Court Opinion

ID: 9727375
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-26 13:33:05.558405+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:25:36.755594
License: Public Domain

*428Opinion by
Mr. Justice Musmanno,
Concurring and Dissenting In Part:
I concur in the Majority Opinion but I can be something less than enthusiastic about its citing with approval the quotation from Commonwealth v. Bausewine, 354 Pa. 35, in which Justice Drew (later Chief Justice) said: “The facts and circumstances proved must, in order to warrant a conviction, be such as to establish the guilt of the defendant, not necessarily beyond a moral certainty, nor as being absolutely incompatible with his innocence, but at least beyond a reasonable doubt.” In fact, I do not agree at all with the statement made by Chief Justice Drew that a conviction is proper even though the evidence is not absolutely incompatible with innocence.
What happens to the time-honored rule that all doubts are to be resolved in favor of the accused if a jury is allowed to return a verdict of guilty when it is not morally certain of the defendant’s guilt and the evidence is not incompatible with innocence? Although a juror can with a good conscience return a verdict of guilty where he is convinced of the defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt that does not amount to mathematical certitude, I doubt that he can sleep easily of nights if by his vote he sends a defendant to prison or to his death when he entertains a moral in-certainty as to his guilt.
This Court has often said: “When a charge of crime is sought to be sustained by circumstantial evidence, the hypothesis of guilt should flow from the facts and circumstances proved, and be consistent with them all. The evidence must be such as to exclude to a moral certainty every hypothesis hut that of guilt of the offense imputed; the facts and circumstances must not only be consistent with and point to *429the guilt of the accused, bub they must be inconsistent with his innocence.” * (Emphasis supplied.)
Has the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania decided to jettison this universal and time-honored rule which has been the lifeboat saving many an innocent person from a sea of seemingly incriminating circumstance which otherwise would have engulfed him? Moral certainty means being honest with oneself. Once we allow convictions when the jurors are not honestly certain of the guilt of the accused, a hole beneath the water line has been driven into the ship of criminal law. To say that a jury may blast into disgrace a defendant while doubt beclouds the mind and uncertainty upsets the heart is to batter down one of the stoutest pillars of the temple of justice erected to protect the innocent as well as convict the guilty.
I concur in the results of this case but dissent from any view which holds that moral certainty is a dead letter in the jurisprudence affecting the lives and liberties of those accused of crime.

 Commonwealth v. Holt, 350 Pa. 375, 397; Commonwealth v. Bardolph, 326 Pa. 513, 521; Commonwealth v. Benz, 318 Pa. 465, 472.