Commonwealth v. Woodward

168 A. 347, 110 Pa. Super. 478
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 1, 1933
DocketAppeal 242
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 168 A. 347 (Commonwealth v. Woodward) 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. Woodward, 168 A. 347, 110 Pa. Super. 478 (Pa. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

On May 10, 1932, Lawrence Woodward, alias Larry Woodward, alias Lawrence Boyle, the appellant herein, was convicted at No. Ill February Term, 1932, of the court of Quarter Sessions of Erie County, of hav *480 ing, on March 3, 1932, feloniously broken and entered “box car No. P. R. R. 92408,” then standing upon a designated track of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, with intent to “steal, take and carry away” the property of that company contained therein.

The following day he was sentenced to pay a fine, pay costs, and undergo imprisonment in the Allegheny County Workhouse for an indefinite term of from two to four years.

On August 8, 1932, the district attorney of Erie County invoked against him the provisions of the Act of April 29,1929, P. L. 854, “authorizing the sentencing of persons convicted for a second or subsequent offense of certain crimes to additional prison terms and to imprisonment for life.”

Thereupon, the court below directed that appellant be brought before it on September 14, 1932, for the purpose of answering the information filed by the district attorney, accusing him of four previous convictions of crimes of the character set forth in the Act of 1929, “and for the purpose of being tried as an habitual criminal.”

As the result of the trial, then conducted before the court below with the aid of a jury, the trial judge, on October 11, 1932, vacated the sentence imposed May 11,1932, and sentenced appellant to undergo imprisonment in the Western Penitentiary, “by separate or solitary confinement • at labor, for and during the period of his natural life.” The appeal now before us is from that sentence.

Material facts, established by the admissions of appellant upon the witness stand, the verdict of the jury, and stipulations filed by counsel, may be thus stated.

(1) On December 8, 1913, appellant, under the alias of Lawrence Boyle, was sentenced by a court of criminal jurisdiction in and for Chautauqua County, New *481 York, to imprisonment in the New York State Reformatory, at Elmira, upon his plea of guilty to an indictment charging him with having committed the crime of perjury on March 12, 1913, in the course of the trial of a criminal case involving a charge of petty larceny, a misdemeanor under the laws of that state.

By the statutes then in force in the state of New York, the maximum penalty for perjury, committed under such circumstances, was imprisonment for ten years.

Appellant was released from the reformatory, on parole, February 13, 1915, and was not returned to that institution.

(2) On November 24, 1915, appellant, under the alias of Lawrence Boyle, was sentenced by a criminal court of Chautauqua County, New York, to imprisonment for a term of two years and five months in Auburn Prison, upon his plea of guilty to an indictment charging him, along with one Floyd "Woodward, with the offense of having, on September 9, 1915, feloniously broken and entered, at the City of Jamestown, freight car No. 72672 of the Erie Railroad, with intent to steal and carry away the merchandise therein.

At his trial in Erie County on September 20, 1932, under the provisions of the Act of 1929, appellant denied he was the person convicted and sentenced to the above mentioned terms for the above described offenses of perjury and breaking and entering a railroad car, but the jurors, to whom the question of the identity of appellant with the Lawrence Boyle, indicted and sentenced as above, was specifically submitted, found, by their verdict, that appellant “is the same person” as the one sentenced and imprisoned as set forth in the above paragraphs, numbered (1) and (2).

We may say in passing that, in our opinion, the issues of fact which arose in this proceeding were properly submitted to the jury and that its findings are supported by competent evidence.

*482 (3) On September 11, 1919, appellant, under the alias of Lawrence Boyle, was convicted at No. 19, September Term, 1919, of the court of quarter sessions of Erie County, Pennsylvania, of the crime of having, in the night time of July 3, 1919, feloniously broken and entered a garage building, in the Borough of Girard, with intent to steal the property therein, and of having stolen therefrom a Packard automobile and accessories, the property of C. Elizabeth Battles. On the same day he was sentenced to the Western Penitentiary for an indefinite term of from three years and nine months to seven years.

(4) On February 13, 1925, appellant, under his own proper name, was convicted at No. 23, February Term, 1925, of the court of quarter sessions of Erie County, of the crime of having, on December 25, 1924, feloniously broken and entered a box car, on the tracks of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company in the City of Corry, with intent to steal the property therein, and of having stolen shoes therefrom of the value of about $300.

The following day he was sentenced to pay a fine and the costs of prosecution, make restitution, and undergo imprisonment in the Western Penitentiary for an indefinite term of from one year and six months to three years, to begin at the expiration of his sentence at No. 19, September Term, 1919.

Appellant, when on the stand, admitted his identity with the Lawrence Boyle convicted at No. 19, September Term, 1919, of the quarter sessions of Erie County, as set out in paragraph (3) hereof.

The “certain crimes,” referred to in the title to the Act of 1929, are thus enumerated in Section 1: “Treason, murder, voluntary manslaughter, sodomy, buggery, burglary, entering with intent to steal, robbery, arson, mayhem, kidnapping, sale of narcotics, perjury, abortion, pandering, incest, or any offense committed *483 or attempted to be committed through the instrumentality of or with the aid of a deadly weapon or gunpowder or other explosive substance or corrosive fluid.”

The act makes a classification, as to the possible punishment authorized, of defendants shown to have been previously convicted, based upon the number of such convictions; the first class includes those having either one or two convictions against them, and the second those having three or more.

As to the first class, Section 1 provides, in substance, that a defendant who has been convicted, “within or without the Commonwealth,” of any of the specified crimes, may, “upon conviction of any of such crimes for a second offense committed within five years after the first offense, or subsequent offense committed within five years after the prior offense, be sentenced to imprisonment for a term the maximum of which shall not be more than twice the longest term prescribed upon a first conviction for the crime in question.”

With respect to the second class, the authority to impose a sentence of life imprisonment upon a defendant, whose criminal record places him within it, is found in Section 2, reading:

‘ ‘ Section 2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 A. 347, 110 Pa. Super. 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-woodward-pasuperct-1933.