34 A.2d 321 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1943
Argued October 25, 1943.
The defendant has appealed from sentence upon a general verdict of guilty on an indictment charging him, *526
in two counts, with (1) using a certain building, situate at No. 816 Western Avenue, Pittsburgh, for the purpose of prostitution and assignation, and (2) with maintaining a disorderly house at that place. There is sufficient competent evidence in the record to sustain the verdict on both counts. The evidence was not confined to testimony that the general reputation of the defendant's rooming house was that it was a place of assignation and a disorderly house. Such evidence was properly admitted. See the last paragraph of section 512 of The Penal Code of 1939, P.L. 872, and Com. v. Visotsky,
The appellant's chief complaint is directed to the cross-examination of this girl who was called as a witness by the defendant and denied that he had made any such demand of her during the interview which she admitted had occurred.
In the course of her examination by defendant's counsel she stated that she had lived in the house — second floor rear — for about five and a half years, and was now working at a certain candy factory, at which she had been employed for about a month — "since I've been out".
The district attorney, in cross-examining her, elicited the fact that a short time before she had been convicted and sentenced to prison for six months for prostitution, and had just "come out" from serving that sentence in the Allegheny County Workhouse. She denied using her room for prostitution, but admitted she had answered the front door a couple of times in the evening and let in soldiers who had asked for `Loretta' — a certain Loretta Brady being a roomer there.
The appellant contends that the crime of which the witness was convicted was neither a felony nor a misdemeanor in the nature of crimen falsi, and that evidence of it should not have been received to affect the credibility of the witness.
The term `crimen falsi' was applied at common law to crime which disqualified a person as a witness: 22 C.J.S. Criminal Law, sec. 2. The only crime that now disqualifies a person in this State from testifying as a witness is perjury. The Penal Code, supra, sec. *528
322. When we use the expression, "a misdemeanor in the natureof crimen falsi", we mean a crime less than felony, that by its very nature tends to cast doubt on the veracity of one who commits it. Under the Criminal Code of 1860, P.L. 382, perjury was a misdemeanor and `crimen falsi'. Subornation of perjury, suppression of testimony by bribery, or conspiracy to procure the absence of a witness, barratry, the fraudulent making or alteration of a writing to the prejudice of another man's right, were offenses of a like nature: Com. v. Schambers,
Under our practice, a witness, other than the defendant, can be questioned on cross-examination as to whether she has beenconvicted — as opposed to merely arrested or indicted — for a felony, or for a misdemeanor in the nature of crimen falsi — that is, such an offense as tends to affect injuriously her credibility. Marshall v. Carr,
The cross-examination of the witness, Mrs. Golaszewski, was sustainable under Com. v. Robzin,
The assignments of error are overruled. The judgment is affirmed, and it is ordered that the defendant appear in the court below at such time as he may be there called, and that he be by that court committed until he has complied with his sentence or any part thereof that had not been performed at the time the appeal was made a supersedeas.