Commonwealth v. Widovich

93 Pa. Super. 323, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 333
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 12, 1928
DocketAppeals 1506, 1507, 1508 and 1509
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 93 Pa. Super. 323 (Commonwealth v. Widovich) 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. Widovich, 93 Pa. Super. 323, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 333 (Pa. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

On June 8, 1927, a grand jury sitting in Beaver County returned as a true bill an indictment containing sis counts in each of which Philip Widovich, Peter Muselin, Tom Zima, Milan Resetar and Steve Bratich were charged with violations of the Act of June 26, 1919, P. L. 639, entitled “An Act defining sedition, and prescribing the punishment therefor,” as amended by the Act of May 10, 1921, P. L. 435. The act contains two sections, the first defining the word “sedition” under eight lettered paragraphs, and the second making the offense, as defined, a felony and prescribing the punishment. One of the defendants, Philip Widovich, has not been apprehended and the trial proceeded against his four co-defendants, of whom Muselin, Zima and Resetar are naturalized citizens and Bratich has obtained his first papers. At its conclusion the learned *326 trial judge instructed the jury that the Common-wealth had not produced evidence which would sustain a conviction of any of the defendants upon the second, third! or sixth counts of the indictment. The case was submitted to the jury as against all four defendants upon the first count,' and a verdict of guilty as to each rendered thereon; it was also submitted against certain defendants, as hereinafter stated, upon the fourth and fifth counts. Each defendant has appealed from the judgment pronounced against him and these four appeals were argued together and will be disposed of in one opinion. The first count was drawn under paragraph (a) of section 1 of the act which provides “that the word 'sedition,’ as used in this act, shall mean:

¡Any writing, publication, printing, cut, cartoon, utterance, or conduct, either individually or in connection or combination with any other person or persons, the intent of which is:

(a) To make' or cause to be made any outbreak or demonstration of violence against this State or against the United States.”

The seditious conduct specifically charged in this count was “by word of mouth, urging upon each other and upon other persons to acquire arms, ammunition and dynamite, to band themselves together to organize and drill, and to overthrow and destroy the government of this Commonwealth and of the United States by force, arms and bloodshed.”

The fourth count was drawn under paragraph (h) of section 1 of the act which provides that sedition “ shall also include......

(h) Organizing or helping to organize or becoming a member of an-assembly, society, or group, where any of the policies or purposes thereof are seditious as hereinbefore defined.’’, As drawn the count charged, inter alia, that defendants “did.......help to organize and became members of the "Workers (Communist) Party of America, and did......help to organize and *327 became members of a branch of the Workers (Communist) Party of America, located in the said Borough of Woodlawn, in the County of Beaver in said Commonwealth, which Workers (Communist) Party of America and the aforesaid branch thereof, had for its policies and purposes the....,. .overthrow of the government of this Commonwealth and of- the United States, by force, arms, dynamite and bloodshed, ..:... and the .setting up in this country of a Soviet Repub-' lie.”

This count was submitted to the jury as against only one of the defendants, Muselin, but through some misunderstanding of the instructions, a verdict of guilty on it was returned against Zima and Resetar, as well as Muselin. As the defendants were not sentenced under any particular counts and as the sentences of Zima and Resetar were less than might have been imposed under the first count, this error on the part of the jury would not require a. reversal of; the judgments against them.

The fifth count, upon which only Muselin and Resetar were convicted, was drawn under paragraph (g) enacting that-sedition shall also include “the sale, gift or distribution of any prints, publications, books, papers,documents, or writtenmatter in any form,which advocate’s, furthers or teaches sedition as hereinbefore defined. ’ ’ It charged that the defendants ‘ ‘ did...... sell, give away, have in their possession and distribute certain prints, publications, books, papers, documents and - other written matter, to wit, ‘ The Theory and Practice of Leninism’ [followed by a specification- by their titles of fourteen additional publications, including “The A. B. C. of Communism” and “Manifesto of the Communist International”], which said prints, publications, books, papers, documents and printed matter advocated, furthered and taught sedition, in part in the following language, which said language refers to-this Commonwealth and the'United .States” *328 and then follows a number of quotations from the texts of the above mentioned documents and publications. A number of publications and documents other than those specified in the indictment were admitted in evidence, as will hereinafter appear, for a limited purpose, but the jury was instructed that it could not convict on this count for disseminating any publications other than those specifically referred to in the indictment and that with respect to these there could be no. conviction unless the jury found from the evidence “that one or more of those books, writings or pamphlets were seditious in fact, as defined by that act of assembly, and that these defendants did actually sell, give away, or distribute those very prints, or some of them,” within the statutory period.

The case occupied a number of days in its trial and we have made a careful examination of the entire record, including more than seven hundred printed pages of testimony. Without attempting a detailed review of the testimony, which was conflicting upon vital points, it is sufficient to say that there was competent evidence from which a jury would be justified in finding these material facts. During the two years preceding the finding of the indictment, Muselin, Resetar and Zima were active members and the leaders of a local branch of the Workers (Communist) Party of America, designated as Branch 55 of District 5, and having about twenty members; Muselin and Resetar each served at different times in the office of secretary and procured and distributed book’s and pamphlets setting forth the policies and purposes of the organization including its official publication “The Daily Worker.” The Workers (Communist) Party of America is under the jurisdiction of and connected with the Third International of Moscow, having as its aim a world-wide revolution to overthrow all existing governments save that of Soviet Russia. Muselin, Resetar and Zima frequently taught *329 “by word of mouth” the doctrines contained in “The A. B. C. of Communism” and “The Theory and Practice of Leninism” etc. Some of these as set out in the indictment are:

“Now both in England and America, the preliminary condition of every real people’s revolution is the breaking and the destruction of the governmental machine. (The State and Revolution.) In other words, the destruction of the bourgeois govermnental machine, is the indispensable condition for the proletarian revolution, the inescapable law of the revolutionary movement in Imperialistic countries.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 Pa. Super. 323, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-widovich-pasuperct-1928.