42 Pa. Super. 115 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1910
Opinion by
The defendant, Bolger, was tried and convicted upon a bill of indictment which charged him with the offense of bribery or corrupt solicitation. The indictment was not preceded by an information before a magistrate, a hearing before him, and a binding over for trial in the usual and customary manner.
It appears that the grand jury of Allegheny county, in the spring of 1909, began a general inquiry into the subject of bribery of members of city councils of Pittsburg, after such an investigation had been duly given them in charge by the court of quarter sessions thén sitting. At the conclusion of their inquiry they made a 'lengthy presentment reciting that they'had investigated a number of separate and distinct transactions and had summoned, and presumably heard, “ fifty-three wit
Following this presentment recommending the indictment of the present defendant, among others, the district attorney prepared, and by direction of the court, sent up a bill indorsing on it, as the witnesses for the commonwealth, the names of the two persons mentioned in the grand jury’s report. It was returned a true bill. The defendant was brought to trial, was again confronted by the testimony of the same two witnesses and was found guilty.
The appellant does not allege that the bill of indictment on which he was tried lacked any legal requirement of form or substance. Nor does he complain of any error in the rulings of the learned trial court upon questions of evidence, or of the manner in which the evidence was summed up and submitted in the general charge, or that the evidence, if believed by the jury, was insufficient to support the verdict they rendered.
At the very opening of the trial the defendant moved to quash the bill, not because of any irregularity exhibited by the record as it then existed, but because of certain alleged facts dehors the record, the existence of which he offered to establish by his own testimony. The learned judge sustained the objection made to this offer and the refusal of the motion to quash followed.
“It cannot now be doubted that an indictment may be
What then was the offer? We quote it in full. “Counsel for defendant offer to-show by the proposed witness, Mr. Bolger, that upon the 15th day of March, 1909, having been subpoenaed by the commonwealth, he appeared before the grand jury in the course of its investigation which led to the indictments in this and other cases; that upon the 19th day of March following the appearance of Mr. Bolger, the presentment in this case was handed to the court; that the presentment filed upon the 19th of March recommended the indictment of the defendant here who had testified before the same grand jury on the 15th of March; that the deliberations of said grand jury extended from the 15th of March up to
The learned counsel for appellant argues from the existence of the facts, in the offer stated, the conclusion clearly follows that the defendant was robbed of the privilege secured to every citizen by the constitutional declaration that “in all criminal prosecutions the accused .... cannot be compelled to give evidence against himself.”
The literature of the law contained in our reports, federal and state, is exceeding rich in discussions by eminent jurists covering almost every conceivable case in which this general constitutional privilege could require judicial interpretation. Professor Wigmore, in the fourth volume of his work on Evidence, has given us a complete history of the origin, rise and development of the doctrine. But the solution of the question before us does not in our judgment take us so far afield. In turning to a more particular examination of that question we may, we think, quote with profit one general proposition announced by the author last named as resting both on reason and authority, viz.: “In preserving the privilege, however, we must resolve not to give it more than its due significance. We are to respect it rationally for its merits, not worship it blindly as a fetish.”
There is no law, natural, civil or moral, which forbids to a criminal the right to divulge his guilty secret, and thus perhaps best begin the work of his own reformation. But out of our knowledge that innocent men are sometimes accused, and our conception of the dignity and self-respect which ought to characterize the conduct of the government of a great people, even in the detection and punishment of crime, have been born the principle that one accused must not be compelled to help in bringing about his own conviction. The constitution then confers upon every citizen the personal privilege of remaining silent whenever it reasonably appears that his testimony or declaration might result in self-incrimination.
Manifestly, then, no possible infringement of the privilege can be predicated of the facts that one is summoned to appear’ as a witness before a lawful tribunal and examined upon oath. There is no room yet. for any assumption by such person that his constitutional privilege will be impaired or denied. It is not the object of the privilege to exempt any citizen, not a defendant, from the obligation to appear as a witness when duly summoned, and the only purpose and effect of the subpoena are to enforce the performance of this duty and procure the desired attendance.
