DocketNumber: Appeals, 291-296
Judges: Keller, Cunningham, Baldrige, Rhodes, Hirt, Kenworthey
Filed Date: 10/26/1942
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
I would concur in the judgment of the court as to Reaver 3d if I understood that it was a necessary result of the conclusion or of the formula applied in Com. v. Vallone,
A review of the essential facts as to this defendant applies to Reaver Sr. as well.
Defendants, Harry Reaver Sr. and his son Harry Reaver 3d, together with William C. Wiand, were indicted, tried and convicted of burglary, larceny, and receiving stolen goods committed in stealing chickens belonging to Nicholas Hasselhan and Samuel Shade. On similar charges Wiand and Reaver Sr. were convicted of the same offenses with reference to chickens owned by Irvin Miller and Lester Everhart.
On the day following his arrest, Wiand made a statement which was in the form of answers to questions propounded by the assistant district attorney. The questions and answers were taken stenographically in the presence and hearing of Reaver 3d. His father, Reaver Sr., the county detective of Berks County, and an officer of the Pennsylvania Motor Police were also present. In his statement, offered in evidence by the Commonwealth, received without objection, and read to the jury,1 Wiand said that Reaver Sr. broke the locks on Miller's chicken houses with a steel bar, and assisted him in removing five or six bags of chickens; that at Hasselhan's place the two Reavers went into the chicken houses and removed the chickens while Wiand remained in the truck; that at Shade's place the two Reavers again entered the chicken houses and took the chickens while Wiand remained on the truck; that at Everhart's place Reaver Sr. and Wiand entered four or five chicken houses, and Reaver 3d drove the car. Wiand further stated that it was their practice to take the chickens to his place where the Reavers assisted him in crating them, after which Wiand took the chickens to Philadelphia where he sold them to a *Page 451 dealer. Wiand received the money and met the Reavers at some place along Ridge Avenue in Philadelphia where the money was divided among the three of them.
Immediately after the stenographic notes of this statement had been transcribed they were shown to Wiand, who read and signed them in the presence of both Reavers. The assistant district attorney then asked the Reavers if they had anything to say; Reaver 3d remained silent. Reaver Sr. said: "There is nothing that I can say. He said it all"; or "I have nothing to say. He said it all"; or "I haven't anything to say. He said everything."
The rule as to the probative value of vicarious admissions has been stated recently by our Supreme Court in Com. v. Turza,
In the present case there is not the slightest evidence that either Reaver was denied an opportunity to refute the incriminating statements made by Wiand. On the contrary, the record shows that the assistant district attorney expressly invited them to speak. They must have known that they were suspected as participants in some crime, because they had been taken into custody and their activities were obviously under investigation *Page 452 by the officers of the Pennsylvania Motor Police, the county detective, and the assistant district attorney. It can scarcely be said that these circumstances would not furnish sufficient motive for a denial on the part of both defendants if the accusatory statements of Wiand were untrue.
Reaver 3d argues that the general rule should not be applied in his case because he was entitled "to remain silent after he [had been] taken into custody and during an official examination of his case." It is apparent from many opinions of the appellate courts that the defendant was in custody and yet his silence or conduct, in the face of accusatory statements, was accorded the evidential value previously indicated: Ettinger v. Commonwealth,
I recognize, as said in Com. v. Zorambo,
Prior to the offer in evidence of Wiand's statement and the presentation of the testimony as to defendants' silence or conduct in the face of it, the corpus delicti had been adequately proved. The evidence left no doubt that the crimes had been committed by someone, and proof of the identity of the wrongdoers was not a prerequisite to the reception of the admissions in evidence. Com. v. Turza, supra, p. 134; Com. v. Eng *Page 453 Chuing,
I think the silence of Reaver 3d, and the statement of Reaver Sr., under the circumstances, were tacit admissions of guilt, that they were competent and substantive evidence for the jury's consideration. The corpus delicti having been sufficiently established these admissions were for the jury. See Com. v.Bishop,
Wiand as a witness for the defense also testified that at the hearing before the alderman he had testified that he and the Reavers stole the chickens, but that this testimony was not true.
These circumstances need not be of themselves sufficient *Page 454 proof of guilt; but together with defendants' tacit admissions they warranted the jury in finding both of them guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
Reaver 3d testified in his own behalf, and denied his guilt, but his credibility was badly shaken by his own testimony.
His conviction should be sustained.
I concur in the affirmance of the judgment of conviction as to Reaver Sr., who did not testify, on grounds which I have previously stated herein, but not for the reasons given in the opinion of the court. The majority opinion has oversimplified the reasons for affirming his conviction.
Reaver Sr. made no voluntary confession, and I fail to see how his words can be so construed from what occurred at the time and prior thereto.
His reply when invited by the assistant district attorney to speak "I have nothing to say. He said it all," is not a confession as I view it, but an evasive or equivocal response tantamount to absolute silence under the circumstances. Com. v.Turza, supra, p. 136.
Commonwealth v. Bishop ( 1925 )
Commonwealth v. Turza ( 1940 )
Commonwealth v. Amato ( 1941 )
Commonwealth v. Chuing ( 1942 )
Commonwealth v. DePalma ( 1920 )
Commonwealth v. Mazarella ( 1924 )
Commonwealth v. Zorambo ( 1903 )
Commonwealth v. Lisowski ( 1922 )
Commonwealth v. Brown ( 1919 )
Commonwealth v. Ballon ( 1911 )
Ettinger v. Commonwealth ( 1881 )
Commonwealth v. Carelli ( 1924 )