87 Pa. Super. 61 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1925
Argued October 22, 1925. Appellant was indicted and convicted in the court below of the offense of extortion. He complains upon this appeal that the conviction cannot stand because: 1. The indictment should have been quashed; 2. the evidence is insufficient to sustain the conviction; 3. there were errors committed in excluding certain evidence.
1. The first count in the indictment, which was the only count on which appellant was convicted, charged that he "being then and there an officer of this Commonwealth, to wit, Chief of Police of the Borough of Emporium in said County, did extort money and did wilfully and fraudulently, receive and take a reward or fee, to wit, the sum of Sixty ($60) Dollars, lawful money of the United States, from one Frank Lipovitz, the same not being allowed or sanctioned by an Act or Acts of Assembly of this Commonwealth, and did unlawfully and wilfully and fraudulently receive and take the said sum of Sixty ($60) Dollars, lawful money as aforesaid, by color of his said office as Chief of Police, all of which acts and things by the said John W. Norris then and there being contrary to the form of the Act of Assembly in such case made and provided for and against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania." It is conceded that appellant was Chief of Police of the Borough of Emporium. While such an officer could not be convicted under Section 12 of the Act of March 31, 1860, P.L. 387, because he was not such an officer as comes within its provisions, it does not follow that he could not be convicted of extortion under an indictment charging extortion at common law: Com. v. Saulsbury,
2. It is admitted that appellant as Chief of Police arrested one Frank Lipovitz upon suspicion of committing an assault upon a young girl, and that he placed Lipovitz in the borough lockup. Lipovitz testified that while he was in confinement appellant came *65 to his cell in the night and demanded and received from him $40 for securing his release. There was a sharp conflict in the evidence but, if the jury believed the witness, Lipovitz, as evidently they did, appellant undertook under color of his office as Chief of Police to sell Lipovitz his liberty and, as a consideration for his promise to secure that liberty, received $40. We all agree that the evidence was sufficient to sustain a conviction of extortion at common law.
3. Assignments of error numbers six to thirteen, inclusive, complain of the refusal of the learned trial judge to permit certain questions to be asked by defendant's counsel of certain of the Commonwealth's witnesses. The fourteenth and fifteenth assignments complain of the refusal to permit defendant to "lay before the jury just what his past life had been." None of the questions raised by these assignments were raised in the court below, and we might disregard them for that reason. We have considered all of them, however, and are satisfied that no reversible error was committed. The manner and extent of the learned trial judge's limitation of the cross-examination was well within the judicial discretion vested in him. Appellant was permitted to show that he was Sheriff of Cameron County from 1908 to 1911. We think he has no just cause to complain because the fuller latitude was not given him to describe his past life. The case was carefully and well tried by the presiding judge and fairly submitted to the jury.
All of the assignments of error are overruled, the judgment is affirmed and the record is remitted to the court below, and it is ordered that appellant 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. *66