Commonwealth v. Weiner Zvon

25 A.2d 844, 148 Pa. Super. 577, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 93
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 11, 1942
DocketAppeals, 10-15
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 25 A.2d 844 (Commonwealth v. Weiner Zvon) 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. Weiner Zvon, 25 A.2d 844, 148 Pa. Super. 577, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 93 (Pa. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion by

Baldbige, J.,

These appeals are from sentences imposed after conviction in the court below on five separate indictments, Nos. 125, 126, 127, 130, and 131, September Term, 1940.

Max Weiner, one of the appellants, was charged in indictment No. 125 with procuring signatures to a nomination paper of the Communist Party by false and fraudulent statements, and in indictment No. 126 with making false statements in the affidavits required to be appended to the nomination papers. Stephen Zvon, the other appellant, was charged in two indictments, Nos. 130 and 131, with the same offenses. Weiner, Zvon, and Oliver Milton were charged in indictment No. 127 with conspiracy to procure signatures to Communist nomination papers by false statements and representations with the intent to prevent a free and pure election. Weiner and Zvon were found guilty as indicted and Milton was found not guilty.

These prosecutions grew out of alleged violations of the Pennsylvania Election Code, approved June 3, 1937, P. L. 1333, 25 PS §2600 et seq. Sometime prior to 1940 the candidates of the Communist Party in this state failed to receive the minimum number of votes necessary to give that party the right to nominate its candidates at a primary election. Hence it was not a “political party” within the definition of that term in sections 102 (n) and 801 (a) and (b) of the Election Code of 1937, and became a “political body” as defined *580 in sections 102 (p) and 801 (c). It was required, therefore, to nominate its candidates by nomination papers as provided in Article IX, (b) of the Code, 25 ps 2861 et seq.

Weiner, the State Legislative Secretary of the Communist Party of Pennsylvania, undertook to secure signatures of qualified electors of Dauphin County to the nomination papers to put candidates on the official ballot at the general election. He secured the defendants Zvon and Milton to help him. During the month of March 1940, these defendants solicited signatures of a large number of people, seventy-five or more of whom were called as witnesses at the trial. The judge in referring to them in his opinion, said: “Not more than one or two of the witnesses were of average intelligence, most of them below • the average. Some of them could not read or write.”

About two months after these nomination papers had been circulated a Harrisburg newspaper published the names of the signers and stated that they had been deceived as to the purpose of these papers. Later the appellants were arrested, indicted, tried, and convicted. Every one of these witnesses, with one or two exceptions, said that he or she was not told, and did not know, it was a nominaton paper to place the candidates of the Communist Party on the ballot; that representations were made by the appellants that the petition was for the purpose of getting higher W. P. A. wages, more relief money, keeping United States out of war, improving the conditions of the poor, etc., which had no real relation to the actual purpose of the petitions. In some instances the appellants acted separately and in others they worked together in obtaining signatures.

The appellants’ first, and probably their chief, complaint is that the Commonwealth’s evidence, consisting of testimony of individuals who signed the nomination papers at different times and places and under different’ circumstances, did not establish that these ap *581 pellants entered into an express agreement with a criminal intent, and, therefore, failed to support the charge of conspiracy.

The Commonwealth was not required to prove an express agreement. It is very rare that a formal or explicit agreement can he proved in a conspiracy case. Invariably the Commonwealth’s case depends upon the attending circumstances: Commonwealth v. Strantz, 328 Pa. 33, 195 A. 75; Commonwealth v. Tilly, 33 Pa. Superior Ct. 35; Commonwealth v. Kelson, 134 Pa. Superior Ct. 132, 3 A. 2d 933. “The joint assent of minds required to sustain a charge of conspiracy may be inferred from facts which establish......that the conspiracy had been formed.” Commonwealth v. Jermyn et al., 101 Pa. Superior Ct. 455, 465, 478.

Many of the witnesses testified that practically the same representations, methods of approach, etc., were made by both of these appellants to obtain the signatures. In Commonwealth v. Antico et al., 146 Pa. Superior Ct. 293, 22 A. 2d 204, (an allocatur was refused by the Supreme Court) the facts strikingly resemble those before us. We there said, p. 327: “The method used by all those circulating the petitions- to obtain signatures was so similar that it is inconceivable that the defendants’ conduct could be attributed to a coincidence rather than to a general agreement between them knowingly to make untrue and fraudulent statements as an inducement for the electors to sign the petitions, and thereafter to make false affidavits thereto.”

The appellants contend that by this language we enunciated a new doctrine in the law of conspiracy. We do not consider what was said there novel or in conflict with former decisions of the appellate courts. It has been consistently and repeatedly held that the acts of the parties may show that there was a Concerted action pursuant to a common design to accomplish a common purpose: Commonwealth v. Jermyn et al., *582 supra, p. 465. In Commonwealth v. Snyder, 40 Pa. Superior Ct. 485, 523, after. stating that the commonwealth was not required to show that the defendants acted jointly or at one time, we said: “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.” See, also, Commonwealth v. Zuern, 16 Pa. Superior Ct. 588, 600; and Commonwealth v. Rhey et al., 140 Pa. Superior Ct. 340, 14 A. 2d 192.

The appellants, relying upon Commonwealth v. Kirk et al., 141 Pa. Superior Ct. 123, 14 A. 2d 914, contend that this court in the Antico case, and the lower court in the instant case, ignored the distinction between an agreement to commit an illegal act, and where the act was legal but performed in an unlawful manner. We said in the Kirk case, p. 138: “If the combination is formed for the purpose of committing a crime — ras distinguished from an act merely illegal,— if there be a direct intention that a crime should be committed, whether it be a crime at common law or by statute, the corrupt motive or criminal intent is necessarily present, for there can be no innocent motive in a combination entered into to commit a crime.

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Bluebook (online)
25 A.2d 844, 148 Pa. Super. 577, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-weiner-zvon-pasuperct-1942.