Urban's Appeal

24 A.2d 756, 148 Pa. Super. 101, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 20
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 20, 1941
DocketAppeal, 203
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 24 A.2d 756 (Urban's Appeal) 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
Urban's Appeal, 24 A.2d 756, 148 Pa. Super. 101, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 20 (Pa. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion, by

Cunningham, J.,

Frank Urban, appellant herein, is the owner .of several “pinball” machines and a member and representative of the Amusement Machines Association of Philadelphia. The association owns and had placed -in divers cigar and drug stores, luncheonettes, taprooms and other public plácés in the City of.'Philadelphia^ several hundred machines, under an arrangement with the proprietors of the stores, etc., for a division, of the coins deposited therein by the persons desirous of playing ■them. He now appeals,' for himself and-on behalf of the association, from an order of the court below entered April 30, 1941, by Levinthal, J., in which it was found that one hundred and eleven pinball machines, listed in the return and petition of the superintendent, of pólice at the above number and term, are devices intended to be used for the purpose of unlawful gaming and had been so employed and' used, and by Which the machines were adjudged forfeited and ordered'to-’be publicly destroyed. The proceedings originated by the *103 filing, on March 20, 1940, of two returns and petitions by Howard P. Sutton, Superintendent of Police of. the City of Philadelphia, — one at No. 21 March Term, 1941, in which two hundred machines were listed, and the other at No. 22 of that term, covering the one hundred and eleven machines included in the order now appealed from.

A similar order was entered March 21, 1941, (immediately following the hearing upon both petitions) for the destruction of the machines listed at No. 21; no appeal was taken from that order. In each petition it was averred that the machines identified therein had been seized by police officers while in operation in various stores, restaurants, etc., and had accumulated in the storeroom of the department of public safety. The prayer of each petition was that a decree be entered authorizing and directing the superintendent of police to destroy the machines therein listed.

The machines were seized and the returns and petitions presented under the provisions of Section 60 of the Penal Code of March 31, 1860, P. L. 382, 18 PS §1445. That section 1 provides, inter alia, that it shall be law *104 ful for any officer of justice, with or without warrant, to seize upon and remove “any device or machine of any kind, character or description whatsoever, used and employed for the purposes of unlawful gaming,” and that upon a return, in writing, to the next court of quarter sessions of the proper county, setting forth the nature and description of the machine so seized, the court, “if satisfied,” upon hearing the parties, “that such device or machine was employed and used for the purpose of unlawful gaming,......shall adjudge the same forfeited, and order it to be publicly destroyed.”

The validity of the order for the destruction of the one hundred and eleven machines here involved is challenged primarily upon the ground that the evidence introduced by the police department (appellant having offered none) was legally insufficient to support the decree. During the oral argument it was also suggested that Section 60 of the Penal Code of March 31, 1860, supra, had been repealed by the recent Penal Code of June 24, 1939, P. L. 872, effective September 1, 1939, 18 PS §4101 et seq., and supplemental briefs were submitted upon that question. Appellant’s contention upon this branch of the case is without merit.

A number of the provisions of the code of 1860 relating to unlawful gaming were reenacted in the code of *105 1939; for instance, section 55 of the Act of 1860, as amended in 1923, and 1925, 18 PS §1441, was substantially reenacted .as section 605 of the code of 1939, 18 PS §4605. By this section it is provided that whoever sets up or establishes or causes to be set up or established “any game or device of address, or hazard, at which money or other valuable thing may or shall be played for, or staked or betted upon” is guilty of a misdemeanor. (Italics supplied.) The concluding paragraph of the section reads: “That this section shall not be construed to apply to games of recreation and exercise, such as billiards, bagatelle, ten pins, et cetera, where no betting is allowed(Italics supplied.)

Other sections of the code of 1860 defining and punishing certain offenses coming under the general subject of gambling, and the Act of April 29, 1925, P. L. 357, 18 PS §1447, prohibiting the manufacture of gambling devices, are reenacted as sections 604 and 606 of the code of 1939, 18 PS §§4604, 4606. It is true that neither section 59 of the code of 1860, 18 PS §1444, relative to the seizure of gaming devices or apparatus upon warrants issued by magistrates along with warrants for the arrest of persons charged with being common gamblers, setting up a gambling house or enticing persons to visit the same, nor section 60 of the code of 1860 (here involved) was expressly reenacted in the code of 1939. But it does not follow that these sections were repealed by the new code. Section 1201 of the code of 1939, 18 PS §5201, is the repealing section and recites a list of acts and parts of acts repealed, in whole or in part, but subject to certain qualifications therein set forth. This list includes the entire Penal Code of March 31, 1860, P. L. 382, but, as indicated, it is expressly provided in the repealing section, of the new code that the acts and parts of acts therein cited for repeal are not repealed “in so far as the same (a) relate to the jurisdiction to indict and try offenses; or (b) fix the limitation of time within which persons charged with offenses *106 may be indicted; or (c) relate to evidence or the competency of witnesses; or (d) relate to search and seizure; or (e) relate to the return of transcripts of cases; or (f) relate to tbe form or contents of indictments.” (Italics supplied.)

We adopt tbe following excerpt from an unreported opinion by Finletter, P. J., filed at March Term 1940, Miscellaneous Docket, of the court below, and referred to in the supplemental briefs: “The Act of 1939 saves from repeal all parts of the Act of 1860 which ‘relate to search and seizure.’ ‘Relate’ is a very broad word and must refer not only to......the seizure of the unlawful devices, but also to the disposition of the latter. All of these things ‘relate’ to the subject, and with anything that relates thereto the amending act evidently intended no repeal. To hold that it did would be to convict the legislature of a vacillation of policy, which is not apparent in the later act unless the contention of the defendant is assented to. The policy of the legislature in both statutes is hostile to gambling, and, that being so, it cannot'be believed, in the absence of express repeal, that any relaxation was intended by the amending act. If such was the intent it was most inaptly expressed by preserving from repeal anything that ‘related’ to search and seizure.”

In approaching the consideration of the controlling question of law .involved upon this appeal — the sufficiency of the evidence upon this record to satisfy an unbiased mind to that degree of certainty which a judicial disposition of the issue requires that the machines listed in the petition at No.

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Bluebook (online)
24 A.2d 756, 148 Pa. Super. 101, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/urbans-appeal-pasuperct-1941.