44 Pa. Super. 552 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1910
Opinion by
The first count of the indictment charged the defendant with the forgery of a miners’ certificate, purporting to be issued by the miners’ examining board of the third inspection district in the anthracite coal region of Pennsylvania, and certifying to the competency and qualifications of one Peter Chapulis, entitling him to be employed as a miner. The second count charged the defendant with
The first specification of error is based upon the refusal of the court below to quash the indictment. All the reasons urged in the court below for quashing the indictment have been expressly abandoned here save that which raised the question of the constitutionality of the Act of July 15, 1897, P. L. 287, entitled “An Act to provide for the examination of miners in the anthracite coal regions of this commonwealth and to prevent the employment of incompetent persons as miners in the anthracite coal mines.” The question raised by this specification of error has been considered by this court in Commonwealth v. Shaleen, 30 Pa. Superior Ct. 1; by the Supreme Court of this state in Commonwealth v. Shaleen, 215 Pa. 595 and by the supreme court of the United States in Shaleen v. Pennsylvania, 207 U. S. 603; and the constitutionality of the statute has been sustained. We are no longer free to consider the question an open one, and the specification of error is overruled.
The witness Davis testified that he was the assistant foreman of a mine and that the certificate in question had been presented to him by Chapulis, who sought employment as a miner. Pie identified the certificate, and having testified that he was familiar with the signatures of the miners’ examining board of the district, and with the certificates which they issued, it was entirely competent to permit him to testify as to the differences between the certificate in question and the signatures thereto and the genuine certificates issued by the board. The second specification of error is without merit. The genuine certificates as well as this forged one were made out upon printed blanks, the blank spaces being filled in with the proper data when the certificate was issued. The jury were in this case necessarily called upon to determine whether the certificate in question was a forgery, and any
The language of the court which is the subject of the ninth specification of error charged the jury, in substance, that the possession by the defendant, when arrested, of other similar instruments when accused of uttering the forgery was sufficient to raise a presumption of law that the utterance of the forged instrument in question was with guilty knowledge as to the fraudulent character of the document: “The possession of this other lot, twenty-four in number, by Wyoda, raised the presumption as to guilty knowledge on his part, and the presumption against him as to the uttering of these documents.” The other lot of papers referred to in the charge, were blank, unsigned certificates, they were not forged documents, although they might have been used to facilitate further forgeries. The possession of these blanks was evidence to be considered by the jury, in connection with the other
The defendant was acquitted upon the first count which charged the forgery of the instrument, but convicted upon the second count which charged that he unlawfully and fraudulently did utter the forged instrument, knowing it to be false and fraudulent. Those parts of the charge assigned for error in the tenth, twelfth and fifteenth specifications of error, when considered in connection with the second count of the indictment upon which alone the defendant was convicted, failed to properly instruct the jury as to the necessity for their finding that the defendant had guilty knowledge of the character of the instrument at the time he uttered it, in order to warrant a conviction upon the second count of the indictment. The jury must be convinced that the defendant had knowledge that the instrument was forged in order to warrant a conviction of fraudulent uttering: Commonwealth v. Hall, 23 Pa. Superior Ct. 104. The instructions in question left the jury free to convict the defendant if they found that the instrument was in fact forged and that the defendant had uttered it. This entirely relieved the jury from consideration of the question whether the defendant had guilty knowledge. These specifications of error are sustained.
The manner in which foreign proper names are spelled, and whether in spelling those names those familiar with the language use a “z” where in the English language an “s” would be used are not questions of law but of fact. The name of one of the miners’ examining board in the
The judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.