Commonwealth v. Snyder

40 Pa. Super. 485, 1909 Pa. Super. LEXIS 634
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 14, 1909
DocketAppeal, No. 13
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 40 Pa. Super. 485 (Commonwealth v. Snyder) 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. Snyder, 40 Pa. Super. 485, 1909 Pa. Super. LEXIS 634 (Pa. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Opinion by

Porter, J.,

William P. Snyder, the appellant, was charged jointly with John H. Sanderson, Joseph M. Huston, James M. Shumaker, and William L. Mathues with conspiracy to defraud the commonwealth. Huston having been granted a severance, the other four defendants were tried together, the trial resulted in a verdict of guilty as to all of the defendants tried and upon that verdict judgment was entered. We have in this case the appeal of William P. Snyder from that conviction.

The form of the indictment, the crime charged therein, and the facts out of which that charge arose have been recited and commented upon at length in disposing of the appeal of the defendant Sanderson, in which an opinion has this day been filed, and it is not necessary here to repeat what we there said. [522]*522We shall, therefore, only deal with the questions raised by the assignments of error of this particular defendant.

The first specification of error complains of the admission of evidence that Huston, when departing on a trip to Europe, left with the witness, who was a clerk in his office, a number of signed architect’s certificates, leaving the body of the certificate blank and simply signing his name followed by the word, “Architect;” that during Huston’s absence the defendant Sanderson came to his office and the witness at his suggestion filled out the blank portion of one of these certificates, taking the amount and other material parts from the bill or invoice presented by Sanderson; that when so filled up it constituted a certificate by Joseph M. Huston, architect, that Sanderson was entitled to receive from the commonwealth $53,318.60, under his contract and that the indebtedness arose and was properly charged under “Item 24; 2,897f feet at $20.00, less 8 per cent,— $18.40, total $53,318.60;” that neither Huston who signed the blank certificate nor the witness who filled in the blank space knew anything about the facts or the correctness of the invoice which was thus certified to be correct; that Sanderson took with him the certificate, and that certificate was identified as the one attached to the invoice, the payment of which was in the indictment averred to have been an overt act done in pursuance of the conspiracy charged. This evidence was admitted against the defendant Sanderson alone. Huston was not on trial, but he was charged jointly with the defendants, and it was competent for the commonwealth to prove what each of those charged had done in the presenting, certification and payment of the identical invoice upon which the indictment was based. The indictment charged that not only the five persons named but that others unknown had been parties to the conspiracy. ■ Now if Huston had left this unsigned certificate under an agreement with Sanderson that the latter might subsequently procure and use the certificate for the purpose of making it appear that the invoice was correct and that the state ought to pay, without Huston having any knowledge whatever as to the facts so certified, then this evidence was competent to show that Sanderson and Huston were guilty of [523]*523conspiracy. If Huston had not authorized this certificate to be issued, then the evidence was competent to show that Sanderson and the man who without authority filled the certificate had conspired in making this false certification. The several persons charged in this indictment were not required to all act jointly or at one time in dealing with the invoices for furniture, under the contract; they acted successively, the act of each led up to the final act of payment of the claim. When two or more persons pursue by their acts the same object, often by the same means, one performing one part of an act, the other another part of the same act, with a view to complete it, and with a view to attaining the object which they are pursuing, the acts of each must necessarily be proved separately, and where there is a charge of conspiracy the acts of each, with regard to the subject-matter of the charge, are always evidence against that particular defendant. The burden was upon the commonwealth in this case to satisfy the jury beyond a reasonable doubt that there had been a conspiracy, between two or more of the defendants or some one of them and a person or persons not named, to defraud the commonwealth. It was not necessary to prove that they had all met to conceive the scheme, nor to .prove by whom it was originated: Roscoe’s Criminal Evidence, 415. This same question has been discussed in the opinion in the appeal of Sanderson, and further comment is not necessary. The second specification of error refers to the comment of the court upon the evidence to which the first specification of error relates. It may here be stated that, in addition to the formal certificate mentioned in the testimony above referred to, there appeared upon the invoice itself an informal certificate, in the words “Approved, Joseph M. Huston, Architect.” The testimony of the clerk from Huston’s office as to the manner in which the formal certificate had been made up was not contradicted. Huston was not on trial, and there was no positive admission by him that he had authorized the issuance of the formal certificate or that he had actually signed the informal one, although there was oral evidence that the certificate last mentioned was genuine. It was, therefore, proper for the court to instruct the jury that it was for them [524]*524to determine, under the evidence, how far the action of Huston in relation to the bill contributed to its passage and payment. The first and second specifications of error are dismissed.

This appellant, through his counsel, contended all through the trial that he as a member of the board of commissioners of public grounds and buildings and, also, as auditor general relied upon the certificate of Huston, the architect, as to the correctness of the various invoices rendered by Sanderson for furniture supplied under his contract and that he was justifiable in so doing. This appellant was the only one of the defendants who testified at the trial and his explanation of the manner in which, as a member of the board of commissioners of public grounds and buildings and as auditor general, he had acted upon the several invoices rendered by Sanderson for furniture, was that he had relied absolutely upon the certificate of Huston as to the correctness of the invoices and the item numbers of the contract under which the several articles of furniture were to be charged and paid for. The contention of the appellant as to the powers of the architect and the complete effacement of the board of commissioners of public grounds and buildings and the auditor general is indicated by his answers to three questions. “Q. In examining the schedule under which the contract was awarded you found that item 25, did you not, referred to chairs and seating and so on? A. I did. Q. Why, when you gave that order, didn’t you specify that this should be furnished under item 25? A. Because the matter of arranging the items was referred to the architect, who was the only one that did know under what items would be proper to order the different kinds of furniture. Q. Where is there anything being left to the architect in his contract of employment or in the resolution as to the item numbers? A. That may be, but all the action, and all his actions, indicated that he was our agent and that we depended on him to take the place of the board, who had no technical knowledge.” The evidence disclosed that as to nearly all of the invoices there were in fact two certificates, one informal which consisted in writing upon the invoice “Approved, Joseph M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 Pa. Super. 485, 1909 Pa. Super. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-snyder-pasuperct-1909.