200 A. 264 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1938
Argued March 14, 1938. The appellant, Claude Zotter, was tried and found guilty (1) on the sixth count of an indictment (No. 57 June Sessions 1937) charging him with being unlawfully concerned in the management, conducting and carrying on of a lottery, known as a "number game"; and (2) on another indictment, (No. 58 June Sessions 1937) charging him with unlawfully erecting, setting up, establishing, etc., a common nuisance, by operating, maintaining and conducting an unlawful lottery, known as a "number game," etc. He was sentenced on indictment No. 57 to pay a fine of $1,000 and undergo imprisonment in the Lehigh County Prison for a period of one year; and on indictment No. 58 to pay a fine of $500 and undergo imprisonment in said prison for a period of six months to take effect after the expiration of the sentence on No. 57 aforesaid.
The statement of questions involved brings before us two legal questions: (1) Whether under the evidence in the case the defendant's point for a directed verdict of acquittal should have been affirmed and the defendant *298 discharged; (2) whether the court erred in admitting evidence of sales of "numbers" slips made in the absence of the defendant.
(1) Appellant bases his right to a directed verdict of "not guilty" largely on the decision of this court in Com. v. Coyne,
The "Numbers" game is a form of lottery. Its mode of operation has been explained in Com. v. Banks,
Hence the evidence required to connect a defendant with being concerned in the carrying on of such a lottery does not have to be of the same kind or character as is required in order to sustain a conviction of keeping a gambling house. For example, see Com. v. Lanzetti,
The Commonwealth contends that the evidence in the present case is sufficient to sustain the conviction under our rulings in Com. v. Lanzetti, Com. v. Fusci and Com. v. Gabriel. We must, therefore, examine it and see if it conforms to the standards set in those cases.
The evidence would reasonably warrant the jury to find the following: On May 4, 1937 two members of the State Police went to Allentown and placed premises No. 814 Maple Street under surveillance. The place was *300 ostensibly occupied by `Hobart Training School.' Between that date and June 10 they purchased lottery tickets, similar to those produced on the trial, from one Michael Volinsky, a numbers ticket seller, who was seen to enter 814 Maple Street on numerous occasions, carrying a dark colored brief case. The defendant, Zotter, was seen by the police in the vicinity of 814 Maple Street and on May 24 was seen to leave the premises. On June 10, shortly before 4:00 o'clock in the afternoon, these policemen accompanied by other State Police under the command of a sergeant, and armed with a search warrant, came to 814 Maple Street and found the door locked. They knocked. Someone within raised the shade at the door. They identified themselves and asked to be admitted. The shade was quickly drawn and the door was not opened. Whereupon the police forced the door. They found in the room on the first floor, three men, one of whom was the defendant, besides a bartender. The defendant had in his hand a typewritten adding machine slip such as is used in computing these "numbers" and another slip with figures in lead pencil. When he saw the police he dropped the slips on a bench nearby and tried to push them away from him. The police recovered them. A search of the first floor revealed 35 or 40 "numbers" books, containing 1,750 to 2,000 slips, in an unlocked cupboard back of the bar, and other slips showing the odds to be given. An open stairway led from this floor to the second floor, where there was an open door. Several policemen went upstairs and found Michael Volinsky and George Gianelli, sitting at a table on which was a dark brief case, a sum of money, an adding machine, about one hundred number slips and a pad on which were a series of figures — the paraphernalia used in the operation of the numbers game. The police arrested all the occupants. Volinsky and Gianelli pleaded guilty and were sentenced. The place, at the *301 time, was undoubtedly being used as a numbers lottery headquarters.
The defendant did not take the stand, but his counsel offered in evidence a blank membership card purporting to be of Hobart Training School, a card with the name, Hobart Training School, a seal and an impression of it purporting to be the corporate seal of Hobart Training School, and a petition which had been presented by the District Attorney to the Court of Quarter Sessions praying for the revocation of the club malt liquor license issued to Hobart Training School, which also set forth that Volinsky and Gianelli had pleaded guilty to the charge of conducting a numbers lottery and had been sentenced.
In the Lanzetti case (
Without further elaboration of the facts, in the light of the above cases, we are of opinion that the testimony for the Commonwealth warranted the submission of the appellant's guilt or innocence to the jury.
(2) The evidence of the police as to the purchase on prior occasions of similar lottery or number slips from Volinsky, who was evidently a "writer" or "pick-up man" and was caught red-handed in the Hobart "School," in the operation of the lottery on the day of the raid was admissible as showing intent and design and a common enterprise.
We are of opinion, however, that both indictments relate to the same offense, and that if the defendant is convicted and sentenced for being unlawfully concerned in the conduct of a lottery, he cannot be given an additional sentence for establishing a common nuisance by operating the lottery so conducted. The offense of establishing a common nuisance is merged in the conduct of the lottery for which he was convicted and sentenced: Com. v. Baker,
In the appeal from No. 57 June Sessions, 1937, the judgment is affirmed, the record is ordered remitted, 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 *303 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.
In the appeal from No. 58 June Sessions, 1937, the conviction is sustained, but the sentence is reversed.