Commonwealth v. Benjamin

10 Pa. D. & C. 775, 1928 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 286
CourtPhiladelphia County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedJuly 16, 1928
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Pa. D. & C. 775 (Commonwealth v. Benjamin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Philadelphia County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Benjamin, 10 Pa. D. & C. 775, 1928 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 286 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1928).

Opinion

Alessandroni, J.,

This is an appeal from a summary conviction before Magistrate Violet H. Fahnestock by each of the sixteen defendants who were fined $10 and costs after the magistrate had found them guilty of breach of the peace, Sunday violation and disorderly conduct. Upon the entry of bail and allowance of their separate petitions, an appeal was allowed.

Upon hearing de novo, the court has before it the following undisputed facts:

A few days before Sunday, Feb. 12th, George Evans, one of the defendants, known to William B. Mills, Superintendent of Police of the City of Philadelphia, to have very strong Communist leanings, if not an avowed Communist, called at his office and stated that he, Evans, was going to hold a meeting to protest on the part of the unemployed against certain actions on the part of city officials and to demand from City Council money for their sustenance and support. Evans was told that a meeting of this kind at this time would only bring there a number of unemployed under false pretences and would attract the usual radical Communist followers to affairs of that kind, and was further told that he would have an answer as to whether or not the meeting would be permitted. After Superintendent Mills conferred with the Director of Public Safety, it was decided, in the interest of law and order and of the prevention of a possible breach of the peace, not to permit the meeting to take place. Instructions were accordingly issued to the police in the district where the meeting was to be held to notify the owners of the hall and others interested that the meeting would not be permitted. Evans then caused the following printed circular to be delivered to the office of the Superintendent of Police: “Unemployed Organize. Demand Work or Government Maintenance. Mass Meeting to Protest Against the Brutal Indifference of the City and State Authorities. Sunday, February 12th, 1928, 2 P. M. Machinists Temple, 13th & Spring Garden Sts. Speakers: Ben Thomas, Geo. D. Evans, Herbert Benjamin and Others. Unemployed Men and Women come in masses to this meeting. Organize your forces for effective action to secure consid[776]*776eration of your needs and immediate adequate relief. Admission Free: Auspices: Philadelphia Council of Unemployed.”

The circular had the following notation on the hack: “2nd Month, 8th, 1928. Supt. Wm. B. Mills. Dear Sir: Arrangements have been made for holding the Mass Meeting announced on the back hereof. Very Truly, Geo. D. Evans, Secy. Phila. Council of Unemployed. Resi. 7723 N. 16th St., Phila.”

After the receipt of this circular, Evans, accompanied by his attorney, David Wallerstein, Esq., called on Superintendent Mills, who explained to them that the police would prevent the meeting. Evans replied that the meeting would be held. On Sunday, Feb. 12, 1928, Corporal Fagan informed Lieutenant John J. Cary that a meeting was to be held at No. 521 York Avenue, and that a crowd was gathering, about 3.30 o’clock in the afternoon. Lieutenant Cary, accompanied by two officers, went to that address, where he met Evans. He informed Evans that he understood there was going to be a meeting and told him, as he did not have a permit to hold it, they would not permit it, to which Evans replied: “I am going to hold it.” There were then about fifteen men upstairs. Evans, raising the second-story window and calling to the people who had gathered outside to come in and not to pay attention to the police, shouted: “The mayor of the. city is only a whelp, and the •President of the United States. . . .” Here he was stopped by Cary. Cary then proceeded to disperse the meeting and placed some of the men under arrest. A couple of hundred people had gathered outside and the streets were blocked with automobiles. Superintendent Mills, recalled, testified that from information he had received, he anticipated that if the meeting was not held at Machinists’ Temple they would go to the Communist headquarters, No. 521 York Avenue, and accordingly gave orders to the police in that district to prevent any uprising there. From this it would appear that those interested in holding this meeting, particularly Evans, brought their meeting to York Avenue to circumvent the police. Sergeant Harry A. Connoughton, acting upon orders from Lieutenant Cary, went to No. 521 York Avenue, where he interviewed Herbert Benjamin, one of the defendants, described as the president. While there he was informed by another defendant, Jennie Cooper, the secretary, that he was misinformed, that no meeting was to take place at No. 521 York Avenue, but at Machinists’ Institute, 13th and Spring Garden Streets. After having reported this to his superior officer, he was directed once more to report to the place of the meeting, where he found about three or four hundred people gathered and acting in a disorderly manner. “They were shouting and talking like a person in an excited mood; and their attitude in general concerning the Mayor and the Police Department in interfering with their meeting.” That he and other officers went upstairs to the meeting-room to pacify the people, “talked nice to them and had no trouble whatever, but they seemed to insist upon being arrested.” That they said, “Lock us up; you cannot put us out.” That all of those arrested seemed to be in the same attitude; they all wanted to be arrested. That speeches were made from the window calling to the crowd about the police interfering; that the Mayor and the police in general were against their cause. Corporal Fagan testified that he arrived at the place of the meeting about 1.30 P. M., with instructions not to allow any meeting to take place. There was no one there at that time. In a short time a number of people began to gather, among whom was the defendant, Jennie Cooper, who stated they were going to have a meeting there. She said: “They just cleaned out Machinists’ Hall and we are going to have this meeting in spite of Superintendent Mills and [777]*777his police, or anyone else.” She was told they could not have a meeting there. Meantime, Evans and Benjamin arrived, and instructed Michael Tuolor, another defendant, to proceed with the meeting. He also instructed the people not to move out of the place, that the police had no power to be there and that they would hold a meeting in spite of them. Tuolor proceeded to take off his hat and coat and started to denounce the police. After that, Tuolor lifted up the window and made a speech exhorting the workers to come in and have their rights; every one to come to the hall arid defy the police. As the witness went upstairs to stop Tuolor, Benjamin and Evans joined in the speech-making, “denouncing” the President and the Mayor; talking about “the Mayor down-trodding them.” Meantime, another one had reached the window to make another speech. About this time the streets were blocked, automobiles could not pass, automobile horns were blowing and the people outside were being exhorted to come in and defy the police. Officer Hagan, who arrived shortly after 3 o’clock, testified that there were about 700 people outside the building at about 3.17 P. M. Officer Schwenck, testifying generally in corroboration of the other police witnesses, stated that the people were “hollering and creating a crowd,” and that he arrested the defendant, Israel Lazar, after he warned him against trying to force his way through the crowd into the meeting. Officer Roth said that he arrived on the scene at 2.15 P. M. He was there with Lieutenant Cary, and the latter informed Evans the meeting would not go on.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Pa. D. & C. 775, 1928 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-benjamin-paqtrsessphilad-1928.