175 A. 438 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1934
Argued September 24, 1934. Be it enacted, c., That if any person shall buy, have, or receive, within the limits of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, any goods, chattels, moneys, or securities, or any other matter or thing, which shall have been stolen or feloniously taken, either in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania or in any other State or country, knowing the same to have been stolen or feloniously taken, such person shall be guilty of felony, and, on conviction, suffer the like pains and penalties which are by law imposed upon the person who shall have actually stolen or feloniously carried away the same within the limits of this Commonwealth.
Appellant was convicted of having violated the provisions of the Act of April 23, 1909, P.L. 159, — the offense commonly known as `receiving stolen goods.' It will be noted that the act — which is printed in the margin — makes it a felony for any person to buy, have or receive any goods, etc. which shall have been stolen or feloniously taken, knowing the same to have beenstolen or feloniously taken. The sixth assignment of error complains that the learned trial judge in charging the jury defined the offense as follows: "Now, what is the crime of receiving stolen goods? The law says it is the acquiring of goods knowing them to have been stolen, or under such circumstances aswould lead a man of reasonable prudence to suspect that they werestolen." [Italics supplied.]
This was adding to the offense as defined by the General Assembly something that was not in the act. It was most material and in our opinion requires a reversal of the judgment. The act of assembly itself furnishes the best definition of the crime. It differs in form from the statute of June 20, 1919, P.L. 542, making it a felony to receive or bring into this Commonwealth goods, etc., stolen in any other State, in that in the latter act the words used are "knowing or having reasonable cause to know the [goods] to have been stolen."
The legislature, in the Act of 1909, supra, did not declare it to be a felony for a person to buy, have or *186 receive stolen goods `under such circumstances as would lead a man of reasonable prudence to suspect that they were stolen,' but only, `knowing the same to have been stolen.' Penal statutes must be strictly construed and cannot be enlarged in scope by the courts, to the prejudice of the accused. The instruction was wrong in two respects: (1) The question at issue was the knowledge of this particular defendant as to the goods having been stolen; not that of a hypothetical man of reasonable prudence; this defendant may, or may not, be a man of reasonable prudence; and (2) the question for the jury was whether this defendant knew, — not suspected — that the goods were stolen. Unless they found that he knew they were stolen at the time they were bought there could be no conviction.
Knowledge is of course subjective, and whether a person knows a thing or not is generally, or at least frequently, determined by circumstances. The jury may infer, from circumstances tending to show knowledge on the part of a defendant, that he knew that the goods he was buying were stolen, but in order to find him guilty of the offense charged they must be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt, that he knew they were stolen. It is not sufficient for them to find that the defendant should havesuspected they were stolen. In Kilrow v. Com.,
We are aware that there is some difference of opinion in other jurisdictions, but the decisions of the appellate courts in this Commonwealth do not justify the instruction complained of. The sixth assignment of error is sustained.
There is some ground for complaint by the appellant (see fourth and fifth assignments) relative to the *188 court's charge as to the defendant's character evidence. In view of our action on the sixth assignment we need not decide whether these portions of the charge constitute reversible error. On the retrial, however, the usual instructions relating to character evidence should be given without incorporating in them any qualification by reason of the defendant's oath as a policeman, or any reference to it in connection with such evidence. They are not related to each other.
The eighth and ninth assignments must also be sustained. The evidence shows that the two guns were delivered to the defendant at the same time. It was one transaction, and one offense, irrespective of whether the first offer to sell related to only one gun. The evidence justified only one sentence on conviction: Com. ex rel. Ciampoli v. Heston,
The judgment is reversed and a new trial awarded.