Commonwealth v. Rhey

14 A.2d 192, 140 Pa. Super. 340, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 466
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 2, 1939
DocketAppeals 106-110
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 14 A.2d 192 (Commonwealth v. Rhey) 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. Rhey, 14 A.2d 192, 140 Pa. Super. 340, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 466 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Hirt, J.,

Defendants Hobart Rhey, Albert Pryel and Joseph Frank were convicted of embracery and of conspiracy to commit embracery on indictments ordered by the court after an investigation of a grand jury. Thomas *342 Clougherty and Thomas Mulkearn, the other two defendants, were acquitted by direction of the court. All defendants were tried together on both charges.

Hobart Rhey, Beulah B. Pryel, wife of Albert Pryel and others had been charged with violations of the election laws at the Primary Election of 1937 in the Borough of Homestead. Mrs. Pryel was the judge of election and all of the other defendants were members of the election board except Hobart Rhey. That case was continued from time to time but was finally set definitely for trial on November 15,1938. All of the defendants in that case met in the office of their attorney at his request four days before that date and he suggested an investigation of the 240 jurors on two panels, summoned for the trial of cases at that term. He provided printed jury lists but definitely instructed them not to contact the jurors but merely to investigate them, principally for political affiliations. These lists were broken down and the names were rearranged with reference to the localities in which the jurors lived. From an examination of fifty typewriters it was found that typewritten lists of the names of jurors were made in the Borough office in Homestead. When typed, the sheets had been cut into slips containing from five to six names each which were placed in a number of separate envelopes and distributed among various persons including some of the defendants in the election case and the defendants in this case.

On November 12, 1938 John Braszo, a funeral director in McKees Rocks was accosted by defendants Frank and Pryel. Frank had a number of the typewritten slips which he gave to Braszo; he spoke of the election case about to be tried and asked Braszo to see these jurors, to induce them to acquit the defendants in that case because they were good people. Defendant Rhey joined the group during the conversation and was present when one of the slips was given to Braszo. Instead of approaching these jurors Braszo later sent for Robert *343 McKinley, a Mend and his former attorney, a member of the Allegheny County Bar, and reported the incident to him and gave him the jury slips. While they were together, defendant Frank called Braszo on the telephone and asked for a report. McKinley reported the matter to the District Attorney and gave him the slips but declined to disclose from whom he had received them. This and other information, which indicated a widespread effort to influence jurors unlawfully, prompted the petition to the court for a grand jury investigation. The matter was submitted to the grand jury then sitting which after an investigation recommended charges against the defendants. Defendants moved to quash the indictments ordered by the court as a result of the investigation, alleging that they charge specific offenses which properly may not be the subject of a grand jury investigation; that defendants’ constitutional rights had been violated in that no information had been lodged against them and that they had not been given a preliminary hearing; that one of the defendants was called as a witness before the grand jury and was compelled to testify. The indictments were also challenged on the broad ground alleged, that the subject matter of the investigation was not of such general public import as to justify the extraordinary procedure. The refusal to quash is assigned as error.

Though within its sphere of action the grand jury is independent of the other administrative branches of our criminal law yet its power of initiating prosecution is confined within very narrow limits. The restrictions imposed upon the grand jury are also limitations upon the power of the court both as to the procedure and the scope of the investigation. To justify the submission of criminal charges to a grand jury, thus initiating a criminal prosecution by that extraordinary method, the subject of the investigation must be of general public importance affecting the entire community. It is only upon such urgent necessity that one accused of crime *344 may be deprived of tbe opportunity of bearing and examining tbe prosecutor and bis witnesses as to tbe time, place and circumstances of tbe offense charged thus enabling bim “if be is an innocent man to prepare bis defense, a thing of tbe hardest practicability if a preliminary bearing is not afforded to bim”: Lloyd & Carpenter’s Case, 3 Clark 188. Tbe offenses brought to the attention of tbe court in tbe District Attorney’s petition come within tbe class of crimes which affect tbe public generally and are properly tbe subject of general complaint. The petition alleged “that divers persons in some instances acting individually, and in others in concert, have been attempting to corrupt and influence a number of jurors who have been duly summoned and are now serving ...... and have been endeavoring ......to bias tbe mind and judgment of said jurors in regard to a case now pending......” in tbe court of Quarter Sessions of Allegheny County. Based upon information received and some investigation tbe petition states: “Petitioner is reliably informed and believes that tbe aforesaid efforts have been widespread and calculated to attempt to corrupt and influence a large number of jurors now serving.” The District Attorney was in possession of some facts indicating a widespread violation of the law but was not informed as to the identity of all of tbe offenders.

A conspiracy to corrupt jurors is a matter of serious public concern and doubly so if tbe effort is directed toward tbe members of a panel from which a jury is about to be drawn for tbe trial of cases involving fraudulent violations of the election laws. Offenses of this nature invade tbe rights of tbe people. It is of the highest public importance that tbe administration of justice be preserved inviolate and that all sources of government be kept free from contamination.

All of the elements essential to an investigation by a grand jury are present. The court acted upon knowledge gained from trustworthy information; a cognate *345 offense was charged and the investigation was directed against “things rather than individuals.” The criminal acts, the subject of investigation, were such that the ordinary process of the law was inadequate in this respect, at least, that the public would suffer from delays incident to ordinary procedure. The object to be attained was the suppression of a public evil affecting in its influence communities rather than individuals. The information available indicated a conspiracy widespread in its scope and since all of the offenders were unknown, an investigation by a grand jury under all of the circumstances, was the appropriate procedure. The principles involved are the subject of thorough discussion in the recent cases, McNair’s Petition, 324 Pa. 48, 187 A. 498; Dauphin County Grand Jury Proc. 332 Pa. 289, 2 A. 2d 783; Com. v. Hubbs, 137 Pa. Superior Ct. 229, 8 A. 2d 611, as well as in the leading case, Lloyd & Carpenter’s Case, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
14 A.2d 192, 140 Pa. Super. 340, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-rhey-pasuperct-1939.