Commonwealth v. Cauffiel

79 Pa. Super. 596, 1922 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 25, 1922
DocketAppeal, No. 136
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 79 Pa. Super. 596 (Commonwealth v. Cauffiel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Cauffiel, 79 Pa. Super. 596, 1922 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295 (Pa. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinions

Opinion by

Gawthrop, J.,

The appellant was tried and convicted upon an indictment charging assault and battery, and after sentence to pay the costs of prosecution, a fine of $500 and imprisonment in the county jail for a period of sixty days he appealed to this court.

The testimony offered by the Commonwealth, if true, warrants the following statement of facts: Joseph Cauffiel, appellant, is mayor of Johnstown, Pennsylvania. In his official capacity as mayor he presides over the police court of that city. While so presiding, on the morning of December 11, 1920, Mary Berzonsky, the prosecutrix, a girl aged about nineteen years, and Joseph Csicsmanyi, her employer, the proprietor of a butcher shop in Johnstown, were arraigned before the mayor on a charge of disorderly conduct. Until that time the mayor had no connection with the case. During the hearing the girl was asked whether she had carnal intercourse with her employer, and when she answered in the negative the mayor directed one of the police officers to summon one Doctor Bertha Caldwell and have her make a physical examination of the girl. Doctor Caldwell, codefendant with Mayor Cauffiel, was then, and for twelve years had been, probation officer of Cambria County. When the probation officer came to the police station, the mayor told her to take the girl to her [599]*599office and have her examined for the purpose of determining whether she was still a virgin. The girl was represented at the hearing by an attorney in regular practice at the Cambria County Bar. In the beginning she objected to the proposed examination. Her attorney also at first protested against the examination and advised his client that she was not required to submit' to it. Someone, thought by the girl to be the mayor, said that if she did not go quietly with the probation officer for the purpose of having the examination made, she would be taken in the patrol. The attorney, thinking that it was useless to protest further against the examination, then advised his client to go with the probation officer, and the girl and her mother walked with that officer to her office at least two squares away, where the girl submitted without further objection to the examination which proved the truth of her statement that she had never indulged in sexual intercourse. Whereupon, the probation officer gave her a letter to that effect for presentation to the mayor who, upon reading it, dismissed the case. On December 29, 1920, the girl made information against Mayor Cauffiel and Doctor Caldwell, charging that the examination above described constituted an assault and battery upon her.

Complaint is made, in the first assignment of error, of the charge of the trial judge in its entirety. An examination of the charge compels the conclusion that it is subject to the imputation of fundamental and basic error because it failed to state the principles of law applicable to the case of a judicial officer who is charged with a crime committed in line of the performance of his duties. Appellant had jurisdiction over the prosecutrix and the offense on which she was tried before him. Section 23 of the Act of May 27,1919, P. L. 310, relating to third class cities provides, inter alia: “The mayor shall have the criminal jurisdiction of an alderman within the city......He shall have the power of a committing magistrate under the acts of assembly relating [600]*600to tramps and vagrants; and shall, in addition, have authority to commit to any city or county prison for a term not exceeding ninety days, any dissolute or disorderly person, in default of payment of such fine or penalty as may be fixed by ordinances, with the cost of suit or arrest.” “It is well settled that a judicial officer, when required to exercise his judgment or discretion, is not liable criminally for any error which he commits provided he acts in good faith......The rule of the common law exempting a judge from indictment for any act done or omitted to be done when sitting as a judge still prevails, except so far as it has been changed by particular statutes, or by some constitutional provision”: 28 Cyc. 574. “A judicial officer is not liable for acts done in his judicial capacity where there is not a clear absence of all jurisdiction over the subject-matter and person, even though such act's constitute an excessive exercise of jurisdiction or involve a decision that the official had jurisdiction over the particular case, where in fact he had none......The principle involved is that all judicial officers are protected by their official character from liability in tort, because of public conduct clearly within the pale of their authority, although involving demonstrable legal error”: 25 Corpus Juris, 515. “The strong trend of authority has been to apply the same rules to judges of courts of general jurisdiction and to those of limited jurisdiction, such as justices of the peace, city magistrates, and other officers with special judicial functions, when acting in a judicial capacity”: 25 Corpus Juris 516. The reason for exemption is the same as for courts of general jurisdiction. If a judge of an inferior jurisdiction has the power, under authority of law to hear and pass on cases, to which the particular offense belongs, the same reason requires that he should be protected from liability for erroneous action, which exempts judges of superior or general jurisdiction from such liability. If judges properly expected to be most learned in the law can plead official exemption for their blunder[601]*601ings in the law, a fortiori those from whom less is to be expected should not be compelled to respond in damages for their mistakes honestly made. The reason upon which the general principle is founded was stated by Chief Justice Kent in Yates v. Lansing, 5 Johns 282, a suit against the Chancellor of New York for imprisoning a man after he had been set at liberty on a writ of habeas corpus by the chief justice of the common law court: “No man can see the disastrous consequences of a precedent in favor of such a suit. Whenever we subject the established courts of the land t'o the degradation of private prosecution, we subdue their independence, and destroy their authority. Instead of being venerable before the public, they become contemptible; and we thereby embolden the licentious to trample upon everything sacred in society, and to overturn those institutions which have hitherto been deemed the best guardians of civil liberty......The doctrine which holds a judge exempt from a civil suit or indictment, for any act done or omitted to be done by him, sitting as a judge, has a deep root in the common law. It is to be found in the earliest judicial records, and it has been steadily maintained by an undisturbed current of decision in the English courts amidst every change of policy and through every revolution of their government.”

In Gardner v. Couch, decided by the Supreme Court of Michigan and reported in 101 Northwestern Reporter, 802, it was held that a justice of the peace is not liable in an action for false imprisonment merely because he reached an erroneous decision where he was acting judicially in having the plaintiff confined in jail. The court said: “We would be bound to hold that a conviction under such a complaint and warrant would not justify a detention if plaintiff sought relief by habeas corpus proceedings......But does it follow that defendant, who was a justice of the peace acting judicially, is responsible as a trespasser because he reached an erro[602]

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Bluebook (online)
79 Pa. Super. 596, 1922 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-cauffiel-pasuperct-1922.