Commonwealth v. Bonnem

95 Pa. Super. 496, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 127
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 22, 1928
DocketAppeal 244, 268, 269, 270, 271, 272 and 273
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 95 Pa. Super. 496 (Commonwealth v. Bonnem) 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. Bonnem, 95 Pa. Super. 496, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 127 (Pa. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

Eight indictments were found in the Court of Quarter Sessions of Philadelphia County, in each of which Carl Bonnem and his father, Edward Bonnem, were charged with having conspired with each other and with “divers other evil disposed persons” to cheat and defraud the respective prosecutors named in the several indictments out of amounts varying in the different cases from $1,900 to $3,000 by fraudulently inducing them to invest these sums in various butcher shops and retail meat businesses, to be conducted, in partnership with the Bonnems, at specified locations in the city.

"When the cases were called for trial on April 20, 1927, Carl Bonnem, the son, alone appeared and it was represented to the trial judge that Edward Bonnem was physically unable to go to trial. The Commonwealth, having been advised by a physician of its selection sent to examine the father that it would be dangerous and inadvisable to compel his appearance, elected to proceed to trial against Carl Bonnem. The legal effect of this procedure, in so far as the questions here involved are concerned, was the same as if Edward Bonnem had been granted a severance. Carl Bonnem was convicted upon seven indictments; his motions in arrest of judgment and for a new trial were denied; sentence was pronounced at the first number in the court below; and he has taken an appeal in each Case. They were heard together and will be disposed of in one opinion. Whe'n these appeals *499 were called for argument at the October T., 1927, of this court, and we were advised that Edward Bonnem had not then been tried, we suggested that they were not ready for final adjudication in view of the anomalous situation which might arise if Edward Bonnem should be acquitted and it should appear fro^n the record that the two Bonnems were the only persons implicated in the alleged conspiracy. Upon application of counsel for appellant the argument was continued pending the trial of the father. The suggested possibility no longer exists; it appears from a stipulation of counsel filed in this court that Edward Bonnem died September 18, 1928. At the continued argument at this term it was contended by the learned counsel for Carl Bonnem, that, entirely aside from the merits, he is entitled to have the judgment against him reversed and to be discharged from custody by reason of the death of Edward Bonnem before trial, because, as they contend, there can be no lawful sentence under any of these indictments for the conspiracy therein charged unless at least two persons have been convicted. We therefore now have two questions for consideration and disposition: one purely technical and the other on the merits.

1. In support of their position on the first question they rely chiefly on our case of Com. v. Faulknier et al., 89 Pa. Superior Ct. 454, but it is. not authority for their present proposition. The situation there was quite different, both as respects the language of the indictments and the availability of the defendants for trial. The indictments in that case charged only two persons with the conspiracy; they were tried together and convicted; and the main question involved was the legality of granting a new trial to one and sentencing the other before the retrial of his Single alleged co-conspirator. There were four indictments in all, two of which charged Faulknier, as a deputy constable, *500 with having extorted money from Lofstead and Eppolito, under arrest for violation of the liquor laws, and the judgments in these cases were affirmed. At the same time two other cases were tried, in one of which Faulknier was charged, along with one Bowman, with having conspired to extort the money from Lofstead and in the other, along with one Fiat, with conspiracy to extort the money from Eppolito. In these two conspiracy cases new trial's were granted Bowman and Fiat, but Faulknier was sentenced. Upon a review of the conspiracy cases we reached the conclusion that the verdicts of guilty against Faulknier were valid but that as a new trial had been granted to his single alleged confederate in each instance the cases were not ripe for judgment against Faulknier. Judge Trexler, speaking for this court, pointed out that the indictments did not charge the defendants therein named with conspiring with others whose names were unknown and that the new trial should have been granted to both defendants in each indictment or refused to both, because, if Bowman and Fiat, or either of them, should be acquitted upon the retrial, the court would be confronted with the anomaly of having before it a single defendant convicted of a conspiracy under an indictment which charged only him and the acquitted defendant with the offense. We accordingly reversed the judgments against Faulknier for conspiracy, directing the verdict's to stand, and remitted the record so that the court below might suspend the sentences until it should properly appear that Bowman and Fiait, or either of them, have been convicted, when Faulknier should be again sentenced, or discharged in the event that both Bowman and Fiat should be acquitted. This was done in accordance with the principle that where a number of known persons are charged together by name with a crime like conspiracy or riot and are arrested and available for trial, but obtain severances, and on the separate trial's verdicts *501 are returned against a fewer number than are capable in law of committing the crime, the judgments should be suspended until the number necessary to the crime have been convicted. In charges of conspiracy, it is a rule of caution against the possibility of the acquittal of all but one of the persons named in an indictment which undertakes to name all the conspirators. This principle does not apply where one alone is indicted for a conspiracy with other's unknown, or where he is indicted with others who cannot be taken or brought to trial: 12 C. J. 644, Sec. 248. Here, the only other known defendant cannot be brought to trial. The rule followed in the Faullmier case has no application to a case, in which the possibility it is intended to guard against has, for any reason, ceased to exist. Nor does the quotation from the opinion of President Judge Porter in Com. v. Sanderson, 40 Pa. Superior Ct. 416, at page 484, that “the Commonwealth is not required to prove in a criminal case that all of the defendants charged are guilty, although in the case of conspiracy it must prove that two or more are guilty,” support appellant’s contention. In that case a .severance had been granted to one of five defendants charged with conspiracy and the remark was made in that portion of the opinion in which it was pointed out that the Commonwealth, under such circumstances, was not required to prove the participation of the severed defendant. It is undoubtedly true that in every case of conspiracy the Commonwealth must charge and prove that at least two persons were implicated in the offense, but it does not follow that at least two must actually be brought to trial and convicted before sentence may be pronounced upon any. Under the authorities in this state it is not even required that alleged conspirators be jointly indicted. In Heine v. Commonwealth, 91 Pa. 145, Heine was indicted alone for conspiring with one Weill to defraud Heine’s creditors. It was urged that the indictment” *502 was defective in charging only one defendant with a joint offense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 Pa. Super. 496, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-bonnem-pasuperct-1928.