Commonwealth v. Quinn

19 A.2d 526, 144 Pa. Super. 400, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 141
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 10, 1941
DocketAppeals, 313 and 314
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 19 A.2d 526 (Commonwealth v. Quinn) 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. Quinn, 19 A.2d 526, 144 Pa. Super. 400, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 141 (Pa. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Stadtfeld, J.,

Patrick J. Quinn, appellant, was tried, together with one Dominick Litz and one Peter S. Kochan, on some fifty bills of indictment consolidated for trial charging *402 larceny, fraudulent conversion, blackmail, extortion and conspiracy, and in the case of Eochan, who was a justice of the peace, failure to keep a docket. Not all of these three men were defendants in each indictment, although Quinn and Litz were defendants jointly in .most of the indictments charging larceny, fraudulent conversion, blackmail, extortion and conspiracy. At the trial, twenty-one of the indictments were submitted by the trial judge to the jury. Quinn and Litz were found guilty of larceny on a number of these indictments, and Eochan, ,was found guilty of failure to keep a docket. Eochan was immediately sentenced. Quinn and Litz filed motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, which motions were denied by the court in banc, Broom all and Crichton, JJ., sitting. Sentences were thereupon imposed upon both Quinn and Litz on the indictments at Nos. 446 and 474., These were convictions for larceny. On the other indictments, sentence was suspended. From these sentences, appeals were taken by Quinn but not by Litz. Eochan was a justice of the peace in the Borough of Eddystone, and Quinn and Litz were private detectives, one licensed in Monroe County and one in Philadelphia, but both operating in Delaware County.

In all of the indictments, appellant Quinn was involved, and in most of them Eochan and Litz also were involved.

In the so-called “Sheeley” case (No. 446), Quinn and Litz went into a diner in East Lansdowne and seized several pinball and other machines. They had a “John Doe” warrant issued by Magistrate Eochan. Quinn took the machines away in his automobile. No hearing was ever held in this case. The indictments submitted to the jury in this case charged Quinn and Litz with the larceny of the machines, as well as fraudulent conversion. Verdicts of guilty on the .charge of larceny were returned by the jury on this indictment.

In the so-called “Eurtzman” part of the case (No. *403 474), Quinn and ,Litz went to a drugstore in Upper Darby with a warrant issued by Kochan. They had a warrant charging “John Doe” with violation of the gambling laws. They took from Kurtzman, a pinball machine, eight boxes of candy and a radio. Kurtzman was notified to appear before Magistrate Kochan, but no hearing was ever .held. The pinball machine was found by its owner in another drugstore a few days later. Here, likewise, Quinn and Litz were charged with larceny. The only indictments submitted to the jury in .this part of the case charged Quinn and Litz with larceny of the pinball machine, candy and merchandise. The jury returned verdicts of guilty on this indictment. The lower court sentenced Quinn on indictment No. 474, charging larceny of a pinball machine, candy and merchandise from Kurtzman. Quinn has also appealed from this sentence.

In the opinion of the trial judge, the testimony in the several eases is correctly epitomized as follows: “Their method was to select some business place in which punch boards or other paraphernalia intended or pi'os-sibly used for gambling purposes had been installed, obtain warrant or a search warrant from Kochan, raid the place, and take and keep the boards and machines. In at least one case they acted without a warrant. No hearings or other proceedings were held, Kochan made no entries on his docket, and the parties raided in most cases never recovered their property......The theory of the Commonwealth was that the raids were made for the purpose of extortion, or to make profit from the property seized, or to prevent the operation of certain machines and implements in favor of those owned by others. Evidence of these transactions was introduced, involving eight business places. In two of these instances, Quinn acted alone. In the'others he and Litz acted together. In one instance they obtained a warrant from a magistrate other than Kochan, but Avhen they failed to appear against the defendant this *404 magistrate dismissed the case. The goods seized, however, were not returned.”

Quinn’s car was invariably used to carry away the stuff seized by Quinn and Litz. Quinn had the “John Doe” warrants and appears to have been the leader in practically all the cases.

On each of the two indictments referred to the sentence of the court was the same, but the imprisonment was made consecutive and not concurrent.

The first two assignments of error in both of these appeals urge that the learned trial judge erred in refusing to grant the motion of the appellant for a severance. This motion is rather ambiguous. In form, it is a motion for a severance, but the grounds stated are: “These are different and separate offenses, the same parties are not involved in all of* them.”

The opinion of the lower court points out that there is a considerable difference between a motion for a severance which seeks separate trials for defendants jointly indicted, and an objection to the consolidation for trial of separate indictments.

The Act of March 31, 1860, P. L. 427, sec. 40, (19 PS §785), provides that in all cases in which two or more persons are jointly indicted for any offense other than felonious homicide, it shall ,be in the discretion of the court to try them jointly or severally. As has already been pointed out, Quinn was indicted in each of the eight separate parts of this case. In two of these parts, he was the sole defendant, and in the remaining Six, he was jointly indicted with the defendant Litz. Also, Quinn, together with Litz and Koehan, were jointly indicted for conspiracy, except in the two cases where Quinn acted alone, and except for the one case where the warrant was obtained from justice of the peace Dupille instead of justice of the peace Kochan. Considering the motion as one requesting a separate trial for Quinn, the trial judge was clearly within his right in refusing to grant a severance. As found by the court *405 below, the testimony showed a general course of con duct pursued ,by Quinn in conjunction with Litz, and all tending to the same general end. No matters were presented to the jury in which the appellant Quinn was not directly charged and he scarcely could have been harmed by the refusal of the lower court to grant his motion. To have granted his motion would have necessitated two .very lengthy trials in which the same evidence would have been presented.

Treating the motion as one objecting to the consolidation of the indictments for the purpose of a single trial, this was entirely a matter in the discretion of the trial judge. In the consolidated cases of Commonwealth v. McCord and Commonwealth v. Waggy, 116 Pa. Superior Ct. 480, 176 A. 834, the learned opinion by Parker, J., stated, at p.

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Bluebook (online)
19 A.2d 526, 144 Pa. Super. 400, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-quinn-pasuperct-1941.