Commonwealth v. Carr

10 A.2d 133, 137 Pa. Super. 546
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 26, 1939
DocketAppeals, 223-242
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 10 A.2d 133 (Commonwealth v. Carr) 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. Carr, 10 A.2d 133, 137 Pa. Super. 546 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

These appellants, Eddie Carr, John Murphy, Bernard McNichol, Herbert J. Donohue and James John Friel, were jointly tried together with Willis Irwine and Thomas Maguire, on certain indictments charging them *550 with, what may be described in general terms: as (1) setting np and establishing a gaming house (Nos. 345-351); (2) pool-selling and book-making (Nos. 352-358); (3) conspiracy to set up and maintain gambling devices and games of hazard (No. 360); and (4) conspiracy to engage in pool-selling and book-making (No. 359).

At the same time, William McQuilken and Elmer Thornton, who had been indicted on September 8, 1938, by the August 1938 grand jury, for the identical offenses, were tried with the beforenamed defendants. The defendants offered no testimony.

The jury acquitted Irwine and Maguire on all charges. Verdicts of guilty were rendered on all indictments against their co-defendants, these appellants. Thornton was found guilty on all indictments against him, and McQuilken was acquitted as to the indictments charging pool-selling and book-making and convicted of those involving setting up and maintaining a gaming establishment.

Judgment was subsequently arrested as to Thornton and McQuilken on the authority of Com. v. Wilson 134 Pa. Superior Ct. 222, 4 A. 2d 324, because the bills were illegally presented to the August grand jury. Identical sentences 1 were imposed on Carr, Murphy, McNichol, Donohue and Friel on four indictments, (one of each class) Nos. 345, 352, 359 and 360, all to run concurrently. The defendants severally appealed from each sentence.

Indictment No. 345 contained five counts, charging substantially in the language of the statute violations of sections 55 (as amended by Act of April 7, 1925, P. L. 185), 56 and 57 of the Penal Code of 1860, P. L. 382, relating to gambling. Indictment No. 352 contained nine counts, charging substantially in the langu *551 age of the statute, commission of the various offenses forbidden by the Act of May 22,1895, P. L. 99, relating to pool-selling, book-making, etc. Indictment No. 359 contained one count and indictment No. 360, two counts. We refer to this because if the law and the evidence support a judgment on any count of an indictment, since the sentence imposed was less than that which might have been lawfully given under any single count, the judgment on the general verdict on that indictment will be affirmed: Com. v. Blankenstein, 81 Pa. Superior Ct. 340, 341; Com. v. Widovich, 93 Pa. Superior Ct. 323, 327.

The thirty-one assignments of error filed are divided in the statement of questions involved into five heads. They relate (1) to rulings of the court below on questions of evidence; (2) to the refusal of the court to withdraw a juror because of remarks made by the Commonwealth’s attorney in the presence and hearing of the jury; and (3) to the insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdicts of guilty. We shall consider the last first.

(1) Counsel for appellants has apparently misunderstood or misapplied our decision in Com. v. Coyne, 115 Pa. Superior Ct. 23, 175 A. 291. In that case, three defendants, Dolan, Goslin and Coyne, were jointly indicted for keeping a gambling house and being common gamblers. The indictment was drawn under sections 55, 56 and 57 of the Penal Code and was very similar to that in No. 345 in this case. All three were convicted. Coyne alone appealed. A reference to the testimony in the record shows that a gambling establishment was conducted on the second floor of 3802 Forbes Street, Pittsburgh, known as Monaca Club, the first floor of which was used as a bar. It was not shown that any of the three defendants personally was engaged in the gambling operations. This was done by persons or attendants, “dressed in dinner clothes,” who had previously been arrested and convicted or had pleaded *552 guilty to similar charges. The case against Dolan and Goslin was based on testimony that the entire building had been leased by Dolan under an assumed name; that he and Goslin had made contracts for the furnishings, draperies, rugs, carpets, etc. used in the building and had received and accepted them as satisfactory; that Dolan had paid the employees and contracted for the telephone service; and that he and Goslin were standing around when gambling was going on. No witness saw them gambling. As was pointed out in our opinion there was no evidence in the case connecting Coyne with the leasing or management of the building, the purchase of the furnishings, or the operation of the establishment. Because of that, we reversed the judgment against him. Had he been linked up with Dolan and Goslin in the matters above referred to, it is unlikely that he would have appealed; and if he had, we would have affirmed the judgment. The proprietor or manager or bacJcer of a gambling establishment does not have to take part in its actual operation; he does not have to operate the gambling apparatus or devices himself, or receive or record bets, or do the actual gambling carried on for him by his subordinates. It is probably unusual for him to do so. But he is none the less guilty, if with his knowledge, acquiescence and consent, express or implied, gambling is carried on upon premises in his possession, as owner or lessee, or under his management and control, by his associates or subordinates, who are likewise guilty, if they were present aiding and assisting in carrying on such gambling operations for him: Com. v. Ciccone, 85 Pa. Superior Ct. 316, 319. Having cleared up this point we go back to the evidence in these cases.

The evidence conclusively shows that a gambling establishment was being operated in the summer and fall of 1937 at 1507 Moravian Street, Philadelphia. A licensed taproom was conducted on the first floor, but the second floor had a large room used for gambling *553 and for pool-selling and book-making on horse races. There were two ways of getting to the second floor; one by a staircase leading from the street and the other by a staircase leading from the taproom to a hallway which opened into the gambling room. In this room, along the north wall, there was a gambling device known as a ‘Chuck-a-luck’ or ‘Bird-cage’ game, which was played with dice. This was operated by McQuilken. Sometimes ‘Black jack’ was played on a table nearby instead. McQuilken also conducted this. On the west wall were hung up racing sheets or rundown sheets, for five race tracks, which contained the names of the horses, the jockeys and their weights, their code numbers, betting odds, and other information relative to the races being run at the Aqueduct, Washington Park, Suffolk Downs, Latonia and Agawam Park race tracks. A person, known as a ‘board man,’ entered the information, on these sheets as fast as it was received from a radio broadcasting loud speaker or teleflash, located on the north wall, above the head of the bird cage operator.

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Bluebook (online)
10 A.2d 133, 137 Pa. Super. 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-carr-pasuperct-1939.