Commonwealth v. Hoffman

157 A. 221, 103 Pa. Super. 433, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 94
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 28, 1931
DocketAppeal 367
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 157 A. 221 (Commonwealth v. Hoffman) 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. Hoffman, 157 A. 221, 103 Pa. Super. 433, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 94 (Pa. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion- by

Kellek, J.,

The appellant was separately indicted, charged with having conspired with Jensen Shaw, Ezra Kunkle and divers other persons, whose names were unknown, (1) to assault Loring Kresge, Horace Storm and other persons employed at the'Mammoth Hosiery Mills; (2) to throw stones upon, against and through the dwelling houses of Loring Kresge and certain other named persons,"and other persons employed at said Mills; (3) to damage and destroy the automobiles of Floyd Andes and other persons employed at said Mills; (4) to feloniously assault Horace Storm and certain other named persons employed at said Mills; (5) to feloniously force from the highway and wreck the automobiles of Arthur L. Storm and other persons employed at said Mills. He was convicted on the first three counts and acquitted of the fourth and fifth.

He has filed sixty assignments of error, which by reason of their raising similar questions may be treated under six heads.

(1) The first assignment complains of the refusal of the court below to quash the indictment. As the motion to quash is not printed by the appellant and we have no certain knowledge on what grounds it is based, the assignment must be overruled. If, as is probable, it refers to the same matters treated under the next two heads, it may be considered as likewise overruled on the merits.

*436 (2) As may be gathered from the indictment, the prosecution grew out of a strike of the employes of the Mammoth Hosiery Mills in Stroudsburg. The defendant was not, and never had been, an employe of that mill. He was a representative of the American Federation of Full Fashioned Hosiery Workers, who, at the invitation of certain employes of the mill, came from Reading to Stroudsburg, when a strike was in contemplation, to consult and advise as to the course to be pursued. The American Federation of Full Fashioned Hosiery Workers had no branch or union in Stroudsburg and the workers at the Mammoth Hosiery Mills were not members of it. Defendant, however, claims that he cannot be convicted of the conspiracy charged in this indictment because of the provisions of the Act of June 16, 1891, P. L. 300, entitled, “An Act to relieve employes from certain prosecutions and punishments for conspiracy, under common law or under the criminal laws of this Commonwealth” which is copied in full in the margin.

*437 This Act is almost a re-enactment of the Act of June 14, 1872, P. L. 1175, as construed by its supplement of April 20, 1876, P. L. 45, with, the exception (1) that the title of the Act of 1891 refers to “employes” generally, instead of to “laborers, workingmen and journeymen,” and (2) the third proviso of the Act of 1891 definitely excepts conspiracy to commit a felony from the immunity granted such employes by the prior provisions of the statute. It is clear from the language of the Act, its title, and its history as above outlined, that it refers only to persons who are or were employes of another person or a corporation, but who have refused to work for their employer because of the reasons set forth in the statute; in other words, to “employes on strike;” and that it has no reference, and extends no immunity from prosecution, to persons other than such striking employes, even though they may be employes of some other person, association or corporation. The employes who receive the immunity from certain prosecutions under the Act are clearly those who have refused to work and labor for their employers, for the reasons mentioned in the Act, and not outsiders, who violate the law, or conspire to do so, even with the idea of aiding or assisting the strikers, and even though they may be employes of, and working for, some other employer.

(3) Appellant asks in his statement of questions involved, Can one person alone be guilty .of the crime *438 of conspiracy? Can a conviction for conspiracy be sustained where the indictment does not charge and there is no proof that any one conspired with the defendant? The answer to both questions is, of course, No. But that is not this case.

Appellant was charged with having conspired with Jensen Shaw and Ezra Kunkle and “divers other evil disposed persons whose names are unknown” to do certain unlawful and criminal acts; and there was evidence which supported the charges. The fact that Jensen Shaw and Ezra Kunkle were employes of the Mammoth Hosiery Mills on strike and within the immunity clause of the Act of 1891, supra, as respects a prosecution for conspiracy for devising and adopting ways and means to make their action effective, and even, perhaps, for conspiracy to “hinder or attempt to hinder any person or persons who might desire to labor or work” for their employer “by the use of force, threats or menace of harm to person or property,” did not make what was inherently unlawful, lawful, but at most granted them Immunity from prosecution for conspiracy to do such unlawful acts; and did not extend such immunity to any one not within the provisions of the Act of 1891 who might conspire with them. If the Act of 1801 is constitutional, and we pass no judgment on that question, Shaw and Kunkle could combine, federate and agree with one not within the terms of the Act of 1891 to do the unlawful acts therein mentioned and thus be guilty of conspiracy, but could not be prosecuted and punished for so conspiring; but if this appellant conspired with them to do such unlawful and criminal acts, he might be indicted, convicted and punished for so conspiring, although they could not. We think this view is consonant with the language of the Supreme Court in the case of Erdman v. Mitchell, 207 Pa. 79, relied on by the appellant, where it is said: “Trade unions may *439 cease to work for reasons satisfactory to their members, bnt if they combine to prevent others from obtaining work by threats of a strike, they combine to accomplish an unlawful purpose, a purpose as unlawful as it always was, though not punishable by indictment” (p. 92). “It is unlawful to deprive a mechanic or workman of work by force, threats or intimidation of any kind; a combination of two or more to do the same thing by the same means is conspiracy. That by the legislation referred to [Acts of 1872, 1876 and 1891, supra], such conspiracy is no longer criminal, does not render it lawful” (p. 91). That case did not decide that such conduct could not, in fact, constitute an indictable conspiracy, but only that it could be restrained by injunction. It assumed, for the purpose of the case, that the defendants could not be indicted for conspiracy, while holding that they could be enjoined; but it must be read in the light of its own facts, and two-thirds of the employes working on the building involved in that case were members of the unincorporated trade union which called the strike and were enjoined from continuing the unlawful acts complained of. The court was not considering the position of an outsider, who might conspire with striking employes to do unlawful and criminal acts for which the latter might not themselves be answerable by prosecution for conspiracy.

But whether we are right in this view or not, the indictment also charged a conspiracy by appellant with divers other persons, and there was evidence to sustain this charge. It is immaterial that such persons were not indicted with the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
157 A. 221, 103 Pa. Super. 433, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-hoffman-pasuperct-1931.