65 Pa. Super. 482 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1917
Opinion by
The appellants, Avith 19 others, were indicted in the Court of Quarter Sessions of Allegheny County, on a presentment by the grand jury and district attorney’s
All of these defendants save Merrick, were employees of the Westinghouse Manufacturing Electric Company, and early in April, 1916, an active agitation Avas started among the employees of several of the manufacturing industries in and near to the Borough of Braddock, Allegheny County, in regard to the wages then paid, the number of the working hours, and the discharge of some of the employees. To further their general purpose and common undertaking, an association was formed called the American Industrial Union, with John H, Hall, president, Edgar Donaldson, financial secretary, Rudolph Blum, corresponding secretary, and a treasurer.
The testimony is voluminous,, describing events occupying three weeks of time, and affecting directly or indirectly many thousands of people; the facts gathered through the examination of many witnesses, by careful review of the testimony, demonstrate beyond any question of doubt, that all these defendants were actively identified in producing, as well as continually encouraging, the conditions of which the Commonwealth complains.
Public meetings were daily held in halls, and in open air places, which were addressed by Merrick, Hall and a number of the others, and attended by crowds ranging from a few hundred to six or seven thousand in number. Parades and processions on the public highways were held under the direction of the leaders; Lithuanian and
Merrick, on invitation of those interested in the strike, was brought from Pittsburgh, where he conducted a restaurant, to address the meetings and advise the strikers. At his, and others’, suggestions, strike and executive committees were named, and pickets were placed at the different gate entrances to the plants. At all of these meetings, he with other defendants made addresses; the essential parts of which are not disputed, and a few citations from the testimony clearly indicate the purpose and temper of the speakers and their auditors. The addresses were made in English, Italian and other alien tongues, as many of the strikers were of foreign birth and did not understand English speech. Substantially the same arguments were presented and the same advice was given at all of the meetings, to wit: Merrick said, “I know what I am talking about, when I say that when trouble arises, I know who will be held responsible; but if trouble does come I won’t be in Canada or any other place but East Pittsburgh” — “I believe in preparedness, you will win this strike” — “You men should do like the Indians used to do, if they weren’t treated right they come out; the Indians would come out and face a couple of thousand trained soldiers, they didn’t care. The social position of the negro to-day is due to the fact that he has been a slave, while many do not like the Indians they respect them because they have never submitted to slavery.” “Don’t be afraid of the police, you have a right to picket these plants, and the picket needn’t be afraid of any of the guards of the company. I want 10 men to take a chance, a desperate chance, which means life or death; 50 men to go over
While many of the above declarations were made by Merrick, they were uttered from platforms, and in open air meetings at which Hall, Donaldson, Blum and other of the defendants also spoke, and all speakers were in accord by active approval of all that each of the others stated. A large number of the strikers were unnaturalized, foreign born; not citizens, and prohibited by our Act of May 8,1909, P. L. 446, “to own or be possessed of a rifle or shot gun.”
On April 26th, Merrick was arrested and confined in the county jail until the 29th; after being, released, he resumed his active participation in the strike meetings, and on May 1st, after one of the most violent disturbances, he addressed a large audience, stating, “Men, this is grand. Who ever heard of an army of men making a raid on a plant of the United States Steel Corporation? Men, this is a great victory; the idea of you men raiding these plants, going into the plants, and giving a concert in the middle of the work. It is remarkable.” When he with the other leaders called for additional pickets, instructing them, to “brand them as'scabs; any man that goes in brand him as a scab.” — “We need not fear the militia, the police or State constabulary. Let them come on, we do not need to fear them; a body of men that has stormed a place and entered a plant the way you have done need fear none; You have already won a glorious victory. We will have a parade tomorrow morning, and we will march them to Homestead and the Carrie furnaces, and we will keep on until we visit and enter every plant in the Monongahela Yalley. Bunch together and keep the men out.”
Many of the assignments of error, relate to the admission of testimony of the character quoted above, which assignments on careful examination cannot be sustained, as all such testimony related to persons and incidents directly associated with acts of violence.
Merrick, Donaldson, Hall and Blum were active and
From the earliest declaration of the common law, it has been held, that “If any person encourages or promotes, or takes part in riots, he is to be considered a rioter, for in such a case all are principals. If a sudden disturbance arises among persons meeting together for an innocent purpose, they will be guilty of a mere affray; though if they form parties, and engage in violent proceedings with promise of mutual assistance, or, if impelled with a sudden disposition to demolish buildings, there can be no doubt they are rioters, and will not be excused by the propriety of their original design: 2 Camp, 370; Hawk, B. 2, C. 65, S. 3. Where an act in itself is indifferent, if done with a particular intent, it may become criminal, the intent must be proved and found; but where the act is in itself unlawful, the proof of justification or excuse lies on the defendant, and on failure thereof the law implies a criminal intent: The King v. Phillips, 6 East’s Reports 473. If persons assemble together for an unlawful purpose, every man is guilty of all acts done in execution thereof or contributing or tending to that purpose. If they meet for a lawful purpose, and proceed to an unlawful act, it is a riot: Pennsylvania v. Cribs, 1 Addison 276. As was said in Pennsylvania v. Craig, 1 Addison 190, “Government is established to restrain the passions of men by certain rules.' Whether these rules be the best, that may be established or not; while they exist, they must be presumed the best, or, whether or not, they must be submitted. We are set to execute, not to make laws. Juries are not courts of honor or discretion, at liberty to do as they please, but bound by oath to judge according to truth, and the rules of the State, — that is the law.”
