Commonwealth v. Waxman

5 Pa. D. & C. 157, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 52
CourtDauphin County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedMay 7, 1924
DocketNo. 136
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 Pa. D. & C. 157 (Commonwealth v. Waxman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Dauphin County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Waxman, 5 Pa. D. & C. 157, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 52 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

Wickersham, J.,

The defendants were indicted to the number and sessions above stated upon the charge that on Nov. 29, 1922, they did unlawfully pay to Rodney W. Shaver, the prosecutor, the sum of $294 in cash and a check for $6, as and for a bribe, to procure and induce the prosecutor, a member of the Pennsylvania State Constabulary, in a certain prosecution instituted against one Grover C. Furl and Cora A. Furl, his wife, to discontinue the said prosecution against the said Furls, who were charged with the illegal possession and transportation of intoxicating liquor.

The indictment was tried Jan. 12, 1923, which resulted in the conviction of the defendants of the charge of bribery, and sentence was duly imposed upon the said defendants; whereupon Rodney W. Shaver, the prosecutor in said case, petitioned this court “for instructions touching the disposition of the money and check aforesaid in his custody.” Aug. 21, 1923, on motion of the district attorney, a rule was granted on H. Waxman, one of the defendants, to show cause why the said sums of money now in the custody of Rodney W. Shaver, the prosecutor, should not be paid to the county treasurer.

No answer has been filed to this rule by either of the defendants. After this opinion was dictated, our attention was directed to a demurrer prepared by counsel for the defendant, Waxman, which was never filed, and which we have ordered to be filed nunc pro tunc. The demurrer sets forth that there is nothing upon the face of the petition to justify the granting of the rule to show cause, there is no authority in law to cause a forfeiture of the money referred to in the petition aforesaid, and there is no act of assembly in this [158]*158Commonwealth which would justify the forfeiture of the defendant’s money. Counsel for the defendant, Waxman, contended that unless the Act of March 31, 1860, P. L. 382, provides for a forfeiture of the thing used in the commission of the bribery or attempt to bribe, the only punishment would be that fixed by the Act of March 31, 1860, and that no forfeiture of the thing used in the commission of the offence is provided for. It is not contended in the defendant’s brief from which we have just quoted that the money in the hands of the petitioner, Rodney W. Shaver, should be repaid to the defendant, H. Wax-man, who paid the bribe money to the said Shaver. Their only contention is that the rule granted in this case should be discharged. This contention overlooks the request of the petitioner “for instructions touching the disposition of the money and check aforesaid in his custody.”

Our attention is further directed in the brief of counsel for the defendant, Waxman, to a dictum, found in 8 Ruling Case Daw, 257, to wit: That “the forfeiture and disabilities imposed by the common law on persons attainted of felony are unknown to the laws of this country, and no consequences follow conviction and sentence, except such as are declared by law.”

The forfeitures referred to by the text from which we have quoted are those mentioned in paragraph xvi, 1 Blackstone’s Commentaries, page 299, which relates to the King’s revenue, and which provides that “if, therefore, a member of any national community violates the fundamental contract of his association by transgressing the municipal law, he forfeits his right to such privileges as he claims by that contract, and the state may very justly resume that portion of property, or any part of it, which the laws have before assigned him. Hence, in every offence of an atrocious kind, the laws of England have exacted a total confiscation of the movables or personal estate, and in many cases a perpetual, in others only a temporary, loss of the offender’s immovables or landed property, and have vested them both in the King, who is the person supposed to be offended, being the one visible magistrate in whom the majesty of the public resides.”

It is not contended by the Commonwealth that the bona confiscate/, of the English common law is in force in Pennsylvania, nor that all the goods and chattels of the defendant, Waxman, could be confiscated by the Commonwealth. The district attorney, representing the Commonwealth, does contend that the law distinguishes between the rights acquired in conformity with and arising under its provisions, and claims originating in their clear and palpable violation; that it will not enforce claims made in contravention of its mandates, nor protect property held against and being used for the deliberate purpose of disobeying its enactments. A different course would be suicidal. The law cannot lend its aid to the destruction of its own authority and to the disobedience of its own commands. The common law will afford no aid to a party whose claims can be successfully enforced only by a violation of its principles or in direct contravention of a statutory enactment. Ex turpi causa non oritur actio: Brooms’s Legal Maxims, 732, 738, 739; Lord v. Chadbourne, 42 Me. 429; 66 Am. Dec., 290, 291, 292.

The money in question is now in possession of the petitioner, Rodney W. Shaver. It was paid to him by Waxman as a bribe to secure the release of the Purls. It was not used by Shaver to accomplish the purpose for which it was paid to him by Waxman. The purpose sought to be accomplished by Waxman in thus paying said sum of money to Shaver was clearly, illegal; it was, in fact, criminal in its intent. Therefore, if a civil suit were brought by the defendant, Waxman, against Rodney W. Shaver to recover from him the money paid to him as a bribe by the said H. Waxman, no recovery could be [159]*159had because of his, Shaver’s, failure to perform his part of the contract: Albertson v. Laughlin et al., 173 Pa. 525, in which it was held that a court of equity will not lend its aid in a gambling transaction, either to the winner to compel payment of his unpaid gains, or to the loser, who has paid his losses, to recover them back.

Morgan v. Groff, 5 Denio, 364, 49 Am. Dec., 273, holds that money advanced to another to be bet on an election, or to be used to violate the provisions of any public statute, cannot be recovered back, though never used by the receiver for the purpose for which it was sent.

Spalding v. Preston, 21 Vt. 9, 50 Am. Dec., 68, was an action of trover against the Sheriff of Caledonia County for 1100 pieces of German silver of the precise size and thickness of a Mexican dollar, and made in that form for the purpose of being stamped and milled into counterfeit coin of that description. The defendant took them within his own county from one Russell, who is shown by the case to have been carrying them, at the time, to a place of manufacture for the purpose of having them finished, so that he could put them in circulation as genuine coin. They were originally taken from Russell, and at the time of the trial were still detained under the authority of the State’s Attorney of Caledonia County. Russell was indicted by the grand jury of that county, and the indictment was still pending. These pieces of partly finished counterfeit coin were detained for the double purpose of being used as evidence upon the trial of Russell, and also of preventing their being put in circulation. These pieces of counterfeit coin were, at the time of the seizure by the defendant, the property of one Foster, so far as property can exist in such a thing, and Foster, after the seizure, transferred his rights therein to the present plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Pa. D. & C. 157, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-waxman-paqtrsessdauphi-1924.