Commonwealth v. J. and M. Cartusciello

100 Pa. Super. 473, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 99
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 29, 1930
DocketAppeal 26 and 27
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 100 Pa. Super. 473 (Commonwealth v. J. and M. Cartusciello) 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. J. and M. Cartusciello, 100 Pa. Super. 473, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 99 (Pa. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion by

Linn, J.,

Michael Cartusciello, an alderman in the City of Scranton, and his brother, John Cartusciello, a licensed detective, were charged in one indictment with conspiracy to kidnap, and in another, with common law kidnapping of Albert Ziman; the indictments were tried together, and after a general verdict of guilty, defendants were sentenced on the kidnapping charge. They have appealed.

Motions to quash the indictments were made: (a) as not charging “a violation of the common law or of a penal statute”; (b) that the “indictment is not clear *476 so that the defendant is notified of the charge against him”. The same reasons were asserted in motions to arrest judgment. The motions were properly overruled. The indictment on. which they were sentenced charged that appellants, “wilfully and unlawfully did inveigle and entice one Albert Ziman to enter into an automobile, and having so inveigled and enticed said Albert Ziman to enter said automobile, did take forcible possession of his body and did by force and threats and by pressing a revolver to his side and threatening him therewith, wilfully and unlawfully take and remove the. said Albert Ziman from the City of Scranton, in the county and Commonwealth, aforesaid, to and into the Commonwealth of New Jersey, the said Michael Cartusciello and John Cartusciello then and there not haying legal warrant and authority for' so taking and removing the said Albert Ziman from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to the Commonwealth of New Jersey, and thereby the said Michael Cartusciello and John Cartusciello, did, in the County of Lackawanna and Commonwealth of Pennsylvania on the day and year aforesaid, wilfully and unlawfully kidnap the said Albert Ziman, contrary to the form of the Act of the General Assembly in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth of ' Pennsylvania.” Appellants contend that no crime' is charged, that it does not sufficiently appear whether the crime intended to be charged is kidnapping at common law, or under the Act of April, 1901, P. L. 65, or under section 3 of the Act of May 14, 1878, P. L. 137.

• We think it is sufficiently clear that' the crime charged is kidnapping at common law "and not the crime declared in the statute. What was recently stated in Com. v. DeGrange, 97 Pa. Superior Ct. 186, is pertinent here: “Another contention is that there can be no conviction of a common law offense under the *477 single count in this indictment because it is charged, inter alia, that the offense was ‘contrary to the form of the Act of the General Assembly in such case made and provided’, but nr statute could be produced. It is to be noted, however, that the count also charged that the offense was committed ‘ against- the peace- and dignity of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania’:' The test whether an indictment for a common law offense is sufficient is prescribed by section 2 of the Act of March'31, 1860, P. L. 427, 433, relating to' penal proceedings and pleadings. It provides that ‘every indictment shall be deemed and adjudged sufficient and good in law which charges the crime......if at common law, so plainly thát the nature of the offense charged may be easily understood by the jury’. Appellant also had a constitutional right ‘to demand the nature and cause of the accusations against him:’ By the indictment, the material parts of which'have been quoted, he was fully informed of the nature and cause of the accusation and unless the validity of the count as a common law count is affected by the inclusion of the words ‘contrary to the form of the Act of the General Assembly’, etc., it is a good common law count: Wharton’s Precedents of Indictments and Pleas, Vol. 1, p. 268. It was held and supported by abundant authority in Com. v. Kay 14, Pa. Superior Ct. 376, 383, that these words may be rejected as surplus-age where the offense is prohibited by the common law only, and that they may be stricken out of the indictment, or the jury instructed to disregard them, as in effect was done in this case: see also Com. v. Richardson, 42 Pa. Superior Ct. 337, 342.”

Now, the Act of April 4, 1901 P. L. 65, makes it a felony to “take, or carry away or decoy or entice away, or secrete any child or person with intent to extort money or any Other valuable thing for the restoration or return of such person ......” The in *478 dictment did not charge an intent to extort; and it conld not have been drawn under the Act of May 24, 1878, P. L. 137, because that act had been repealed by the Act of April 21, 1927, P. L. 327, “Kidnapping at common law is defined to be the forcible abduction or stealing away of a man, woman or child from their own country and sending them into another. It is treated as an aggravated species of false imprisonment, all the ingredients in the definition of the latter offense being necessarily comprehended in the former, with the additional ingredient of carrying the person imprisoned out of his own country and beyond the protection of its laws”. 8 R. C. L., p. 296; see also 35 C. J. 903. The element of that definition ‘ ‘ carrying the person imprisoned out of his own country and beyond the protection of its laws” is provided when a kidnapped person is taken from the state of his residence to another state of the Union, as was charged here: Norton’s Case, 15 W. N. C. 395; Shuster v. Ash, 11 S. & R. 89; U. S. v. Cruikshank, 92 U. S. 542, 549; 26 C. J. 888, 889; Bellows Falls P. Co. v. Com. (Mass.), 109, N. E. 891, 894.

We must, however, sustain the assignments of error complaining of parts of the charge in which the learned trial judge stated to the jury that the warrant offered in evidence charging Albert Ziman with adultery, made on an information sworn to by Ziman’s wife, was unlawful on the ground that a wife was incompetent to make the information.

The Commonwealth made out a prima facie case against both.defendants on both indictments, and from the evidence the jury may have found the following facts. Albert Ziman lived in Scranton, Pennsylvania. His wife resided in New Jersey. They had been separated six years. On or prior to December 31, 1929, she employed the appellant detective “to make an investigation and determine if her husband was living *479 in adultery” in Scranton. One account is that she appeared before the appellant alderman, and made an information charging her husband with adultery; on that complaint the alderman issued his warrant for Ziman’s arrest. Instead of delivering that warrant to the constable of the district for execution, the aider-man and his brother motored to Ziman’s place of residence in Scranton with the warrant, seized him at about 11 P. M., December 31 and took him to the alderman’s office. Ziman, however, testified that the warrant was not issued by the alderman until after he was arrested and brought to the alderman’s office, when, he says, his wife made the information and the alderman issued the warrant. They declined to permit him to consult counsel or make any effort to get bail, and without hearing and without any form of commitment, imprisoned him in a police station and kept him there two days, the alderman, himself, taking him to the police station. The warrant of arrest bears no official return of its execution.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Smith
69 Pa. D. & C. 529 (Jefferson County Court of Quarter Sessions, 1949)
Commonwealth v. Payne
66 Pa. D. & C. 462 (Beaver County Court of Quarter Sessions, 1948)
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47 Pa. D. & C. 302 (Allegheny County Court of Quarter Sessions, 1941)

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100 Pa. Super. 473, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-j-and-m-cartusciello-pasuperct-1930.