Commonwealth v. Pent

170 A. 401, 112 Pa. Super. 215, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 36
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 20, 1933
DocketAppeals 308 and 309
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 170 A. 401 (Commonwealth v. Pent) 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. Pent, 170 A. 401, 112 Pa. Super. 215, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 36 (Pa. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, J.,

Howard F. Pent, this appellant, was jointly indicted with his son, Robert E. Pent, and Alexander D. Robinson, Vice-President and Treasurer of the Northwestern Trust Co., charged with having conspired with them, (1) to fraudulently assign and transfer to this appellant property and assets of the Coraza Cigar Co. of the value of $128,260.09, with intent to defraud the creditors of said Coraza Cigar Co. (indictment No. 495, July Sessions, 1932; Appeal No. 309, October Term, 1933); and (2) to cheat and defraud the Northwestern Trust Co. of $47,000 (indictment No. 496, July Sessions, 1932; Appeal No. 308, October Term, 1933).

When the cases were called for trial counsel for the Pents, father and son, and the assistant district attorney presented a statement of facts which had been agreed upon between them covering those two defendants, and stated that with those facts agreed upon as the Commonwealth’s case, they would demur to the evidence. The court very properly pointed out that there could not be a demurrer to the evidence as to two out of the three defendants jointly indicted for conspiracy until the Commonwealth’s case was closed, and that the agreed statement of facts would be subject to such corrections or modifications as might develop from the evidence produced by the Commonwealth; and counsel for the Pents then said that the statement of facts would be filed subject to any corrections that might develop. The trial judge called counsel’s at *217 tention to the fact that in view of what he had said counsel might want to ash some questions of the Commonwealth’s witnesses; to which he replied, “If there is any contradiction, yes.”

At the close of! the Commonwealth’s case, the assistant district attorney offered the statement of facts agreed upon between counsel for the Pents and himself, and the exhibits attached thereto, as well as any exhibits that had been offered in evidence during the presentation of the Commonwealth’s case. The two Pents then demurred to the evidence. The Commonwealth tacitly joined in the demurrer. The court discharged the jury from consideration of the case as to the Pents. The jury trial proceeded as to Robinson. The court, subsequently, on consideration of the evidence presented by the Commonwealth as well as that “properly contained in the statement filed,” overruled the demurrer, entered judgment for the Commonwealth and against the two defendants, adjudging them guilty in manner and form as indicted.

In passing upon the statement of facts the court said: “The so-called agreement of facts or statement filed as supplementary and additional evidence in this case is irregular in form and' substance; it is in large part merely argumentative, and in important particulars abounds in inferences and conclusions which are not justified by the uncontradicted facts in evidence. Of course, by such impertinent and non-evidential matters the court is not and cannot be bound in deciding the demurrer before it.”

The court had warned appellant’s counsel that the evidence adduced in court from the Commonwealth’s witnesses was superior to and would supersede any statement of facts agreed to between counsel representing this appellant and the Commonwealth respectively; and'counsel in thereafter demurring to the evidence was bound to know the effect of such a *218 course: That it admitted the truth of the evidence produced by the Commonwealth, and in so far as that evidence was inconsistent or contradictory in details that the inferences most favorable to the Commonwealth were to be drawn by the court in passing upon the demurrer. In view of this, appellant’s counsel could not have been misled or prevented from cross-questioning the Commonwealth’s witnesses. The court had, in addition, specifically called this matter of cross-examination to counsel’s attention.

The practice on demurrers to the evidence in criminal eases has been passed upon by this court in Com. v. Williams, 71 Pa. Superior Ct. 311; Com. v. Ernesto, 93 Pa. Superior Ct. 339, 341; Com. v. Smith, 97 Pa. Superior Ct. 157; and Com. v. Kolsky, 100 Pa. Superior Ct. 596 — which refer back to Hutchison v. Com., 82 Pa. 472, 474, 478, 479 and Com. v. Parr, 5 W. & S. 345, in which latter case it was said, “that, on a demurrer to evidence, every fact which the jury could infer in favor of the party offering it, from the evidence demurred to, was to be considered as admitted.”

We find nothing in the action of the court below which is in any respect contrary to the practice as laid down in those cases.

The court was bound to hear the evidence of the Commonwealth before any of the defendants could demur| to it; and it was for the court, not the district attorney, to draw the inferences to be made from that evidence; and in so far as the testimony of the Commonwealth’s witnesses and the exhibits received in evidence as part of the Commonwealth’s case clashed, or were at variance, with the agreed statement of facts, the latter gave way (Com. v. Parr, supra), and appellant’s counsel could not fail to understand this.

Appellant’s present counsel cites and relies upon *219 Com. v. Smith, supra, as sustaining his contention that the court should not have heard or considered any evidence as to the Pents, beyond the statement of facts, but it does not support his position. In that case, after the Commonwealth’s case had closed, and two of the three defendants had demurred to the evidence, and the case as to them had been withdrawn from the jury, and the case proceeded to the hearing of the witnesses produced by the third defendant, the court attempted to reopen the case as to the two defendants who had demurred to the evidence and use the evidence of the third defendant in passing on the demurrer. We held that this could not be done; that no evidence produced by the defendant who had not demurred could be considered in passing on the demurrer of the two defendants who had demurred. The court below, in this case, in passing upon the demurrer filed by the Pents, considered no evidence produced by Robinson in his defense, after the Commonwealth’s evidence had closed. It did just what we said the court should have done in the Smith case— restricted its judgment on the demurrer to the evidence which had been received up to the closing of the Commonwealth’s case.

Appellant’s counsel has also misconstrued our statement in the Smith case, quoted from the case of Com. v. Williams, supra, that “The court in such case is not the trier of the facts. ’ ’ The context, with the cases cited in support of the proposition, explains the statement as meaning, that it is not the duty of the court in such cases, to weigh the evidence and decide, as a trier of fact would do, whether the Commonwealth’s witnesses are speaking the truth or not, because “in criminal cases demurrer to the evidence of the Commonwealth admits all the facts which the evidence tends to prove, and all inferences reasonably deducible therefrom”: Com. v. Williams, supra, p. 313. The *220 court is not the trier of the facts, because they are all admitted

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Related

Commonwealth v. Haines
196 A. 621 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1937)
Commonwealth v. Robinson
176 A. 908 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 A. 401, 112 Pa. Super. 215, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-pent-pasuperct-1933.