Commonwealth v. Friedman

165 A.2d 678, 193 Pa. Super. 640, 1960 Pa. Super. LEXIS 715
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 16, 1960
DocketAppeal, 327
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 165 A.2d 678 (Commonwealth v. Friedman) 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. Friedman, 165 A.2d 678, 193 Pa. Super. 640, 1960 Pa. Super. LEXIS 715 (Pa. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

Opinion by

Watkins, J.,

This is an appeal from the judgment of sentence of the Court of Quarter Sessions of Philadelphia County *642 by Harold Friedman, the defendant-appellant, after conviction of bribery and from the denial by the said court of motions in arrest of judgment and for a new trial.

Friedman was indicted for the statutory crime of bribery in an athletic contest as set forth in the Act of July 19, 1951, P.L. 1071, 18 PS §4614, which reads as follows: “Whoever gives or promises or offers, . . . to anyone who participates or expects to participate in any professional or amateur game . . . any bribe or money . . . with intent to influence him ... to lose or cause to be lost any game . . . or to fix or throw any game ... is guilty of a misdemeanor . . .”

Humberto Robinson, was a member of the Philadelphia National League Baseball Club, the Phillies, and was a pitcher for that club. He had been assigned to pitch the second game of a twilight doubleheader scheduled for Tuesday, September 22, 1959, between the Phillies and the Cincinnati Reds. On Monday evening, September 21, 1959, he was sitting in a booth in the Rittenhouse Hotel restaurant drinking beer with a man and two women, one of whom was Mrs. Dolores Drassel. Robinson testified that Friedman came to his booth and asked him to come to the lobby of the hotel; that he had known Friedman for some years; that they went to the lobby of the hotel where Friedman asked him it he was going to pitch the next day; that he said, “I want to put some money on the game”, and offered him $1500; that he refused the offer, saying, “I don’t want your money, I don’t want to talk about it”; that he returned to the booth in the restaurant and told Mrs. Drassel what had happened and that he went to a booth in the rear of the restaurant and started to cry; that the following morning Friedman came to his hotel room in the Rittenhouse hotel and offered to give him $1500 if he would lose the game; that he again repeated that he did not want the money; that Fried *643 man then placed an estimated two or three hundred dollars on the washstand; that he told Friedman to “Come and take it back, I don’t want it”; that on the same evening he was the victim of a theft of his money-concerning which he made a complaint to the police; that he went to the ball game and told his friend Reuben Gomez, also a pitcher on the Phillies club that Friedman had offered him money to lose the game; that he pitched and won the game; that he conferred with Edwin M. Sawyer, manager of the Phillies, Charles Meister, traveling secretary of the Phillies and Reuben Gomez; that on the following day he had a conference with John Quinn, General Manager of the Phillies.

Mrs. Drassel corroborated Robinson in that on the evening of September 21, 1959, she was sitting in the booth with Robinson in the Rittenhouse Hotel restaurant; that when she was visiting another booth she saw a man approach Robinson, talk to him and they left together; that on his return he told her that someone had asked him to throw, a baseball game and he started to cry.

The appellant has evidently abandoned his motion in arrest of judgment and presses his argument for a new trial on the grounds that the court below erred in permitting Robinson to testify that he told his lady companion of the first alleged bribe offer and that he told Gomez much later, at the ball park; that the court further erred in permitting Robinson to testify about the conferences with the club officials; and that the court further erred in permitting these witnesses to be called when their testimony was excluded in toto.

The only testimony admitted into evidence as to what Robinson said in regard to the bribe offer, in addition to that of Robinson himself, was by Dolores Drassel, the woman who was one of his companions on the evening of September 21, 1959, when the appel *644 lant made the first bribe offer. She testified that “immediately” upon the pitcher’s return to the table, after he had left with Friedman for the lobby, Robinson “seems terribly upset”, “started to weep and cry” and said that “someone had asked him to throw a ball game”. In that factual context the testimony clearly falls within the res gestae exception to the hearsay rule. The Supreme Court defines a res gestae declaration as follows: “A res gestae declaration may be defined as a spontaneous declaration by a person whose mind has been suddenly made subject to an over-powering emotion caused by some unexpected and shocking occurrence, which.that person has just participated in or closely witnessed, and made in reference to some phase of that occurrence which he perceived, and this declaration must be made so near the ocurrence both in time and place as to exclude the likelihood of its having emanated in whole or in part from his reflective faculties. In a res gestae declaration the exciting event speaks through the impulsive words of a participant or onlooker. It is in a psychological sense a part of the act itself. The apparent condition of the declarant’s mind when the declaration is made is the test of the latter’s admissibility as a part of the res gestae. To make the declaration admissible the state of the declarant’s mind as induced by the shock of the occurrence must be such as to integrate his spontaneous declaration exclusively with the occurrence itself.” Allen v. Mack, 345 Pa. 407, 410, 28 A. 2d 783 (1942). See also: Com v. Stallone, 281 Pa. 41, 126 A. 56 (1924).

The offer of a bribe is that kind of crime that takes place in the utmost secrecy and only between the offeror and the sport participant whom it was intended to bribe. The alleged statement of the defendant was the gist of the crime. The recent rash of bribery and attempted bribery that has swept the professional sports of baseball, football, basketball and boxing, as well as *645 amateur sports, including college football and basketball, has resulted in an intensified effort on tbe part of tbe legislature and law enforcement agencies to prevent and eradicate this crime. Because of the very nature of tbe crime itself, its secrecy and its attempt to corrupt tbe integrity of national sports that bolds tbe interest and loyalty of so many of tbe general populance of this Commonwealth and of this country, tbe sincerity, tbe motive of tbe accuser becomes an integral part of tbe crime itself and relevant toward tbe establishment of tbe criminal intent of tbe accused.

It is somewhat comparable to tbe crime of rape where tbe sincerity of tbe accuser is tested by prompt outcry. It is deemed an important test of tbe sincerity of tbe woman in this crime against chastity that she make prompt complaint and if she conceals tbe injury for any considerable time after having tbe opportunity to complain, a strong inference may be justified against tbe truthfulness of her testimony. Com. v. Mtynarczyk, 34 Pa. Superior Ct. 256 (1907).

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Bluebook (online)
165 A.2d 678, 193 Pa. Super. 640, 1960 Pa. Super. LEXIS 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-friedman-pasuperct-1960.