Commonwealth v. Kammerdiner
Commonwealth v. Kammerdiner
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
This appeal is by the commonwealth from an order of the court of quarter sessions made in arrest of judgment. The defendant was charged in the first count with fornication and bastardy, and in the second with incestuous fornication and bastardy, and was found guilty in manner and form as indicted.
It is difficult to understand upon what view of the law the action of the court in arresting judgment was based. The causes assigned constitute no valid reason for interference by the court, and the reasons stated in the opinion throw little light upon the subject, and are wholly untenable. That it
The case presents the anomaly of an arrest of judgment not for defects appearing upon the record, but for causes entirely foreign to it. The indictment was in proper form, nor is it suggested that its averments were not fully sustained by the testimony, and unless tlie defendant was to go free there was no alternative but to enter judgment on the verdict. In any subsequent attempt to convict tbe defendant of adultery the prosecution would be met with the difficulty that the substantial offence was the same in each charge, and that the evidence necessary to support the second indictment was sufficient to convict, on the first. See Com. v. Arner, 149 Pa. 85. There was no sufficient- ground for the arrest of judgment.
The judgment is reversed and tbe record remitted to the court of quarter sessions to proceed to sentence according to law.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Commonwealth v. Alfred E. Kammerdiner
- Cited By
- 9 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Criminal law—Fornication and bastardy—Incestuous fornieat'ion— Adultery—Pleading—Practice—Act of March 31, 1860. Where an indictment in one count charges fornication and bastardy, and in a second count incestuous fornication and bastardy, it is no ground for arresting the judgment after a verdict of guilty, that the evidence showed that the prisoner was a married man at the time of the offence and that he should therefore have been indicted for adultery.