Commonwealth v. Stein

158 A. 600, 103 Pa. Super. 198, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 43
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 30, 1931
DocketAppeal 182
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 158 A. 600 (Commonwealth v. Stein) 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. Stein, 158 A. 600, 103 Pa. Super. 198, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 43 (Pa. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinions

Opinion by

Keller, J.,

The appellant was indicted for bribery, the charges being that she gave (1) two police sergeants the sum of $44, and (2) a patrolman the sum of $10, as bribes to permit her to set up, maintain and conduct an illegal lottery, commonly known as the “Number game” or “Clearing House game” (See Com. v. Banks, 98 Pa. Superior Ct. 432); and promised to pay them a weekly sum thereafter if they would permit her to conduct and operate said lottery under police protection and without arrest or prosecution. She was convicted, and a careful review of the testimony satisfies us that her conviction was warranted by the evidence and that the verdict was a just one.

Two grounds for reversal are urged by her present counsel, who did not represent her on the trial.

(1) It is contended that the judgment should be reversed because of the court’s failure to withdraw a juror, when the assistant district attorney, i'n addressing the jury told them that if acquitted in this case, “the defendant will continue to run her despicable business and continue to rob the poor.”

The Commonwealth’s officer should not seek to inflame the jury by referring to matters not in evidence, or by drawing deductions from the evidence which are not strictly legitimate or fairly warrantable, with the same end in view: Com. v. Nicely, 130 Pa. 261; Com. v. Swartz, 37 Pa. Superior Ct. 507; Com. v. Martin, 47 Pa. Superior Ct. 346; Com. v. Shoemaker, 240 Pa. 255. But it is his duty to present the case fully, and to draw all legitimate inferences fairly deducible from the evidence, and to impress on the jury *201 the importance of a just verdict and the consequences likely to result from an erroneous one. There was evidence that the defendant had admitted being in the “number game” for seven years, and the whole purpose of her giving money to these police officers was to permit her to extend her operations to a, new field. The remark of the district attorney’s representative was therefore based on evidence in the case and was not an unfair statement of the results that would happen if the evidence of the officers was believed, but a verdict of acquittal rendered out of sympathy, etc. In the endeavor to be fair to the accused courts should not bend so far backward as to prevent a vigorous prosecution of a defendant who, the Commonwealth’s officer is reasonably satisfied from the evidence, is guilty.

The language used by the assistant district attorney in this case was less harmful to the defendant and more warranted by the evidence than was employed in a number of cases in which the Supreme Court or this court refused to interfere. See Com. v. Del Vaccio, 299 Pa. 547; Com. v. Smith, 270 Pa. 583; Com. v. Cicere, 282 Pa. 492; Com. v. Davison, 99 Pa. Superior Ct. 412; Com. v. Bonnem, 95 Pa. Superior Ct. 496; Com. v. Exler, 61 Pa. Superior Ct. 423; Com. v. Kline, 66 Pa. Superior Ct. 285, 287; Com. v. Massarelli, 304 Pa. 335. The first and second assignments of error are overruled.

(2) Two police sergeants and a patrolman testified on the trial to the matters averred in the indictment, and the Commonwealth produced and offered in evidence the forty-four dollars in currency which the sergeants, according to their story, had received from the defendant and which they at once turned over to their superior officer and marked so as to be able to identify it. The defense was a denial of the entire story; a denial that she ever knew the police officers, *202 ever met them or talked to them, or attempted to bribe them or secure police protection for a lottery, or gave them any money for that or any other purpose. Defendant testified and was corroborated by her maid, and in part by her husband’s sister-in-law, that she was at home sick in bed on the two occasions (Sept-28, 1930 at 1:30 A. M. and Sept. 29, 1930 at 8:30 P. M.) when the officers said she had approached and attempted to bribe them. The trial judge called the jury’s attention to the full and complete denial of the defendant; to the corroboration of her witnesses; to the presumption of innocence in her favor; and told them that unless the Commonwealth had proved her guilt beyond a reasonable doubt she was entitled to the benefit of the doubt and to an acquittal; that before they could find her guilty they must believe from the evidence in the case that she met the police officers as testified to by them and gave them the money for the specific purpose testified to by them; in other words, that if they had any reasonable doubt as to her being present with the officers and giving them money to secure protection for her lottery, as testified to by them, they must acquit her.

Appellant’s present counsel now complains, and contends that the judgment should he reversed, because the trial judge in his charge did not call her defense an “alibi” and instruct the jury that the defendant was required to establish such defense only by the preponderance of the evidence, and not beyond a reasonable doubt. But a reference to the foregoing will show that the judge placed no burden of proof whatever on the defendant, but charged the jury that unless they found beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was present with the officers and gave them money for the corrupt purpose before mentioned, they should acquit ; that if they had any reasonable doubt arising out of the evidence as to her presence with the officers as *203 testified to by them and her giving them the money for the specific purpose mentioned by them they must render a verdict of “not guilty. ’’ In the circumstances of this case had the court charged the jury as the appellant now asserts it should have done, we would probably have had her counsel here asserting, with more merit, that error had been committed because it placed the burden of disproof by a preponderance of the evidence on the defendant, when the burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt rested at all times and as to all essential matters on the Commonwealth.

Appellant relies on two decisions of the Supreme Court, and if followed without discrimination and with no regard to the facts of those cases, they might support her proposition; but even so, we reverse only for harmful error, and if the court below charged the jury more advantageously to the defendant than she was entitled to, she has no just ground for complaint.

The cases relied on by the appellant are Com. v. Andrews, 234 Pa. 597 and Com. v. Barrish, 297 Pa. 160. Both of them were homicide cases in which the defendants were convicted of murder in the first degree. In both of them the trial judge specially referred to the “alibi” presented by the defendant as an affirmative defense, and to the proof offered by the defendant to sustain it; in the former case saying, “But in every case where the defense of alibi is made it should be very closely scrutinized for the reason so forcibly expressed by an eminent judge. It is a defense often attempted by contrivance, subornation or perjury, and the proof therefore offered to sustain it, is to be subjected to a rigid scrutiny, because, without attempting to contest or rebut the evidence of facts sustaining the charge, it attempts to prove affirmatively another fact wholly inconsistent with it, and this defense is equally available if satisfactorily established to avoid the force of positive as of circumstantial evi *204

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88 A.2d 760 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1952)
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189 A. 684 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 A. 600, 103 Pa. Super. 198, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-stein-pasuperct-1931.