Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1918

Commonwealth v. Motsko

Commonwealth v. Motsko
Superior Court of Pennsylvania · Decided July 10, 1918 · Head, Henderson, Kephart, Orlady, Porter, Trexler, Williams
70 Pa. Super. 209; 1918 Pa. Super. LEXIS 212

Commonwealth v. Motsko

Opinion of the Court

Opinion by

Henderson, J.,

Two assignments of error are presented. The first relates to the competency of a witness called in rebuttal by the Commonwealth to testify in regard to the reputation of the defendant as a law-abiding citizen. The second excepts to a portion of the charge of the court on the subject of reputation.

The witness objected to was the chief of police of *211Plains Township. He testified that lie was acquainted with, the defendant’s reputation before the occurrence of the felony charged against him. No objection was made to the form of the question and none appears to the competency of the witness. He lived in the community and stated that he had knowledge of the reputation of the defendant with respect to the matter involved. It appeared on his cross-examination that he ascertained certain facts with reference to prior conduct of the defendant after the assault for which he was tried, but after the examination on that subject had been concluded by the counsel for the defendant the question as to the reputation of the accused before the occurrence of the assault was propounded and it was with reference to that reputation that he testified. The officer qualified himself as a witness and no sufficient reason appears for sustaining the assignment.

The objection to the charge bears rather on the form of the question propounded to the witness than on the propriety of the comment by the trial judge. The evidence must unquestionably relate to the general reputation of the defendant. When the court referred to the testimony of the witness for the defendant to establish his good reputation nothing less was meant than the reputation which had been the subject of investigation in the examination of witnesses. The jury could not have misunderstood the court on the subject. The authorities cited would be pertinent as related to the form of the question propounded in regard to character; but they have no' bearing on the assignment now under consideration. Moreover, when the attention of the counsel on the respective sides was called to the sufficiency of the charge by the court no objection was made on this point but the court was requested to give further instructions1 on another branch of the case: After a fair trial on the merits and with an opportunity to have any lack of fulness of explanation supplied the defendant ought not now to be heard in complaint of what could have been *212easily corrected if it were a matter of importance. Inadequacy of the charge is not assigned for error and what was said by the court on the subject of reputation was not contrary to law. The charge was full and clear and we are not convinced that the defendant whs in any way prejudiced.

The assignments are overruled, the judgment is affirmed and the record is remitted to the Court of Quarter Sessions of Luzerne County with direction that the subject be fully carried into effect and to that end it is ordered that the appellant appear in that court and that he be committed by that court to serve and comply with such parts of his sentence as had not been served and complied with at the time this appeal was taken.

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