Commonwealth v. Pinkenson

11 A.2d 176, 138 Pa. Super. 485, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 381
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 22, 1939
DocketAppeals, 244-246, 249-251
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 A.2d 176 (Commonwealth v. Pinkenson) 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. Pinkenson, 11 A.2d 176, 138 Pa. Super. 485, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 381 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

These appellants, Jack H. Pinkenson and Harry S. Gilgore, were jointly indicted and tried along with *487 John Williams, Alexander Commers, William Braver-man and Daniel Gilhool at No. 116 August Sessions, 1938, of the court below for having on August 4, 1938, committed various violations of the Act of May 22, 1895, P. L. 99, 18 PS §1461, which may be described in general terms as pool-selling and book-making, occupying part of a building for receiving and paying bets on the results of horse races, setting up and establishing a gaming house and gambling devices, etc. A general verdict of guilty was rendered against all of them except Gilhool who was acquitted. Pinkenson and Gilgore were each sentenced to imprisonment for three months and the payment of a fine of $500 and costs. Pinkenson’s appeal to No. 244 October Term, 1939, of this court and Gilgore’s to No. 250 are from those sentences.

Appellants were also convicted along with Williams and Braverman at No. 1149 August Sessions, 1938, of having committed similar offenses on July 20, 1937. They were placed on probation for one year under suspended sentences; their respective appeals to above Nos. 246 and 249 of this court are from those convictions. Similar convictions were obtained against appellants and Williams and Braverman, at No. 1150 August Sessions, 1938, for offenses committed on August 30, 1937. Suspended sentences'and probation followed upon that indictment. Appellants’ appeals to Nos. 245 and 251, respectively, of October Term, 1939, of this court, are from those convictions.

Under another indictment at No. 1151 August Sessions, 1938, tried along with those above mentioned, appellants and their codefendants were acquitted of a charge of conspiracy to commit the offenses specified in the other indictments.

As the only material variation in the indictments relates to the dates upon which the violations are alleged to have been committed, the six appeals were argued together and but one opinion will be filed.

*488 Neither appellant took the stand nor was any evidence offered in his behalf. Through an attentive reading of the three hundred and fifty printed pages of testimony adduced by the Commonwealth at the trial, over which the late Judge Millar presided, we find ample, competent and uncontradicted evidence which, if believed by the jury as it evidently was, fully justified the verdicts against appellants. It need not be reviewed in detail. Material facts appearing were that Pinkenson was the lessee and occupant of the second floor of the building at the northeast corner of Chestnut and Fourth Streets in the City of Philadelphia, known as No. 59 Fourth Street, to which entrance was had by a stairway leading from the sidewalk on that street; that the lease was obtained upon the representation by him that he intended to use the space for storing papers and magazines in connection with his newsstand at the corner; that, at his instance, the interior was equipped with receiving and paying booths and all the paraphernalia incident to the receiving, placing and paying of bets on horse races conducted at various tracks, including telephones, Min-Haf run-down sheets, etc.; and that a vestibule had been constructed at the top of the stairway with two doors — the outer one equipped with a buzzer and the inner with a peephole.

The other appellant, Gilgore, was the licensee of a taproom conducted in the ground floor of the building.

The indictments at Nos. 1149 and 1150 charge the commission of offenses on July 20 and August 30, 1937. There was conclusive evidence that in those months both Pinkenson and Gilgore were actively engaged in taking bets from the patrons of the establishment (varying in number from twenty to thirty) upon horse races. Both were inside the booths and Pinkenson paid off the winners. Braverman was “running the board and marking down on the sheets.” Williams and Commers were engaged in various activities in connection, *489 with the betting transactions, and Gilhool, acquitted by the jury, was the doorkeeper.

The indictment at No. 116 was based upon! the events of August 4,1938, upon which date the place was raided and the defendants named therein, with the exception of Pinkenson, arrested by state policemen and county detectives. Pinkenson was not in the room at the time of the raid. Officer Moody’s testimony with respect to the raid was corroborated by the testimony of his fellow officers, Dando, Koth and Witzel. It was to the effect that they walked up the ¡staffs to the landing at the top and found Gilhool at the peephole in the door. Moody told him he “wanted to play some horses and wanted to see Jack” (Pinkenson). Gilhool told him “Jack” was not there but “Johnny” (Williams) was. Williams came to the door and said he did not know Moody. Thereupon the officers announced who they were and took charge of the situation. About twenty patrons were present and were released after giving their names and addresses. Braverman was working at the “board”, Commers and Gilgore were in the booths. Numerous parts of the equipment were seized and marked for identification. In a waste paper basket the lease to Pinkenson for the second floor of the building and a certificate of title to an automobile in his name were found torn in half. Into the same waste basket five intact ten dollar bills had been thrown. Approximately one hundred dollars was found in a metal box kept in the pay-off booth. A gray coat and pair of pants was hanging in a back room connected with one of the booths. In the pockets were several bills, notices, etc., addressed to Pinkenson.

Appellants seek a new trial upon the ground of alleged trial errors. Fifteen assignments of error have been filed in addition to the formal assignments to the judgments, which may for convenience be thus grouped:

(1) Assignments 1, 2, 3 and 4, relate to the admis *490 sion, over the objection of counsel for appellants, of certain testimony;

(2) Assignments 5 and 6 to permitting the representative of the Commonwealth to cross-examine his own witnesses;

(3) Assignments 7 to 12, inclusive, to alleged errors in the charge. The remaining assignments are based upon the refusal of appellants’ motions for the withdrawal of a juror, the overruling of their demurrers to the evidence, and the denial of a new trial.

The 13th assignment, charging error in denying several motions in behalf of appellants for the withdrawal of a juror, is not covered by the statement of questions involved nor argued in their brief. We have examined the subject matter of the assignment and are convinced the motions were properly denied under the principles fully discussed in Com. v. Wilcox, 112 Pa. Superior Ct. 240, 170 A. 455, 316 Pa. 129, 173 A. 653.

Upon turning to a consideration of the assignments relating to the admission of certain testimony, we note that assignments 1 and 2 are based upon the admission of evidence of the conversation, already referred to, between Gilhool and the officers when the latter sought admission on August 4, 1938.

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Bluebook (online)
11 A.2d 176, 138 Pa. Super. 485, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-pinkenson-pasuperct-1939.