Commonwealth v. Schoen

25 Pa. Super. 211, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 42
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 10, 1904
DocketAppeals, Nos. 31 and 40
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 25 Pa. Super. 211 (Commonwealth v. Schoen) 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. Schoen, 25 Pa. Super. 211, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 42 (Pa. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Opinion bt

Mobrison, J.,

The defendants, with others, were indicted on two separate indictments, and on trial were found guilty in each case, and being sentenced to pay fines and to imprisonment appealed to this court. The first questions raised by the appellants go solely to the informations and warrants upon which they were arrested and brought before the committing magistrate, and the learned counsel for the defendants has made an elaborate argument seeking to convince this court that the constitutional rights of the defendants were violated on account of certain alleged irregularities in the informations and proceedings before the magistrate.

But the record discloses that at no time prior to their conviction and this appeal did the appellants raise any question as to the form or sufficiency of the information.

No motion was made to quash the bills of indictment, neither [213]*213were the bills demurred to, nor was a motion made in arrest of judgment.

In short the question as to the sufficiency of the informations is raised for the first time in this court.

We are of opinion that it is entirely too late to raise any such question after indictment found and a conviction had. Where an indictment is regularly found by the grand jury and the defendants plead thereto and go to trial on the merits all defects and irregularities in the information, warrant and proceedings before the magistrate must be held as cured. We think this question is ruled by Commonwealth v. Brennan, 193 Pa. 567, where the information charging the defendant with murder was not signed by the prosecutors. In that case the opinion of the Supreme Court is brief and is as follows : “ The defendant was tried upon an indictment found regularly by the grand jury upon examination made before a magistrate. A trial was had upon the merits and the defendant was duly convicted of murder of the first degree. On the trial a motion was made to quash the indictment because it was not found after an information sworn to and subscribed before the committing magistrate. While the defendant might have been heard on that subject upon a proceeding to be discharged from custody on the ground of an illegal commitment, it is certainly too late after indictment found upon the trial of the cause. The final indictment cannot be invalidated for any such reason.

“ The judgment is affirmed and the record is remitted for the purpose of execution according to law.”

Other authorities might be cited upon this question, but we deem it unnecessary as the law is too well settled in Pennsylvania that an indictment regularly found and pleaded to, followed by a trial upon the merits, cures all defects in the preliminary proceedings.

The next question raised is as to the form of the indictments. This question was raised for the first time in this court on appeal. There was a motion in the court below to dismiss the indictments, but the record shows it was based solely upon the supposed insufficiency of the evidence to sustain a conviction, and nothing was said about the form of the bills of indictment or of any defects therein or the misjoinder of the counts.

[214]*214•“ Every objection to any indictment for any formal defect, apparent upon the face thereof, shall be taken by demurrer, or ■ on motion to quash such indictment, before the jury shall be sworn, and not afterwards : ” Act of March 31, 1860, sec. 11, P. L. 427.

In Commonwealth v. Hand, 3 Phila. 408, the defendant charged in one bill with two distinct offenses, having pleaded to the indictment and gone to trial without raising any objection, Judge Allison refused to arrest the judgment. In Kilrow v. Com., 89 Pa. 480, it was held “ that while duplicity in crim- ’ inal cases may be objected to by special demurrer, or perhaps general demurrer, or be ground for an application to quash the indictment, yet the better view is that it cannot be made the subject of a motion in arrest of judgment, or of a writ of error.”

It should be borne in mind that the appellants raised no question as to the form of indictment in the court below, and therefore, they cannot raise it now for the first time on appeal.

But in addition to this it is not apparent that the appellants could at any stage of the proceedings have raised any question as to the joinder of the counts in these bills of indictment. It is true that a defendant cannot be indicted in one bill for several distinct and unrelated felonies, yet it is well settled that a bill of indictment may contain several counts charging several offenses if they all arise out of the same transaction ; and it is well settled that any number of misdemeanors may be charged in one bill of indictment. “ If the same acts constitute two or more offenses counts charging each offense are properly joined : ” Sadler on Criminal Procedure in Penna. par. 227, page 269. In Hollister v. Commonwealth, 60 Pa. 103, it is said: “ It would not do to hold a defendant convicted on an indictment in form for burglary strictly liable to be sentenced under this section by changing the averments, or assuming them changed to suit the conviction. In fact it is not the same offense, although it partakes of its nature; and I have no doubt but it might be joined in the same indictment. But it would be as necessary to set forth the charge, so as to bring it within the offense described in the section, as it is necessary to set forth the essentials to constitute the crime of burglary.” This we understand authorizes the indictment of a defendant in one [215]*215bill for statutory and common-law burglary. But of course tbe charges must be properly set out in separate counts. In Nicholson v. Commonwealth, 91 Pa. 390, it was held “there was nothing wrong in adding the counts for fornication and bastardy to the count for seduction. They are offenses of the same nature.” In Commonwealth v. Shutte, 130 Pa. 272, it was held “that a defendant was properly indicted in two counts, one charging robbery and the other larceny as bailee.” See 2 Chitty’s Criminal Law, 39, 40, where a precedent is given for joining in one bill of indictment separate counts for maintaining a bawdy house and maintaining a disorderly house.

In the cases under consideration the first bill of indictment contains two counts charging the appellants with maintaining a disorderly house and maintaining a bawdy house, and the second bill of indictment has three counts, charging them with maintaining a bawdy house, maintaining a disorderly house and being frequenters of a bawdy house.

We consider the first bill of indictment in exact accord with all the precedents, and the authorities appear to fully sustain it.

The supposed difficulty in the second indictment is the joining a third count charging the appellants with being frequenters and inmates of a bawdy house.

It clearly appears that the offense of frequenting and being inmates of a bawdy house grew out of the same facts as those alleged in the first and second counts charging the appellants with maintaining and keeping a disorderly house and a bawdy house. The three offenses were misdemeanors and under the authorities they could undoubtedly be joined in one bill of indictment. In Commonwealth v. Gillespie and another, 7 S. & R. 469, it is said (p. 476): “ These several charges, as laid in the indictment, are different modes of laying the same offense.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Commonwealth v. Murray
272 A.2d 201 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1970)
Commonwealth ex rel. Woodson v. Myers
25 Pa. D. & C.2d 373 (Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas, 1961)
Commonwealth ex rel. Lockhart v. Myers
193 Pa. Super. 531 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1960)
Com. Ex Rel. Lockhart v. Myers
165 A.2d 400 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1960)
Commonwealth v. Blumenstein
153 A.2d 227 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1959)
Commonwealth v. O'BRIEN
124 A.2d 666 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1956)
Commonwealth ex rel. Musser v. Day
119 A.2d 811 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1956)
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Burge v. Ashe
77 A.2d 725 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1951)
Commonwealth v. Evans
28 A.2d 731 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1942)
Commonwealth v. Houck
43 Pa. D. & C. 687 (Clinton County Court of Quarter Sessions, 1942)
Commonwealth v. Wiswesser
188 A. 604 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1936)
Commonwealth v. Lingle
182 A. 802 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1935)
Commonwealth v. Wimmer
10 Pa. D. & C. 720 (Lehigh County Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1927)
Fendall v. Eckert
90 Pa. Super. 305 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1926)
Commonwealth v. Shinfield
83 Pa. Super. 292 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1924)
Commonwealth v. Klein Goodstein
81 Pa. Super. 551 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1923)
Commonwealth v. Zayrook
30 Pa. Super. 111 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Pa. Super. 211, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-schoen-pasuperct-1904.