21 Pa. Super. 217 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1902
Opinion by
This is an appeal from an order quashing an indictment containing nine counts. It is contended that this .was an interlocutory order from which no appeal lies, because it was coupled with an order, made on the district attorney’s motion, directing the defendant to give bail for his appearance at the next term. This position is not tenable. The order was final although it did not have the effect of an acquittal of the defendant. Holding him to bail to answer a new indictment based on the same information and commitment orto answer the present indictment in case of reversal did not change the nature of the order. See Commonwealth v. Bartilson, 85 Pa. 482.
All of the counts of the indictments were evidently intended to be drawn under the Act of June 8, 1881, P. L. 70, entitled “ An act to prevent bribery and fraud at nominating elections, nominating conventions, returning boards, county or executive committees, and at election of delegates to nominating conventions, in the several counties in this commonwealth.”
The indictment alleges generally, that at a nominating or delegate election, commonly known as a primary election, held by the qualified electors of the Republican party at the several voting districts and precincts of the county, the defendant and David Ruckle were rival candidates for the office of county chairman of said party, that ballots were cast for each of them by the qualified electors at the said election, and that the defendant was returned and elected to the office.
Four of the counts allege that offers and promises of bribes were made by the defendant to four different electors of four different districts, on condition, in the case of one elector, that he should cast his vote at the election above referred to for the defendant for the office of county chairman, and, in the case of each of the other electors, that he should use his influence at
Do these counts charge indictable offenses ? The determination of this question requires us to construe the 1st section of the act of 1881.
Taking bribes by electors and corruptly influencing or intimidating electors were offenses punishable under the Penal Code of 1860, and earlier statutes. Speaking of these provisions the revisors said: “ The 50th and 51st sections will be found to be amendments of existing laws punishing the bribery of electors; a crime which saps the very foundation of our entire political system; substantially, they are the same as the 122d and 123d sections of the Act of July 2,1839, P. L. 546, except that the offenses have been more precisely defined and the punishments thereof made to bear a more just relation to the enormity of the crimes:” Report on the Penal Code, 20. It is apparent, however, that these provisions related to the election of public officers, and so far as we are aware were never understood to apply to primary elections. This was the view taken by the Supreme Court in Commonwealth v. Wells, 110 Pa. 463, where the subject of the application to primary elections of the provisions of the act of 1839 relative to wagering upon the result of “any election within this commonwealth ” was under consideration. See, also, Leonard v. Commonwealth, 112 Pa. 607, at p. 623. But as was forcibly declared by Mr. Justice Paxson in the case last cited, “ many of the frauds which affect elections, and sometimes thwart
In a statute the meaning of words may be this or that, according to the subject, context and other particular circumstances. The province of the courts is to determine the meaning the legislature intended them to have. The rule of strict construction in favor of the accused is not violated by giving the words a reasonable meaning, according to the sense in which they were intended, even though in a different connection a more restricted meaning would be ascribed to them. “Strict construction is not the same thing-as construing everything to defeat the action,” or, we may add, the prosecution. “This is not what is meant by the expressionThompson, J., in Bartolett v. Achey, 38 Pa. 273. In the construction of statutes it may sometimes become necessary to transpose words or even to supply or strike out a word which the context shows was omitted or inserted by mistake. Instances are not lacking in the reports where this has been done in order to effectuate the intention of the legislature. But where an enactment is plain and sensible, and, according to any meaning, broad or narrow, popular or technical, which may be ascribed to the words, does not apply to the case in hand, it is not permissible for the courts to add or omit words, in order to make it so apply, even though it may be clear to them that the case is as fully within the mischief to be remedied as the cases provided for. This would be, not to construe, but to amend the law, which is within the exclusive province of the legislature.
The sixth count was evidently intended to be drawn under the second paragraph of the 6th section of the act, which makes it a misdemeanor for any person, whether a candidate for office or not, by the offer or promise of money, office, appointment, employment, testimonial, reward or other thing of value, or by threats or intimidation — we quote from the language of the act — to “ endeavor to influence a member of a county or executive committee of any party, a judge or clerk
It is urged that even if each of the counts, as a separate indictment, would be good, yet the indictment as a whole was bad because of the joinder therein of several distinct offenses. We cannot assent to this proposition. It is well settled that it cannot be objected in error, or on demurrer or in arrest of judgment that two or more offenses of the same nature on which the same or similar judgment may be given are contained in different counts of the same indictment: Commonwealth v. Gillespie, 7 S. & R. 469 ; Harman v. Commonwealth, 12 S. & R. 69; Commonwealth v. Sylvester, Brightly’s Rep. 381; Henwood v. Commonwealth, 52 Pa. 424; Commonwealth v. Birdsall, 69 Pa. 482 ; Commonwealth v. Stahl, 1 Pa. Superior Ct. 496. See also Stevick v. Commonwealth, 78 Pa. 460 ; Hunter v. Commonwealth, 79 Pa. 503; Staeger v. Commonwealth, 103 Pa. 469; Commonwealth v. Rockafellow, 3 Pa. Superior Ct. 588, 596; Commonwealth v. Liebtreu, 1 Pears. 107. As to quashing an indictment for this cause, some of the earlier decisions made a distinction between felonies and misdemeanors. But as all of the offenses which this indictment charges are misdemeanors, we are not required to consider to what extent this distinction is still recognized. It is further to be noticed that the distinct acts charged in the several counts of the indictment were not unrelated in nature, purpose or effect. All of them are alleged to have been committed to influence the same election and to accomplish a single result, namely, the election of the defendant to the office of county chairman. Such being the case, it is clear, both upon reason and upon authority, that the inclusion of these charges in several distinct counts of the same indictment was not such
One other objection remains to be noticed. The information charged the making of offers or promises of bribes to three different electors, naming them, and the making of similar offers and promise to divers electors, whose names were not given. At the hearing before the committing magistrate, as stated in his transcript, no evidence was offered other than that which appertained to two of the electors specifically named, but the transcript does not clearly and unequivocally show that the charge as to the other electors was withdrawn by the prosecutor or dismissed by the magistrate. The indictment, as we have seen, charges the making of offers or promises of bribes to the two electors last referred to, to one elector specifically mentioned in the information, but as to whom no evidence was given at the preliminary hearing and to another elector who was not specifically mentioned by name in the information. Five months elapsed between the finding of the indictment and the motion to quash, and in the mean time the cause was twice continued.
Strictly speaking the two counts last referred to do not contain charges not preferred before the magistrate, and it would be an unwarranted extension of the rule laid down in Rowand v. Commonwealth, 82 Pa. 405; Commonwealth v. Green, 126 Pa. 531, and kindred cases, to make the sufficiency of the evidence given on the preliminary hearing the test by which to determine the validity of the action of the district attorney in sending the indictment before the grand jury. But be that as it may, viewing the information as a whole, and giving it a reasonable intendment, and looking also at the transcript, the objection under consideration was, at the utmost, valid as to the seventh, eighth and ninth counts only.
It has been said that if there be one good count, the motion to quash, as a general rule, will not be sustained. In a case where the court had quashed an indictment containing two counts, the Supreme Court, in reversing the order and reinstat
The order so far as it relates to the sixth count is reversed, and so far as it relates to the other counts is affirmed, and the record is remitted to the court below with a procedendo.