32 Pa. Super. 241 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1906
Opinion by
The indictment charged the defendants with conspiracy to unlawfully and fraudently assess and place, and cause and procure to be assessed and placed upon the assessors’ list of voters of the thirtieth election district of the first ward of the city of
The first and fourth specifications of error refer to evidence to the admission of which no exception was taken in the court below, and, for that reason, cannot be considered. The defendants took no general exception to the charge of the court, and, upon that ground, the tenth, eleventh and thirteenth specifications of error are dismissed.
The commonwealth, having proved that a large number of persons had been assessed and their names placed upon the list of voters of the election district who in fact did not reside in the district and were not qualified voters therein, and that the appellants were active in causing and procuring the names of such persons to be placed upon said list of voters, introduced evidence which tended to establish that the appellants caused and procured to be jfiaced upon said list of voters the names of a large number of persons who, although they resided in the district, were not qualified to vote therein, because they were foreign born and had never been naturalized, and that the appellants knew that fact. There was no exception taken to the admission of the evidence as to the registration of unnaturalized persons, but the defendants subsequently moved to strike out this evidence and requested the court to charge the jury that they were not to take it into consideration. The court refused to strike out the evidence and declined to charge as requested, which rulings are the foundations of the second, third and seventh specifications of error. These specifications raised but one question: the relevancy of the testimony as to the registration of unnaturalized persons to the issue, being tried. The indictment charged a conspiracy to cause the registration, as voters of the district, of persons who did not reside in said district and were not then-and there qualified to vote therein. The offense as charged referred only to voters of a particular class, and having thus been limited by the indictment, the burden was upon the commonwealth to establish
The fifth specification of error refers to the refusal of the court below to grant a new trial, “ in view of the inflammatory, prejudical and untruthful publications in the newspapers of Philadelphia, concerning the trial of the said cause.” The depositions taken in support of the motion for a new trial indicated that a number of the jurors had, during the trial, read newspaper accounts of the proceedings, and the publications in
The sixth specification of error refers to the refusal of the court to arrest the judgment, upon the ground that the acquittal of McCartney, the assessor, is a finding that no crime had been committed by him, and, therefore, the other two defendants could not have conspired with him to commit a crime. Nothing is better settled than that it is not necessary for the commonwealth to establish that all the persons charged in the indictment had been guilty of an unlawful conspiracy; if the evidence establishes that any two have been guilty of the conspiracy charged they may be convicted although all the others are acquitted. If these appellants conspired to cause to be placed on the list of voters the names of persons who were not residents of the district they were guilty of the offense charged in this indictment, even if the assessor was not a party to the conspiracy and was the victim of the deception of those whó
There was evidence which, if believed, warranted the conviction of both the appellants, and the court properly overruled the motion to discharge them, respectively, upon the ground that there was no evidence to connect them with the conspiracy. The eighth and ninth specifications of error are dismissed.
The judgments in the appeals Nos. 165 and 166, October Term, 1905 are affirmed, and it is ordered that the appellants, Phillip Valverdi and Edward H. Wood, appear in the court below, to the end that they, respectively, be- committed to serve such part of their respective sentences as had not been complied with at the time their respective appeals were made a supersedeas.