Commonwealth v. Antico

22 A.2d 204, 146 Pa. Super. 293, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 220
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 9, 1941
DocketAppeals, 5 to 31 inclusive, 36 to 59, inclusive, and 69 and 93
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 22 A.2d 204 (Commonwealth v. Antico) 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 v. Antico, 22 A.2d 204, 146 Pa. Super. 293, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 220 (Pa. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Pee Cueiam,

The appellants were jointly indicted to No. 519 June Sessions 1940, Allegheny County, on a charge of common law conspiracy.

The indictment charged in substance that the defendants had unlawfully conspired together, and with certain other persons named, to violate the provisions of the election laws of the Commonwealth by fraudulently getting the names of the candidates of the Communist Party on the ballot for the general election to be held on November 5, 1940, by means of false swearing to affidavits to nomination papers required by said election laws and the securing of signatures of qualified electors to said nomination papers by false representations as to their contents, with the intent and design to prevent a free, fair and legal general election under the election laws of the Commonwealth. It further charged the commission by the defendants of certain unlawful overt acts done by them pursuant to said conspiracy, to wit: (1) That they had procured certain named persons to circulate said nomination papers and secure signatures to them by false and fraudulent representations: (2) that they had themselves circulated said nomination papers and procured signatures to them by false and fraudulent representations; and (3) that after the said signatures had been so fraudulently obtained, they made false affidavits to said nomination papers and falsely swore to the affidavits appended to them by law, and violated the laws of the Commonwealth governing and concerning the election of candidates for public office in these and other respects.

*298 At the same sessions true bills of indictment were returned against the appellants separately, charging each of them in the first count with perjury (Section 322 of the Penal Code of 1939, P. L. 872) in the making of the elector’s affidavit appended to said nomination paper and required by law to be made before a duly qualified officer as a prerequisite to its filing; and that each defendant had wilfully, falsely and corruptly sworn in said affidavit that the signers to said nomination paper had signed the same with full knowledge of the contents thereof, whereas, in truth and in fact, the signers to said nomination paper did not sign the same with full knowledge of its contents. The second count charged the’ defendants with having knowingly made false statements in an affidavit required to be appended to and to accompany a nomination paper by the election laws of the Commonwealth (Section 1813 of the Act of June 3, 1937, P. L. 1333), on the same facts averred in the first count. A separate indictment was returned for each nomination paper on which it was alleged the affiant had made a false affidavit, and as some .of the appellants had sworn to three or four nomination papers, sixty-nine separate true bills were returned on these charges.

A number of true bills were also found charging certain of the same defendants separately with having obtained a signature to a written instrument, namely, one of said nomination papers, ,by false pretenses. As no sentence was imposed on any of these bills and no appeals were taken in those cases, they were not included in the record sent up on appeal, and our knowledge of them is confined to the opinion of the trial judge refusing motions in arrest of judgment and for a new trial.

It is evident, however, that all these separate indictments related to the same matters which formed the basis of the indictment for conspiracy, and were but formal bills charging the commission of the offenses *299 constituting overt acts alleged to have been done in the carrying out of that conspiracy.

The indictments were tried together before Judge Graff, specially presiding. The trial lasted from September 30 to October 31, 1940, and resulted in a verdict of guilty as to all the defendants tried on the conspiracy indictment except Eva Peifer, as to whom an acquittal was directed by the court. Verdicts of not guilty were likewise directed, at the request of the district attorney, on certain of the indictments charging perjury, etc. and obtaining signatures by false pretense, for lack of sufficient evidence; and demurrers to the evidence on certain others of said indictments were sustained for the same reason. Verdicts of guilty were rendered on all the other bills.

The court refused motions in arrest of judgment and for a new trial in all the cases where verdicts of guilty had been rendered, except in the conspiracy case of James Headman, who became ill in the course of the trial, and as to whom a mistrial was granted.

Sentences were imposed on the conspiracy bill ranging from a fine of $100, without imprisonment, to a fine of $500 and two years imprisonment in the county workhouse; and on one perjury bill, as to each defendant, the same imprisonment, if any, was given as had been imposed on the conspiracy bill, to run concurrently with that sentence. Sentence was suspended on all the other perjury bills and on all the bills for obtaining a signature by false pretenses. Separate appeals were taken from the respective judgments.

The prosecutions grew out of alleged violations of the Pennsylvania Election Code of June 3, 1937, P. L. 1333, a general act applying to all elections. Primary elections, as well as the procedure for nominating candidates by political bodies not entitled to nominate candidates at primary elections, are made by the Code an integral part of the election machinery of the Commonwealth. See United States v. Classic, 313 U. *300 S. 299, 61 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1031, opinion by Mr. Justice Stone, now the Chief Justice, filed May 26, 1911. The prosecutions were instituted pursuant to the presentment of an investigating grand jury, summoned by the court in consequence of widespread charges and complaints — following the publication in a newspaper of the names of the signers of the Communist Party nomination papers — that the signers had been deceived as to the object and purpose of the papers or petitions they had signed.

For some years the Communist Party had been entitled to nominate its candidates for public office at the primary elections held pursuant to earlier election laws; but some time prior to 1910, its vote in the State had fallen below the percentage required to give it the right to nominate its candidates at the primary election. Accordingly it lost its status as a ‘political party’ (within the definition of that term in section 102(n) and 801 (a) and (b) of the Election Code of 1937) which nominates its candidates at the primary election, and became a ‘political body’ (as defined in said Code, sections 102(p) and 801(c)), which must nominate its candidates by ‘nomination papers,’ as provided in Article IX(b) of the Code.

The term ‘nomination paper’ must not be confused with ‘nomination petition.’

A nomination petition is used for the nomination of candidates of a ‘political party/ Each signer of such petition must declare therein that he is a registered and enrolled member of the party designated in such petition.

On the other hand, a ‘nomination paper’ is used for the selection of its candidates for office by a ‘political body,’ which is not a ‘political party’ and not entitled to nominate its candidates at the primary election.

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Bluebook (online)
22 A.2d 204, 146 Pa. Super. 293, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-antico-pasuperct-1941.