Commonwealth v. Tompkins
Commonwealth v. Tompkins
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The appellant was found guilty of murder of the first degree, and judgment of death followed, The sole and
We are again called upon to repeat, strange as it may seem, that on the trial of an indictment charging felonious homicide, the law’s presumption is that the offense of the accused is no higher than murder of the second degree, and the burden is always upon the Commonwealth to rebut that presumption by proof, establishing to the satisfaction of the jury, that the crime is of the first degree. This burden never shifts, but continues to rest upon the Commonwealth throughout the entire trial, and the accused is not called upon to rebut the presumption of a degree of guilt which does not exist: Com. v. Drum, 58 Pa. 9; Murray v. Com., 79 Pa. 311; Com. v. Mika, 171 Pa. 273. There is not a line in the entire charge indicating to the jury that, though the prisoner’s guilt had been established, the presumption of the law was that it did not rise higher than murder of the second degree. On the contrary, the only conclusion the jury could have reached, under the instructions given them, was that the law presumed it to be murder of the first degree. This most clearly appears from those portions of the Charge complained of by the first and third assignments of error. After defining the different degrees of homicide and announcing in a general way to the jury that “in an indictment such as that before us, and which you will have in charge, a verdict for murder of the first degree, murder of the second degree, or voluntary manslaughter could be found and could be sustained,” the trial judge almost instantly added, “We
In Com. v. Greene, 227 Pa. 86, the only one of the numerous assignments of error sustained complained of the following from the charge of the court: “The law holds that if a man uses a deadly weapon upon the vital part of another person, it is a presumption that he intended the consequences that would follow from, as, for illustration, from his pulling the trigger and sending a bullet crashing into the brain of some human being; that is, that he intended to kill, and if he so does, it is on him to answer to the jury aught that he may have in extenuation or qualification to relieve himself from that presumption of murder of the first degree.” What was said, in holding that this was error, is here controlling, and we now repeat it: “The only inference to be drawn by the jury from this instruction was that if they found the prisoner had shot the deceased, the burden was upon him to relieve himself from the law’s
Nothing is to be found in the charge relieving it from the error disclosed .by the first and third assignments, and they are, therefore, sustained.
Judgment reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.
See Com. v. Berkenbush, above, p. 455.
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- Criminal law — Murder—Degrees—Murder of second degree— Presumption — Burden of proof — Insanity—CTia/rge of court. 1. On the trial of an indictment charging felonious homicide, the presumption is that the offense of the accused is no higher than murder of the second degree, and the burden is always on the Commonwealth to rebut this presumption by proof, establishing, to the satisfaction of the jury, that the crime is of the first degree. This burden never shifts, but continues to rest upon the Commonwealth throughout the entire trial, and the accused is not called upon to rebut a presumption of a degree of guilt which does not exist. 2. Where insanity is set up as a defense, and the court correctly charges the jury that if they find from a fair preponderance of the evidence that the prisoner had not consciously committed the crime charged against him, he should be acquitted on the ground of insanity, it is reversible error for the court to further charge that, if the prisoner was sane at the time of the commission of the offense, the law presumes it to be murder of the first degree and that the jury should so find. 3. In such case, the court, having charged that under the indictment a verdict of murder of the first degree, murder of the second degree, or voluntary manslaughter could be found and sustained, almost instantly added: “We have to deal in this ease only with the offense of murder of the first degree.” Immediately after this the jury was told that if the prisoner’s insanity had not been established, “there is no evidence that we can discover that would diminish the offense from that of murder of the first degree.” Held, that no matter what the testimony may have shown, and no matter what counsel for the prisoner may have admitted in addressing the jury, before whom they could waive no right of their client, such utterances by the court were erroneous, since they must have been understood by the jury as taking from them, to whom the law had exclusively committed it, the question of tha degree of the guilt of the accused.