Commonwealth v. Hartman

31 Pa. Super. 364, 1906 Pa. Super. LEXIS 220
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 30, 1906
DocketAppeal, No. 238
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 31 Pa. Super. 364 (Commonwealth v. Hartman) 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. Hartman, 31 Pa. Super. 364, 1906 Pa. Super. LEXIS 220 (Pa. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Opinion by

Head, J.,

During the summer of 1905, an information was made charging nine persons, to wit: Otto F. Kurz, William Reagan, Charles Judge, Benjamin Williams, E. M. Gunkle, Thomas H. Hartman, Jr., Edward McCaffrey, Charles Kane and John Falvey, with a conspiracy to violate the election laws of the state, by the receipt and computation of a large number of false and fraudulent ballots at the preceding spring election, and the making of a false and fraudulent return.of the result of said election in a certain precinct of the city of Philadelphia. Three of those so charged, viz.: Reagan, Falvey and Kane, were not arrested, it being alleged they were fugitives from justice. The remaining six were arrested, had a hearing before a magistrate [366]*366and were held to bail to appear at the next term of tlie court'. To No. 757 of the August sessions of that court, a bill was presented to the grand jury formally charging the nine persons above named with the conspiracy already referred to, aud was returned a true bill as to all of them, permission of the court having been first applied for and obtained to present the bill as to the three persons who, as already stated, were fugitives. The preliminary hearing had been held by the committing magistrate, not in the regular magistrate’s court, but in the private law office of the magistrate in a part of the city outside the territorial limits of his jurisdiction. For this reason a motion to quash the bill was, after argument, sustained by the court and the bill was quashed as to all of the defendants except the three fugitives; as to them the bill stood. Meantime, Edward McCaffrey, one of the defendants, had died. A new information was then made against the five living persons as to whom the bill had been quashed, they were rcarrested, had a hearing, were again held to bail for court, and to No. 156 of November sessions, a bill was again presented to and found by the grand jury, charging these five with having conspired with the three already indicted under the former bill, to commit precisely the same offenses charged against the entire nine in the earlier bill. When the time for trial came the record thus showed that eight persons stood indicted before the court, charged with having participated in one and the same act of conspiracy to accomplish one and the same object, or, in other words, with the commission of a single crime; but, by reason of the technical error of the magistrate and the action of some of the defendants consequent thereon, under two bills of indictment instead of one as the commonwealth intended they should be. On motion of the district attorney, and against the objection of the appellant, the learned trial court made an order that all of the defendants under both bills of indictment should be tried together before the same jury, and that order is the error alleged in the first assignment.

As it seems to be agreed we have neither statute nor precedent to give us the aid of authority in disposing of the question now before us, we must turn to the general principles on which our system of criminal law rests, and to the decisions of our courts in cases more or less analogous to the present one, and [367]*367from a study of these determine whether or not the action of the court below was in harmony with these principles and in ■line with these decisions. A natural and orderly course of procedure would seem to require that all who are charged to have joined in the commission of a single offense should be tried together. This should be true even where the offense is of such a character that it-could be committed by a single person ; and a fortiori should it be true where the crime charged can be consummated only by the concerted action of several. Where it is alleged that a number of persons, for the purpose of striking a more effective blow against the state, have voluntarily bound themselves together in such an intimate union that the hand and voice of each become the hand and voice of all, there should be no just ground of complaint that the union, so claimed to have been created by themselves, is recognized and insisted upon by the state when the time to answer for their acts arrives. This conclusion would not be denied had there been but a single indictment. Is there anything in the naked fact that, in this case, it, required two bills of indictment to bring all of the defendants regularly before the trial court, which necessarily deprived the commonwealth of the right it would have otherwise had to have tried all of the alleged conspirators together? The power to weld together, at a proper time and under proper circumstances, two proceedings begun separately is, in essence and substance, precisely the same power which separates, under like conditions, a single proceeding into two or more. Such power must be lodged somewhere, and reason and authority unite in designating the trial court as the proper repositoxy of this power and in declaring that it should be exercised or withheld as a sound judicial discretion would determine on the facts of each paxticular case.

Where two or more defendants have been jointly indicted in one bill, the right to sever them in their defense and permit separate trials, upon proper showing, has been often and fi'eely exercised by trial courts, and is beyond question. But the offense of conspiracy is so pecxiliar in character and so strongly does the law incline to the natux'al conclusion that co-conspirators should be tx-ied together, that an application for a severance in such a case, was refused by an eminent judge, even [368]*368when based on reasons that would have ordinarily' prevailed: Commonwealth v. Manson, 2 Ashmead, 31. We are not to be understood, however, as holding that in no case of conspiracy may a. severance properly be allowed. So the correlative power to consolidate two indictments for conspiracy and try them as one before a single'jury was held to have been properly exercised by the trial court in Withers v. Com., 5 S. & R. 69. • In that case the bills charged separate and distinct offenses, but the defendant was the same. Here the defendants are different, but the crime charged in both bills is but one and the same. In that case Gibson, J., says : “ In the present case the prisoner was allowed his challenges on each indictment and has, therefore, no ground for complaint. But, had it been otherwise, we could view these two charges only as if they had been included in the same indictment.” So we find the general rule thus laid down in 4 Ency. Pl. & Pr. page 733 : “ Conspirators are generally tried jointly, yet such -is not the invariable practice.” We conclude, therefore, that the only real question raised by the first assignment of error is whether or not there was any abuse of power by the learned trial court. Inasmuch as it has not been made to appear that any right, secured to the appellant by our constitution or laws, has been impaired or taken away by the consolidation of' the two bills, we can find no tangible ground upon which to convict the court below of error, and the first assignment must be overruled.

Numerous objections were made to the rulings of the court directing the ballot box to be opened and permitting its contents to go to the jury as evidence. It is contended that the identity of the box was not sufficiently proven and that the commonwealth should have been required to show affirmatively that it had not been tampered with in the time intervening between the election and the trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 Pa. Super. 364, 1906 Pa. Super. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-hartman-pasuperct-1906.