adjournment on the previous day, the witness, with one or two others, had left the *Page 440 court room and entered an automobile which was driven by one of the others to the Hotel Easton; that, upon arriving at the hotel, Officer Ruppert, who had trailed the car from the court house to the hotel, came up to the car and placed the witness under arrest; that, without being told why he was being arrested and without any information against him, the witness was taken to the court house, finger-printed and photographed and placed in jail where he remained over night and until subsequently brought into the court room; and that, during the entire time he had been confined, he was not interviewed or questioned by anyone. He was apparently given the "silent treatment;" he was left to fathom, if he could, the basis for his mysterious incarceration.
The district attorney's explanation of what was, certainly at first blush, high-handed treatment of a defense witness was that "we intended to detain him for forty-eight hours for the purpose of questioning him." By way of justification, he then advanced two very lame excuses. His first excuse was that the officer had discovered that the driver of the car, who was not the witness, was carrying an unsigned operator's license; the second excuse was that on the previous day the witness had spoken to one of the jurors. The obvious answer to this excuse was, as pointed out by counsel for appellant, that the entire matter had been investigated by the court on the previous afternoon, the juror had been interviewed, the court was satisfied that the conversation was entirely accidental and innocent and that the juror had been permitted to resume his seat in the jury box.
Apparently the opportunity for reflection furnished by the involuntary retreat with which the district attorney favored the witness paid dividends. When finally the witness was called to the stand, he manifested a loss of memory which would have been difficult to explain *Page 441 if the district attorney's generous hospitality had not been disclosed.
It requires no argument to demonstrate that the conduct we have just described resulted in the intimidation of an important witness. The guilt or innocence of appellant turned entirely on whether the jury believed the girl or whether it believed appellant on the vital part of her testimony that he had driven her to Scranton in his automobile and accepted money from her. The presentation of appellant's defense was, to say the least, fraught with many difficulties. The girl's youth was against him, although as we have pointed out, by the time he met her she had admittedly been a prostitute for some months and he had nothing whatever to do with her descent from respectability. He was obviously a man of low moral standards. And because of the class of people with whom he chose or was compelled to associate, the only witnesses he was able to call were, in addition to McLaughlin, Rose Marino who admitted operating a bawdy-house in Scranton for fifteen years (and who, from some of the remarks in the record, looked the part), and the proprietress of a roadhouse on Route 309. But neither appellant's morals nor those of the people with whom he associated were on trial. He was charged with a specific statutory offense; the burden was on the commonwealth to prove he was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. We think the police and the district attorney violated those fundamental principles of fair play which are implicit in our judicial process.
The second, sixth and seventh assignments are sustained and the judgment reversed with a venire facias de novo.
Commonwealth v. Westwood , 324 Pa. 289 ( 1936 )
Commonwealth v. Turza , 340 Pa. 128 ( 1940 )
Commonwealth v. Sydlosky , 305 Pa. 406 ( 1931 )
Commonwealth v. Ford , 1925 Pa. Super. LEXIS 160 ( 1925 )
Commonwealth v. Leskoski , 225 Pa. 382 ( 1909 )
Commonwealth v. DePalma , 268 Pa. 25 ( 1920 )
Commonwealth v. Karmendi , 325 Pa. 63 ( 1936 )
Com. of Pa. v. Coyne , 115 Pa. Super. 23 ( 1934 )
Commonwealth v. Russell , 149 Pa. Super. 326 ( 1942 )
Commonwealth v. Zorambo , 205 Pa. 109 ( 1903 )
Commonwealth v. Aston , 227 Pa. 112 ( 1910 )
Commonwealth v. Ballon , 229 Pa. 323 ( 1911 )
Commonwealth v. Lisowski , 274 Pa. 222 ( 1922 )
Commonwealth v. Mazarella , 279 Pa. 465 ( 1924 )
State v. Ferrone , 97 Conn. 258 ( 1922 )
Commonwealth v. Smith , 105 Pa. Super. 497 ( 1932 )