39 A.2d 734 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1944
Argued September 26, 1944.
Defendants, husband and wife, were found guilty in a general verdict on six counts of a single indictment. They were charged with keeping a disorderly house, a bawdy house, and a building for the purpose of prostitution and assignation. All of the charges were related and depended for their proof on the same acts of the defendants. We agree that the evidence does *178
not support a conviction on any count except that of keeping a disorderly house and we will consider that charge alone. The sentences in this case were within the statutory penalty for that offense. If, therefore, the evidence sustains a conviction on that count, the judgments of sentence must be sustained although the proofs are insufficient to support convictions on the other counts. Com. v. Pearlman,
Defendants, together, operated the Biltmore Hotel at 1513 Arch Street in Philadelphia. The police in plain clothes entered the hotel at one o'clock in the morning of January 12, 1944, and found both defendants behind the desk where guests were registered. Within a short time, while the police were present two couples made requests for rooms. The officers also found a sailor and a woman in the hall waiting to secure a room. All of them were unmarried. While this was not evidence against the defendants there is other testimony charging them with knowingly providing rooms in the hotel for the purpose of fornication. An unmarried couple were found in bed in each of two rooms. Only the man had registered in each instance. Unmarried couples were found in beds in two other rooms. None of these occupants had baggage and the circumstances under which they applied for rooms put the defendants on notice of their unlawful intent. One registration card found at the desk indicated the assignment of a room to a couple during the evening preceding the raid. The officers found the room vacant but the bed showed evidence of use. The registration card, obviously fictictious with an attempt at humor, was signed Sgt. Fee Foo Fun. Defendants contend that the indiscriminate renting of rooms, even with notice of the unlawful purpose for which they were to be used, does not stamp the hotel a disorderly house under the statute because the disorder occurred wholly within *179 the building and did not result in a disturbance of the neighborhood.
Under the common law "Any act which has a direct tendency to corrupt the public morals, or which tends to shock the public sense of morality and decency, is a misdemeanor, whether covered by any statute or not": Com. v. Schoen,
Some kinds of houses become nuisances and therefore disorderly only when conducted in a manner annoying to the public; this class includes places where, e.g., drunkenness or boisterous conduct are encouraged or permitted (even in a duly licensed tavern) to the annoyance of the neighborhood. Other kinds of establishments are regarded in law as common nuisances affecting the public per se, such as bawdy houses and common gambling houses. Com. v. Ciccone,
In seeking a new trial defendants also argue that the court improperly admitted testimony of the defendant *181
husband against his wife. At common law, husband and wife are incompetent to testify against each other and the rule has never been relaxed. Canole v. Allen,
Judgments affirmed, and it is ordered that defendant Paul Hartung appear in the court below at such time as he may there be called and that he be committed until he has complied with the sentence imposed.