Commonwealth v. Clark

187 A. 237, 123 Pa. Super. 277, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 278
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 13, 1936
DocketAppeal, 4
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 187 A. 237 (Commonwealth v. Clark) 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. Clark, 187 A. 237, 123 Pa. Super. 277, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 278 (Pa. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

The defendant was convicted on an indictment containing four counts: (1) Attempted extortion in connection with the agent’s commissions on insurance to be taken out on behalf of the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board; (2) attempted extortion in connection with an appointment to a position under the Public Service Commission; (3) bribery relative to the commissions on insurance referred to in the first count; (4) bribery relative to the appointment under the Public Service Commission referred to in the second count. The indictment set forth that the defendant was a Senator of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania at the time of the commission of the alleged offenses and that the acts charged were done unlawfully, wickedly, wilfully, corruptly and dishonestly and under color of his office as aforesaid. A general verdict of guilty was rendered on which the court sentenced the defendant to pay the costs of prosecution and a fine of $4000. The condition of defendant’s health moved the court not to impose sentence of imprisonment. Defendant appealed.

The evidence on behalf of the Commonwealth tended to prove: That defendant was chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee and in practical control of the appropriation bills to be reported to the Senate; that he was also senior partner in the insurance firm *282 of Clark and Hulme, with offices at West Chester, Pennsylvania; that in December, 1934, his firm had obtained the agency award of certain insurance protecting the Pennsylvania Liquor Stores, which had been allocated from Governor Pinchot’s office, and had received a commission of thirty per cent of the premiums paid, or $10,852.14, of which his firm had turned over two-thirds, or $7234.76, to one Morgan Bird, an attache connected with Governor Pinchot’s office force, who had shortly before been appointed a sub-agent of the company represented by defendant’s firm; that defendant was desirous of renewing this insurance under the new administration which had been inducted into office in January, 1935, and approached Harry E. Kalodner, Governor Earle’s private secretary, who had the naming of the persons or firms who would be designated agents for the insurance companies that should be awarded insurance contracts, and proposed that he would report to, and procure the passage through, the Senate of certain appropriation bills in which the Governor and his administration were specially interested provided his firm was designated the agent to whom the commission was to be paid in case the insurance company represented by him should be awarded the contract insuring the State liquor stores; and in the event that this was not done, that his partner, Hulme, or some other person to be named by defendant, should be appointed to a position on the staff of the Public Service Commission, in connection -with the investigation of rates, etc., of the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company, for which an extra appropriation of $250,000, was desired; that defendant also approached the Attorney General, Charles J. Margiotti, along the same lines, with the purpose of inducing him to persuade Kalodner with respect to the insurance, or securing the aforesaid appointment on the staff of the Public Service Commission; that the Governor was informed of *283 these overtures from the defendant and pursuant to directions from him, a speak-o-phone, the trade name of a form of dictaphone, or phonographic recording instrument with an aluminum metal disk, instead of a wax recording disk, and equipped with two ear phones, was installed in the offices of the Attorney General, the microphone or receiving instrument being placed in his private office and the amplifier and recording devices, which were connected with the microphone by wires, in an adjoining office. When this apparatus had been installed and tested, an appointment was made with defendant who came to the Attorney General’s office, with Mr. Kalodner, on June 18, 1935, about 6:30 o’clock P. M. and met the Attorney General there. No one else was present in the private office, but in the adjoining room, where the speak-o-phone recording instrument was placed, were a representative of the speak-o-phone firm, an expert of the State Police familiar with instruments of this nature, one Bastow, a stenographer or court reporter, and a deputy attorney general or two. The stenographer and one of the others used the ear phones and could hear the conversation as it was recorded on the metal disks, six of which were used, on both sides. It is not necessary to give the details of the conversation between the three, the Attorney General, the Governor’s private secretary and the defendant. It tended to support the alleged previous proposals made by the defendant as to the personal benefits he desired in return for favorable action on the appropriation items in which the Governor and his administration were specially interested.

The defendant did not deny the conversation as recorded on the speak-o-phone. On the contrary, he admitted that it had occurred as recorded on the metal disks, but averred that his motive in going to the conference and discussing the matter with the Attorney General and the Governor’s private secretary was not *284 corrupt but that it was done iu an endeavor to learn how far the latter (Kalodner) would go respecting certain corrupt proposals which he had previously made defendant in an effort to induce him to support a bill, known as the Ripper bill, the object of which was to oust the Mayor of Pittsburgh from his office, and substitute some one more in sympathy with the new administration. His story was that he had first been approached by another State Senator, who informed him that the Governor would permit him to name the judge to fill the vacancy in the Courts of Chester County if he would support the Ripper bill; that Kalodner subsequently made the same proposition to him, on behalf of the Governor, and also first advanced the proposition as to the insurance commissions and the appointment of his partner, or some one to be named by defendant, to the staff of the Public Service Commission in the investigation of the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company in return for favorable action on certain appropriation items which were doubtful of passage in the Senate; that he had informed a number of his fellow senators of the offer made to him to name the judge to fill the court vacancy in return for his support of the Ripper bill, and that some of them stated they had been offered similar inducements for supporting that bill, and had suggested that it would be well to see how far the proposals for such corrupt bargains would go; and that his object and purpose in attending the conference on June 18 was to draw out these proposals. The defendant was supported in some of his statements by other witnesses. A number of state senators were called who testified that the defendant had told them of the offer made to him to name the judge in return for his vote in favor of the Ripper bill, and that somewhat similar proposals of patronage had been made them by other officials connected with the administration, of which they had told the defendant, and that several *285

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 A. 237, 123 Pa. Super. 277, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-clark-pasuperct-1936.