Opinion by
Joseph J. McHugh and Robert K. Malloy appealed from judgments of sentence imposed by the Court of Quarter Sessions of Lackawanna County after their conviction, together with certain other defendants, of the crime of conspiracy. The indictment charged de *571 fendants, Joseph Bartell [Bartel], Philip E. Brady, Joseph J. McHugh, and Robert K. Malloy, with conspiring to unlawfully, willfully, wantonly and maliciously damage and destroy and cause to be damaged or destroyed a certain partially built and constructed building in the City of Scranton. All the defendants were convicted on the charge of conspiracy; the jury returned a verdict of not guilty, however, on another indictment charging malicious mischief.
Appellants contend that they did not receive a fair and impartial trial because of the closing argument of the district attorney which is alleged to have been inflammatory and prejudicial, and because of the charge of the court which is alleged to have been argumentative in favor of the Commonwealth.
Appellants and their co-defendants were officials of various labor unions in the Scranton area. In 1953, a nonunion construction company from Luzerne County contracted to build a house for Joseph and Ellen Denny on Seymour Avenue in the City of Scranton. Work was started on December 29, 1953. On December 31, 1953, as the work progressed, Joseph Bartell, one of the defendants who has not appealed, appeared on the job. His home joins the rear of the Denny property. Bartell was business agent for the local carpenters’ union and was president of an organization of trade unions called the Scranton Building Trades Council. Bartell asked who was doing the work and whether it was a union job; upon being told that it was not a union job he said that it had better be. Work continued on the building, and McHugh placed a picket from the teamsters’ union at the job.
On January 15, 1954, a group consisting of twenty to forty men appeared at the premises. They climbed on the scaffolding, forced off the men working on the building, removed the mixing tool from the workmen *572 at the mortar box, and surrounded a truck which was delivering material. The workmen were warned that there would be trouble if any more work was done on the building. After the work had been forcibly stopped, appellants McHugh and Malloy appeared at the premises.
On January 17, 1954, appellants were among, those who met with approximately twenty-five men who were connected with, labor unions in Scranton. Malloy announced that the purpose of the gathering was to do a job on the nonunion construction, and that they were going to damage the foundation walls. He further stated that the nonunion contractor had a nerve to construct a building practically in the back yard of President Bartell of the Scranton Building Trades Council, and that they were going to teach the contractor a lesson. The group then obtained wrecking bars, and between ten thirty and eleven o’clock that evening, they proceeded to the Denny property. Appellants and the co-defendants were present and participated in damaging and destroying the property. Malloy destroyed the cement; McHugh used a crowbar to punch holes in the cinder block wall. Other members of the group participated in the criminal acts, which reveal the antecedent conspiracy.
The sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the convictions is not questioned by appellants on these appeals. The questions raised are limited to the district attorney’s closing address to the jury and to the charge of the court.
The closing remarks of the district attorney are alleged by these appellants to have been improper, inflammatory, and prejudicial. A district attorney is a quasi judicial officer charged with important duties which include the proper presentation of the case for the Commonwealth as the circumstances demand.
*573
Com. v. Exler,
Bearing in mind these basic principles, we examine the specific remarks of the district attorney in this case to which objection is made. In the first part of his argument the district attorney stated to the jury: “God forbid that the house wasn’t built when that swarm of people went over that night, or they would
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have flattened it to the earth!” In commenting upon this remark, the court below said in its opinion: “In closing defense counsel implored the jury not to brand defendants as criminals for $35 worth of building materials and characterized the crime as nothing ‘more serious than a Halloween prank.’ It was, • therefore, proper for the District Attorney to point to evidence that the property destroyed was worth hundreds of dollars; to assert that it was a serious matter; and to argue that the violent and lawless nature of the events indicated that more destruction would have been accomplished had the construction progressed further toward completion at the time. This was fair comment.” Appellants cannot complain of remarks which were invited or provoked by the argument of the defense, where such remarks were not excessive but were justified replies.
Com. v.
Sloat,
Appellants also complain that the district attorney, in the course of his argument, stated to the jury that on a certain day a conspiracy was announced, and further that he referred to one ■ of the witnesses who testified for the Commonwealth against defendants as
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a fellow conspirator; both statements, it is alleged, assumed the existence of the conspiracy, the fact in issue. We observe that defense counsel did not object to the remark of the district attorney concerning the announcement of the conspiracy, and that, after the district attorney had referred to a Commonwealth witness as a fellow conspirator, he withdrew his remark on the objection of defense counsel. However, we have examined both remarks in the context and, in view of the evidence, find that they could not have been prejudicial. The remark concerning the announcement of a conspiracy was based upon the evidence and was a fair argument thereon. The reference to one of the Commonwealth’s witnesses as a fellow conspirator was an isolated incident which was immediately corrected. While the district attorney should always be cautious in expressing to the jury his personal belief in the guilt of the accused, any remark to that effect may be rendered harmless, as in the present case, unless it appears that the district attorney exceeded the limits of fair argument and appealed solely to the prejudices of the jury.
Com. v. Bubnis,
supra,
Appellants’ next contention relates to the final summation in the argument of the district attorney. In particular, complaint is made to a statement that, while these union men had rights which they could have exercised according to law, they rejected the law of the land and resorted to the use of force and violence, the “law of the jungle,” and that such activities, if allowed to persist, were a threat to the person and property of individuals in the community such as the jurors. The remarks of the district attorney were in answer to the arguments of defense counsel that defendants, as officials of the unions, were trained to do things in a legal way Avithout violence; that this was an issue of union against nonunion labor; and that these defendants and their families suffered by reason of publicity and of anonymous telephone calls, and because their children did not want to attend school as a result thereof. The summation of the district attorney refuted these arguments. As the court below said: “The argument was strong and persuasive but not improper or inflammatory. Every aspect was in reply to defense appeal. The District Attorney was, certainly, entitled to argue that while unions have rights which the defendants could have exercised according to law, they preferred to gain their ends by force and violence; that in so doing they rejected the law of the land and resorted to the law of the jungle’ or other methods of a more primitive civilization.” A district attorney may argue, Avithin the bounds of propriety, in favor of law and order, and in so doing-may remind the jury of the danger to the community posed by persons prone to resort to violence. See
Com.
*577
v. Morrison,
Appellants finally complain that the charge of the court was argumentative and favored the Commonwealth. We have fully examined the charge of the court, and it is our conclusion that the trial judge fairly and adequately explained the law, reviewed the evidence, and set forth the contentions of both the Commonwealth and the defense. We find no overemphasis of the Commonwealth’s case or any minimizing of the contentions of the defense. The arguments here are similar to those presented in
Com. v. Bartell,
We are of the opinion that the appeals are entirely devoid of merit; they merely delay compliance with the sentences imposed. The trial was conducted by Judge Robinson in a competent manner, and no constitutional or other right of appellants was violated.
Judgments of sentence are affirmed; the record is remitted to the court below, and it is ordered that defendants appear in the court below at such time as they may there be called, and that they be by that *578 court committed until they bave complied with tbe sentences, or any parts thereof which have not been performed at the time each appeal was made a supersedeas.
