Court Opinion

ID: 6276142
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 16:01:21.328228+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:00:03.871487
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Henderson, J.,
This case was argued with Commonwealth v. John Havrilla, ante, p. 292, and arises out of a similar state of facts. The decision in the latter case disposes of the first assignment in this case.
The second assignment brings into question a part of the charge in which the court expressed the opinion that under the evidence the defendant was guilty of neglect of duty. There was no error in this. It has been frequently held that the judge may indicate to the jury the weight of the evidence, provided the jury is permitted to render a verdict uncontrolled by his opinion. The charge shows that the question was fully committed to the jury and there is no ground of complaint on this account.
The subject of the third assignment of error was considered and disposed of in the opinion in Havrilla’s case above re*306ferred to, and reference is made thereto for our opinion on the charge of the court with regard to the form of the verdict.
The fifth assignment relates to the refusal of the court to admit in evidence a copy of the election law sent by the county commissioners to the election board of which the defendant was judge, in which copy it was stated as alleged that the returns should be made to the prothonotary’s office. There was not any offer, however, to show that the defendant read the copy so sent nor that he acted on the information obtained from it. The court was not in error, therefore, in excluding the evidence.
There was no request for the instruction set forth in the sixth assignment, and the court should not be convicted of error in omitting to give it. Moreover, the legal or reasonable cause which will excuse an election officer from the performance of his duty as required by the act of 1874 is a matter of defense and makes the question one of evidence, and as the jury found the defendant guilty we must assume that there was no evidence of any such cause.
We are not persuaded that the court was in error in imposing a penalty under the thirty-third section of the Act of June 10, 1893, P. L. 419. The twenty-eighth section of that act establishes a method of counting the ballots, and declares that “ a full return shall be made in the manner now provided by law of all votes cast and the total vote as soon as counted shall be publicly announced.” The manner of making the return to which this provision relates is set forth in the thirteenth section of the Act of January 30, 1874, P. L. 31. The act of 1893 imposes a duty which is defined by the act of 1874. The nineteenth section of the latter act provides a penalty to be imposed upon any election officer who shall neglect or refuse to perform any duty enjoined by that act without reasonable or legal cause. The penalty imposed is $100. The provision of the act of 1893 is upon the same subject, as will be observed, and declares that for negligent or willful failure to perform any duty imposed by that act any public officer shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be sentenced to pay a fine not exceeding $1,000, or to undergo an imprisonment for *307not more than one year, or both, at the discretion of the court. As this act imposes the duty upon the election officers of making a return the negligent omission so to do becomes a misdemeanor, punishable as above quoted. It is not essential that the manner in which the return is to be made should be set forth at length in the statute. If it is sufficiently declared in the act of 1874, to which reference is made, the offense may be punished under the act of 1893. The penalties for neglect of duty in the two statutes are different, and we are of the opinion that the penalty provided in the act of 1893 applies to the charge of neglect of duty in making an election return.
The judgment is affirmed.