Commonwealth v. Hopkins

70 Pa. D. & C. 166, 1949 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 95
CourtPhiladelphia County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedSeptember 13, 1949
Docketno. 272
StatusPublished

This text of 70 Pa. D. & C. 166 (Commonwealth v. Hopkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Philadelphia County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Hopkins, 70 Pa. D. & C. 166, 1949 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 95 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1949).

Opinion

Gordon, Jr., P. J.,

The bill of indictment in this case contained 26 counts charging extortion by a public officer under section 318 of The Penal Code of June 24, 1939, P. L. 872, 18 PS §4318, and the jury rendered verdicts of guilty on 11 of the 26 counts, and of not guilty on the other 15 counts, four of the latter having been directed by the trial judge for lack of sufficient evidence. After we had overruled the usual motions in arrest of judgment and for a new trial, defendant appealed to the Superior Court from the judgment and sentence entered on the verdict, and this memorandum opinion is written under Rule 58 of the rules of that court.

The single, simple and plain issue of fact for the jury was whether defendant, who was Chief Assistant Fire Marshal of the City of Philadelphia, had, on the occasions specified in the bill of indictment, “taken and received” from various business men, or their representatives, certain sums of money as a “reward or fee” for officially approving numerous applications for permits for the installation, at specified locations in the City of Philadelphia, of storage tanks for high explosives, such as gasoline and oil, and burners using those substances.

[168]*168Under the Act of June 4, 1901, P. L. 361, and the Municipal Ordinances (April 2, 1901, page 118; December 30, 1916, page 699; and January 4, 1935, page 4) adopted thereunder, licenses or permits for the installation of high explosive equipment in the city are granted by the mayor upon applications, which must be first approved by the fire marshal, the fees for which are paid to the city treasurer through the mayor’s office (no fee whatever being payable to the marshal), and the witnesses for the Commonwealth testified directly and explicitly to having given to defendant, when they secured his official approval of their applications, sums of money averaging 600 percent of the fee required for each permit. Apart from the presentation of “character evidence”, the defense consisted solely of a categorical denial by defendant of having received any money whatever from, or having been offered money by, the witnesses for the Commonwealth, as testified to by them. This was the nature and substance of the factual issue raised in each count of the bill by the conflicting evidence submitted to the jury, and upon that issue the verdicts of guilty on the 11 counts indicated above were rendered.

Counsel for defendant has notified us that he intends to raise five questions on the appeal. Of these, the first and fifth were raised by the motion in arrest of judgment, and the second, third and fourth by the motion for a new trial. These questions are stated by counsel as follows:

“1. It will be contended that under article 5, sec. 23 of the Constitution, it is mandatory that the indictment aver that the conduct of defendant was against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth, and, therefore, the deletion of the averment, necessitated an arrest of judgment upon the indictment.

“2. It will be contended that since the Commonwealth was permitted to show a number of transactions [169]*169and that each of these transactions could properly be considered by the jury to show schemed plan, etc., it was defendant’s right to show other transaction to negative schemed plan, etc.

“3. It will be contended that the essential elements of extortion were incorrectly submitted to the jury.

“4. It will be contended that defendant was entitled to have the court charge the jury as to the nature and weight to be given to accomplice testimony.

“5. It will be contended that the verdict of guilty was not a finding of all essential elements for a criminal offense in that the jury did not find that defendant’s conduct was against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth, since such averment was stricken from the indictment.”

Before discussing these questions, it may be helpful to explain briefly the machinery set up by statute and city ordinance for controlling, in the interest of the public safety, the installation, use and keeping of high explosive gasolines and oils. The Act of June 8, 1911, P. L. 705, creating, in section 1, the office of fire marshal provides in section 2 for the appointment of “such a number of assistant fire marshals as the city councils may allow, one of the said assistants to be designated as chief assistant”, and in section 3 provides that “in the event of a vacancy in the office of fire marshal, or during the absence or disability of that officer, the chief assistant marshal shall perform the duties of the office . . .”. The regular procedure was for the applicant for a permit to present his application therefor, together with a blue print showing the location and plan of the proposed installation, to the fire marshal’s office, and, after study and inspection of the location and plans by ,an assistant marshal, the application was then presented for approval to the fire marshal himself, or the chief assistant fire marshal, defendant, who was authorized by the. act to perform the duties [170]*170of the former in his absence. It was at this point that defendant is alleged to have received the “extortion money” testified to by the Commonwealth’s witnesses. The approved application was then taken to the mayor’s office, where it became a formal permit by suitable endorsement, effective upon payment of the required fee, either through that office or directly to the city treasurer. After the installation was made, the law also required the fire marshal to inspect and approve the work.

Considering, first, the three questions involving the motion for a new trial, we were of opinion that the points thus raised were without merit and did not justify the granting of a new trial. With respect to the contention that the trial judge erred in refusing to permit defendant to show by persons with whom he had officially dealt at other times, and with respect to other applications for permits, that he had never solicited or received money from, or been offered anything by them, we think such refusal was fully justified by fundamental principles of evidence. The Commonwealth made no attempt to prove transactions of the same criminal nature, other than those charged in the indictment, for the purpose of indicating criminal intent, and rebutting any inference of mistake in defendant’s acceptance of money in the instances covered by the bill. It confined its evidence entirely to the individual transactions charged; and the defense consisted exclusively of a simple and categorical denial that defendant was offered or accepted any money whatever in the instances testified to, without the slightest suggestion that he accepted any money mistakenly, either as to the amount, or the purpose for which it was given and received. There was no room, therefore, for injection into the case of the specious and misleading contention that defendant had not committed extortion at other times, and in his dealings with [171]*171other people. It may be that the multiplicity of the crimes specifically charged and proven against him strongly suggested the possibility that they were not the only ones of a like nature that defendant has committed, but this was merely an inevitable consequence of his repeated offending; and to show that, at other times, when he could have broken the law, he refrained from doing so, manifestly had no probative value whatever in establishing his innocence of the particular charges under investigation by the jury.

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70 Pa. D. & C. 166, 1949 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-hopkins-paqtrsessphilad-1949.