79 Pa. Super. 428 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1922
Opinion by
Appellant was tried and convicted of charges made in fourteen bills of indictment; a new trial was granted as to four, and sentence was suspended as to nine. He was sentenced on a bill charging felonious entry, larceny and receiving stolen goods and has appealed,, alleging errors, now considered in the order stated in the argument presented on his behalf.
The first assignment asserts that “appellant did not have a fair, impartial and judicial trial in the court below.” In support of that the brief states that “It appears by the informations filed in this and other cases that the defendant, together with six others was charged with felonious entry and kindred offenses committed as alleged by all of the defendants jointly who were indicted in fifty-three bills of indictment, upon which they were proceeded against in the court below in separate trials.
The second, third and fourth assignments are grouped in appellant’s argument. The second complains of the refusal to quash the indictment; the third, of the refusal to arrest the judgment; and the fourth of the refusal to grant a new trial. The motion to quash was based on the proposition that as the informations showed that a number of persons were charged with having committed offenses, they should have been indicted together and not separately, and that section 65 of the Act of March 31, 1860, P. L. 427, and the Act of March 10, 1905, P. L. 35, prohibited the separate indictment of the parties jointly accused in the information.
The fifth assignment of error complains of the following extract from the charge: “Jacobs was also implicated in the commission of these offenses by the three witnesses to whom the court has referred; but he appears in this case as a witness only,” “without [so appellant now contends] at the same time, advising the jury that1 Jacobs had been acquitted on a former trial of all the offenses charged against him and the defendant.” We consider this harmless and can conceive of no way in which the statement injured appellant. Moreover, as the attention
The sixth assignment is to the following extract from the charge: “In this connection, too, the court observes to you that it is not unusual for counsel for the defendant to condemn officers. Much testimony in this case consists of that given by the officers. The presumption of honesty abides with the officers as well as other witnesses, and it is not to the discredit of any officer that he seeks to find lawbreakers and criminals. There is nothing, in the court’s opinion, in this case, that would warrant the conclusion that the officers have not acted from proper motives; but, we say to you that the arrest of Kreisher was not lawful. The officers were not armed with a warrant and Kreisher could have been discharged from custody upon a writ of habeas corpus; but, when he entered bail he waived all irregularities relative to his arrest. These circumstances, while they appear in the trial of this case, are not very important.” We might likewise dismiss that assignment, as not reviewable on a general exception, but we have considered it and find it without error. The suggestion made in appellant’s argument is that “there was every reason and justification for the defense, in addressing the jury, to refer to and criticize the activity and undoubted attempt to impress upon the defendant their importance as officers, although they were imposters, to attempt to extort on more than one occasion, statements from the defendant, who from the beginning to the end denied his connection with the charge.” We are not advised what the learned counsel for the defendant said in addressing the jury, necessitating the comment by the court now complained of, nor does the record show that any of the officers were imposters. We find no error in the assignment.
The judgment is affirmed and the record remitted to the court below and it is ordered that the defendant appear in that court at such time as he may be there called and that he be by that court committed until he has complied with the sentence or any part of it which, had not been performed at the time the appeal in this case was made a supersedeas.