DocketNumber: Appeal 335-336
Citation Numbers: 86 Pa. Super. 569, 1925 Pa. Super. LEXIS 185
Judges: Tbexleb, Porter, Henderson, Trexler, Keller, Linn, Gawthrop, McDevitt
Filed Date: 11/20/1925
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
Opinion by
The defendant was charged in two separate bills (1) with the unlawful possession and use of drugs, (2) conducting a disorderly house, and was convicted on both charges.
In the police raid made at 12.30 A. M. on premises leased and occupied by the defendant, she was found coming out of a room on the second story in which were seven Chinamen who had been smoking opium. Some of the pipes were still hot and fourteen small cans or toys of opium were found in the room which was filled with opium smoke. The defendant explained her presence in the room by the fact that she had been looking for her dog. The object of the raid was to arrest one “Chit” but he was not about. The defendant claimed “to have command of the place more or less and she wanted to know who would fasten the place up when she was placed under arrest.” The defendant argues that there was no evidence that the defendant had the drugs in her possession or under her control. It is true that there was no one of the Commonwealth’s witnesses who saw the defendant have the drugs in her manual possession but we think the inference can be legitimately drawn that she had control of the premises, and that she had had in her pos *571 session the drugs, which either had been used, or were to be used by the Chinamen on the premises. She was the tenant of the house, the man, “Chit,” who was supposed to have charge of the premises was gone, and she seemed to be in control and was apparently running the joint. The hour when the raid was made would lead to the conclusion that the presence of the defendant in the room where the Chinamen were was not merely casual.
As to the charge of keeping a disorderly house, we question whether there was sufficient evidence to sustain conviction but the order of the court was in these words: “10/2/25. Sentence on Bill No. 500.” Number 500 was the bill charging unlawful possession and use of drugs. We are in doubt as to what this means. There could not be one sentence on the two indictments The only conclusion that we could draw is the trial judge did not sentence on Bill No. 501. There is, therefore, nothing to appeal from. The appeal in No. 501 July Sessions 1925 (being No. 336, October Term 1925 in our court) is “quashed.” The judgment of the lower court in No. 500 (our October Term No. 335, 1925) is affirmed and the record remitted to the court below and it is ordered that 'the defendant appear in the court below at such time as she may be there called and that she be by that court committed until she 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.