Commonwealth v. Shinfield

83 Pa. Super. 292, 1924 Pa. Super. LEXIS 125
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 14, 1924
DocketAppeal, 84
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 83 Pa. Super. 292 (Commonwealth v. Shinfield) 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. Shinfield, 83 Pa. Super. 292, 1924 Pa. Super. LEXIS 125 (Pa. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

Henderson, J.,

The defendant was convicted of the unlawful possession of intoxicating liquors. The assignments of error all relate to the charge of the court and are presented under a general exception to the charge. They complain of (a) certain “important misstatements of fact”; (b) the inadequacy of the charge. The argument of the learned counsel for the appellant involves a consideration of the facts as exhibited in the testimony. The defendant was the lessee of a two-story brick building, No. 633 Dickinson Street in the City of Philadelphia which had been occupied for some years by him as a place for the manufacture of metal cornice and spouting. The shop, at the time of the defendant’s arrest, was in the second story of the building where the defendant also had his office. Entrance to the second story was obtained by a door and stairway at the southwest corner of the building. There was also a double door permitting the entrance of vehicles from the street to the lower floor. On the latter floor adjoining the west wall of the building was an inside room about twelve feet wide and twenty-eight feet long with a wide door at the end opening toward the front of the building. Back of the building was an enclosed shed about twelve feet wide. A door or gate led from this shed to an over-arched passage way between two buildings to a back street. The police department received a complaint by letter with respect to this building, whereupon six police officers proceeded with a search warrant to examine the premises about half past six o’clock on June 20, 1923. As they approached the front of the building on Dickinson Street, three of the officers proceeded to the rear of *294 the building and three remained at the street. As the officers entered the building through the large front door, a. man appeared at one of the front windows upstairs. They proceeded to the rear of the building and into the shed referred to where they found a high pressure steam boiler in operation. Near the boiler was a door leading from the shed into the inner room and in the latter place there was found a still composed of two copper containers each of which had a capacity of about 200 gallons. These were connected to the boiler and also to a condenser from which liquor was flowing into five 5-gal-lon jugs from as many outlets. There was found also a large quantity of raw whiskey or alcohol estimated at about 2,000 gallons. Six empty alcohol barrels; 12 empty 5-gallon bottles; a quantity of funnels, cartons, corks, empty 5-gallon cans, and 195 5-gallon cans of alcohol, were found there, and on the outside of the inside room were barrels containing liquor. A quantity of soft coal used for fuel in the boiler was in the shed. No one was seen on the premises by the officers except the man on the second floor and he had disappeared when the premises were entered. The case against the defendant rested on the fact that he was the lessee of the building, that the distillery had been found in operation, and that a large quantity of whiskey had been found therein as above stated. The fact of the distillation of the liquor in the manner described by the Commonwealth’s witnesses was not controverted. .The defense was that the appellant had sublet the rear part of the first floor of the building to a man named Martin Jacobs, on the 7th of June, 1923, and a lease was offered in evidence between the defendant and Jacobs. The lease was for the term of one month and purported to be the demise of a dwelling, but the real estate clerk who drew the lease explained that she inserted that description without direction from either the lessor or lessee, and that she alone was responsible for that mistake. The defendant testified that Jacobs leased the premises for a garage *295 and repair shop, and his understanding was that it was to be so used. There was a general denial by the defendant that he had anything to do with the distilling of the liquor, or that he knew that any such business was conducted in the building. He testified that he was away from his shop much of the time; that the only use he made of the lower story was a place for keeping his automobile, which he did under an arrangement with the sub-tenant. The Commonwealth’s evidence showed that some of his material, sheet metal, etc., was on that floor and near the empty barrels. The foreman of the defendant’s shop testified that he worked upstairs from 8 o’clock in the morning to 4:30 in the afternoon; that he. never noticed any odor or smell or indication of any cooking or brewing on the first floor; and that all the use that was made of the first floor by the defendant was the keeping of a truck there. The foreman had occasion to go into the lower floor for material used in making the cornices, but never saw any barrels there. The bookkeeper. of the defendant also stated that he never noticed any odor on the premises nor saw black smoke arising from the boiler. In the 1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 7th and 8th assignments of error our attention is directed to the alleged misstatements of fact. These all relate to the description of the premises given by the court in the charge to the jury. There was evidence relating to a trapdoor opening from the first to the second floor. When referring to the inner room the court said that according to one of the Commonwealth’s witnesses there is access through a trapdoor up into the second story. It is alleged by the appellant that this was a mistake, and that there was no trapdoor leading from the inner room to the second floor, but that the trapdoor opened from the outer room into the second floor. It is not apparent how the defendant was prejudicially affected by this mistake, if it were a mistake. There was certainly evidence given with reference to the trapdoor and it is not disputed that there was an outer trapdoor as shown *296 in the photographs which were used in the argument on the appeal, but were not offered at the trial. The court, as we read the charge, was giving in some detail a description of the premises as disclosed by the Commonwealth’s evidence, and was not intimating any fact affecting the defendant. He was giving a general description of the premises in order that the jury might direct their attention to the conditions out of which the prosecution arose. Moreover, if there were a mistake in regard to this subject (and this applies also to the other alleged misstatements of fact) it was the duty of the counsel engaged in the trial to bring the subject of the error to the attention of the court, if it were a matter of importance. It is further objected that the court used the term “blind room” with reference to the room within the first floor apartment; the contention being that the room had a large door at the south end opening toward the street, but not on the street, and a window at the rear opening into the shed, but we think it cannot be successfully alleged that the description was inaccurate; it was not an outside room, it had neither door nor window opening on the outside of the building, and the court described it as a “blind room with no visible access front or back. I mean unseen from the front of the building and out of sight to anybody in the back of the building.” That fairly describes the condition of the inside room.

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Related

Commonwealth v. State Loan Corp.
176 A. 516 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1934)
Commonwealth v. Guild
170 A. 699 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1933)
Commonwealth v. Kline
9 Pa. D. & C. 448 (Berks County Court of Quarter Sessions, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 Pa. Super. 292, 1924 Pa. Super. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-shinfield-pasuperct-1924.