It is needless to examine whether every particular person engaged in this riot was a part of the first assembly, or actually had a previous knowledge of the design. While mere presence, without encouragement is not enough to establish criminality as to these defendants, it would be a reflection on them to say that they did not intend to be actively identified with the work they were designing and managing.
The aggressive arguments urged by Merrick, Hall and the others, certainly produced definite results, and, while they may not have intended the actual destruction of any particular building, or personal violence to any particular person, the law does not require such specific and particular proof. If the results which did follow, pr. ones similar to them in kind, should reasonably have
The gates and doors of a number of the manufacturing plants were broken down, and large numbers of these parading strikers turbulently entered these properties ; intimidated the employees by physical violence and by stopping the machinery, and in the use of offensive personal epithets, with threats of physical injuries. The local police were resisted and violently assaulted.
All persons actively concerned in such combinations are equally guilty of the subsequent acts done, when they are in furtherance of the common object of the assemblage, and all who are present in the commission of any riotous act and actively engaged therein, by act, sign, or words, are to be considered as principal rioters, and, all those who incite others to commit riot, or actively participate in enterprises which reasonably lead to riot, if a riot results, may be principal rioters although absent from the place where the riot is committed : 34 Cyc. 1780. It is further held, that in riotous and tumultuous assemblies, all persons who are present and not actually assisting in their suppression may, where their presence is intentional, and where it tends to the encouragement of the rioters, shall be prima facie inferred to be participants; and the obligation is cast upon a person so circumstanced, and it must be his defense, to prove his actual noninterference: Wharton’s
The trial was conducted by eminent counsel, who earnestly contended for every legal proposition reasonably to be urged in the interest of the defendants. Fifteen points, as presented by the defendants, were affirmed by the trial judge; nine were refused for the reason that they were stated in too broad terms to apply to the proven facts of the case.
At the conclusion of the charge, the court requested counsel to specify if any suggested proposition had been omitted or not fully answered by him, when, it was conceded that nothing further could be stated to more fairly present the cause of the defendants to the jury. The jury were properly instructed as follows: “Inciting to riot, from the very sense of the-language used, means such a course of conduct, by the use of words, signs or language, or any other means by which one can be urged on to action, as would naturally lead, or urge other men to engage in or enter upon conduct which, if completed, would make a riot. If any man or set of men should combine and arrange to. so agitate the community to such a pitch, that the natural, and to be expected results of such agitation, would be a riot, that, would be inciting to riot, an offense at the common law, an offense charged in the first count in this indictment. The element of riot, which is the basis of the charges in this case, is the assembling together in a riotous and tumultuous and disorderly manner, and such conduct as would tend to alarm and terrify peaceful citizens, and proceeding with a common intent and purpose to do some act in pursuance of such common intent, to do it in an unlawful manner.”
When the evidence clearly shows that meetings originally peaceful and orderly are so persisted in that they degenerate into dangerous and lawless assemblages, the offense of riot is complete, and those who were originally
The elements necessary to constitute a riot are so in- . disputably established in this case by the undisputed testimony, that no other verdict than guilty could have been expected.
The challenge to jurors, while presented under a special assignment, was properly disposed of in the court below. As said in Commonwealth v. Sushinskie, 242 Pa. 406, “the challenge of a juror for cause, is addressed to the trial judge, and much weight must be given to his judgment in passing upon it. In exercising his discretion as to the fitness of a juror to serve, he has the juror before him, and much latitude must be left to him. And the weight to be given to the answer of a juror when examined on his voir dire, is not to be determined exclusively by his words as we read them in the printed record. They are first to be weighed by the trial judge, who sees and hears the juror, and who in the exercise of a wide discretion, may conclude that he is competent to enter the jury box for the purpose of rendering an impartial verdict, notwithstanding his words to the contrary, and nothing short of palpable error will justify a reversal of a trial judge in passing upon a challenge for cause. The great concern of counsel as well as of courts, should always be to secure jurors free from feeling, prejudice or opinions formed as to questions at issue; for only such jurors can be safely trusted to return verdicts based upon evidence alone.”
The controlling questions were of fact only so as to identify the respective persons with the admitted acts of violence and lawlessness, and all of these facts were submitted to the jury in a fair and adequate charge by the
A careful examination of this whole record satisfies us that the defendants had an impartial trial. The assignments of error in each of the appeals are severally dismissed. The judgment is affirmed, the record is remitted to the court below and it is ordered that the defendant, Fred. H. Merrick, appear in the court below at such time as he may be there called, and be by the court committed, until he has complied with the sentence imposed, or such part of it that had not been performed at the time the appeal to No. 52, April Term, 1917, became a supersedeas.