The offer next asserts the fact that the grand jury, before
But a single additional fact is contained in the offer, viz.: “And further that the examination of the defendant when he appeared before the grand jury was confined to the circumstances involving the charge upon which this indictment is founded.” From this carefully guarded and somewhat ob
Further, the inference we are asked to draw not only finds no support in the record of the grand jury, but is practically contradicted- by that record. The presentment of the grand jury declares in substance at least, if not in so many words, that the testimony, which in their judgment called for the indictment of this defendant, was that of Ramsey and Vilsack, the bank officers, because they gave to the district attorney the names of these two witnesses as those whose testimony
The record further shows that the presentment against one Charles Stewart, a member of select council, was rested on some of the same circumstances out of which grew the indictment of this defendant. Why should we undertake to assume that the testimony of the defendant before the grand jury, even if “confined to the circumstances involving the charge upon which this indictment is founded,” was not directed towards a discovery of the connection of that municipal officer with the transaction then the subject of investigation? In Com. v. Mosier, 135 Pa. 221, Mr. Justice Paxson said: “The second assignment alleges that the court below erred in refusing to quash the indictment because the wife of the defendant was examined before the grand jury as a witness, and testified against her husband contrary to law. It nowhere appears that she testified against her husband contrary to law. The defendant was indicted for the crime of adultery. The Act of May 23, 1887, P. L. 158, expressly authorizes the wife to testify to the marriage, upon a charge of adultery against the husband. We have nothing here but the indorsement of the wife’s name as a witness on the back of the bill of indictment; and, in the absence of any information as to what she testified to, we must presume she was examined only as to matters to which she was a competent witness.”
So we say here. The fair presumptions that flow from the record, as it existed at the time the motion to quash was made, point to the conclusion that this defendant was deprived of no constitutional right. It was his right to place upon the record, if he could, the facts which would properly raise the conclu
The view we have thus taken renders it unnecessary to discuss several interesting phases of the question carefully argued in the able briefs submitted or to attempt to review and analyze many cases therein cited. As we have stated, from the moment the bill was returned by the grand jury to that when sentence was pronounced, we have a record singularly free from even the allegation of substantial trial errors. The main claim of the appellant is that in the fact that the grand jury — at a time when no indictment was pending, and when that body was engaged in a general investigation of the manner in which the municipal business of a great city had been conducted, — called him as a witness along with fifty-two other citizens, and-then subsequently, on abundant testimony from sources outside himself, presented him for indictment and found a true bill against him, there is wrapped up the legal conclusion that he was deprived of his constitutional privilege. When we come to measure his claim by the rule of the practical, the substantial and the tangible, it seems to elude our grasp. To the writer it appears to be rather an appeal to the hypercritical eye of the casuist than to that broad sense of justice which ought to keep the judicial mind alert to see that no man, accused of or tried for crime, is deprived of any substantial, right secured to him by the constitution and laws of the commonwealth.
After the jury had retired and begun to deliberate upon their verdict they sent to the trial judge a request for further instruction or information. The jury was brought back to the court room and the learned trial judge then read aloud their note of inquiry. This seemed to indicate to him that there was an impression in the minds of the jury, or some of them, that there was no testimony of any direct payment of money.
We are unable to see wherein the learned trial judge in any way overstepped the boundaries of judicial propriety in giving such instructions. We know of no precedent in Pennsylvania holding that any reversible error would be committed by a trial judge when, in answer to a request made by the jury, he permits their recollection to be refreshed by reading a portion of the testimony actually delivered on the trial, concerning which some misapprehension had arisen in the minds of the jury. It was upon the evidence as actually delivered that the defendant was to be tried, and we do not deem it necessary to collate the precedents, all of which tend to show that no reversible error can be found in the action of the trial court thus complained of.
The judgment is affirmed and the record is remitted to the court of quarter sessions of Allegheny county with direction that the judgment be fully carried into effect, and to that end it is ordered that the defendant appear in that court and that he be by that court committed to serve and comply with such part of his sentence as had not been performed at the time this appeal was made a supersedeas.