Commonwealth of Penna. v. Degrange

97 Pa. Super. 181, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 246
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 30, 1929
DocketAppeal 43
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 97 Pa. Super. 181 (Commonwealth of Penna. v. Degrange) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth of Penna. v. Degrange, 97 Pa. Super. 181, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 246 (Pa. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

Appellant appeals from a judgment and sentence, directing him to pay the costs of prosecution, a fine of fifty dollars and undergo imprisonment in the workhouse for six months, pronounced against him by the court of quarter sessions of Allegheny County upon his conviction under an indictment charging him with an indecent assault upon a female child between eight and nine years of age.

The indictment contains but one count and the material parts charge that on August 9, 1928, appellant “unlawfully and indecently did make an assault in and upon......and did......unlawfully, indecently and against [her] will ......put and place [his] hands ......against and upon the private parts, person and body of [the child]......contrary to the form of the Act of the General Assembly in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.”

*183 The Commonwealth’s evidence consisted not alone of the testimony of the girl, which hy reason of her yonth and several uncertainties and discrepancies in her story might be considered an unsatisfactory basis for a conviction, but also of the corroborating evidence of her mother, a police officer and a physician. As the sufficiency of the evidence to support the indictment and the verdict thereon is not challenged in the statement of questions involved, we are relieved of the unpleasant duty of considering it in detail. It is sufficient to say that there was evidence of these facts: On Monday, August 6, 1928, three days preceding the date of the offense as laid in the indictment, the child was seated in a moving picture theatre beside appellant who talked to her, gave' her some money and arranged with her to meet him at the same theatre on the following Thursday. Upon returning to her home the girl informed her mother of the incident and of the arrangement; the mother reported the matter to the police department and an officer was detailed to be in attendance at the theatre on the following Thursday afternoon.

This officer testified that he saw appellant and the girl leave the lower floor of the theatre and go to the balcony; that he followed them and while standing near the seats occupied by them saw appellant disarranging the girl’s clothing and taking the indecent liberties with her detailed in his testimony; and that he forthwith placed him under arrest.

Appellant strenuously denied that he was in the theatre on Monday and endeavored to establish an alibi for that afternoon. He admitted that he was in the theatre on the following Thursday but denied the testimony of the girl and the officer with respect to the assault. The contention of the Commonwealth was strengthened materially by the evidence of a physician who examined the girl late that night.

*184 At tlie conclusion of all the testimony counsel for appellant presented what he called a “demurrer” to the evidence; it wa's in no sense of the term a demurrer hut, in effect, a motion requesting the trial judge to direct a verdict of acquittal upon the ground that “the facts of this case as presented by the Commonwealth do not constitute an offense against any law of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.” The motion was refused and the issues of fact submitted to the jury so adequately and impartially that counsel for appellant made no suggestions when invited to do so at the conclusion of the charge. Appellant’s motion for a new trial was not pressed but it was urged that the judgment should be arrested because the indictment did not charge an indictable offense.

The question involved upon this appeal is, therefore, whether the acts charged in the indictment and proven to the satisfaction of the jury amount to an offense for which the perpetrator may legally be indicted and punished under the law of this Commonwealth — statutory or common.

The indictment is endorsed “Indecent Assault;” appellant contends that this ‘ ‘ is not an indictable offense either at common law or by statute.” It is conceded that we have no statute enacting that any person who shall commit the acts charged in this indictment shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction thereof, subjected to a prescribed punishment. The trial judge submitted the case to the jury as a common law offense, saying: “There has been some question here about the basis for this indictment, and we will say to you that we find no statute, no law passed by the legislature, covering this specific charge or act; but we are submitting it to you as an action that is prohibited under the common law, the law as we get it from England, being an action against public morals. So that we say to you that there is an *185 offense charged in the indictment.” This instruction is assigned for error.

Our Penal Code of March 31, 1860, P. L. 382, Sec. 178, p. 425, provides that “every felony, misdemeanor or offence whatever, not specially provided for by this act, may and shall be punished as heretofore. ’ ’ If the offense charged was indictable under that portion of the common law of England which has been adopted in this Commonwealth it is preserved by this section, described by the codifiers as “a saving section”: Com. v. Mohn, 52 Pa. 243, 245, and Com. v. McHale, 97 Pa. 397, 407.

Indecent assault is a generally recognized criminal offense; it is defined as the taking by a man of indecent liberties with the person of a female without her consent and against her will, but with no intent to commit the crime of rape: 2 R. C. L, 547, Sec. 26; 5 Corpus Juris 731. In some jurisdictions it is treated as a species of assault and battery and in others singled out and made specifically punishable as an aggravated assault. The age of the child in this case excludes any consideration of the question of her consent. The technical name by which the offense is designated in or on the indictment is not important. In such cases the fundamental offense against organized society is the assault. Where the evidence does not disclose circumstances which would warrant the inference that an assault of this nature was committed with intent to ravish, or with the specific intent to inflict bodily injury, it may properly be described-as an “indecent” assault.

We think'the acts of which appellant has been convicted, tending as they do to outrage decency and corrupt public morals, were indictable under the common law of England and are now indictable under the common law of Pennsylvania, composed as it is “partly of the common law of England and partly of our own *186 usages”: Guardians of the Poor v. Greene, 5 Binney 554, 557; Com. v. Lehigh Valley R. R., 165 Pa. 162, 171; Forepaugh v. Railroad Co., 128 Pa. 217, 228.

We, for instance, have retained as indictable the common law offense of being a “common scold,” Com. v. Mohn, supra, but have rejected the “ducking-stool” as an “engine of correction” and substituted fine and imprisonment at the discretion of the court, James v. Com., 12 S. & R. 220. It is not necessary that the Commonwealth be able to point to a “precise definition” of an offense in the textbooks or adjudicated eases in order to show that it is an offense at common law: Com. v. McHale, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
97 Pa. Super. 181, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-of-penna-v-degrange-pasuperct-1929.