Commonwealth v. Colwell

3 Pa. D. & C. 153, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 455
CourtSusquehanna County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedNovember 14, 1922
DocketNo. 18
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Pa. D. & C. 153 (Commonwealth v. Colwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Susquehanna County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Colwell, 3 Pa. D. & C. 153, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 455 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.,

The defendant was tried upon an indictment containing three counts.

First count, aggravated assault upon the person of James Herliky, a minor.

Second count, wilfully and without lawful excuse refusing and neglecting to provide said minor as one of whom he had legal charge and control and liable to provide such with necessary food, clothes and lodging.

Third count, unlawfully and maliciously assaulting said minor, whereby the latter’s health was permanently injured.

The first count being drawn under the 98th section of the Penal Code of 1860, and the other two under the 90th section of the same Code. The latter provides against the two said offences when committed by “any master, mistress or any person having the legal care and control of any infant.”

Under the reasons for a new trial assigned, it is important to first determine whether, under the evidence at the trial, the defendant comes within the meaning of the language of this section of “any person” possessing such “legal care and control” of James Herliky and “legally liable to provide” for him as stated in the act.

It appears from the testimony of Florence Ecker, mother of James Herliky, the infant alleged as having been maltreated by the defendant at the time of the acts and commissions complained of, was an employee of the defendant, working upon his farm under a contract for wages made verbally by the mother with the defendant, to wit, the defendant to pay cash wages $12 per month and furnish the boy board and lodging, and out of the $12 per month to purchase him necessary clothing and the balance, if any, to be paid to the mother, who says she received $12, with which the testimony of the defendant himself is at variance only as to the amount of cash wages, which he negatives as being $12 per month, but does not state just what they were.

It is cause of congratulation that occasions for prosecuting under this section 90 rarely arise. In consequence, however, there is a like absence of judicial interpretation and application of its provisions. If a “legal care and control” of James Herliky, the infant here, by the defendant, Marcus Colwell, is deemed to have existed during the period of the alleged offences charged in the indictment, it must have been because of their relations as master and [154]*154servant, because of the contractual relations created by the contract of hiring by the defendant of said infant, placing upon the former the responsibility of furnishing the latter with “necessary food, clothing and lodging,” as supported by the testimony.

The research by attorneys on both sides, as well as our own failing to find any direct decisions in Pennsylvania, unless it be the quotation by McCollum, J., and approved by him as law in Com. v. Coyle, 160 Pa. 36, 42; from 1 Russell on Crimes, 80: “It is an indictable offence in the nature of a misdemeanor to refuse or neglect to provide sufficient food or other necessaries for any infant of tender years unable to provide for and take care of itself (whether such infant be child, apprentice or servant), whom the party is obliged by duty or contract to provide for so as to injure its health.” This language, it will be observed, includes “servants” as subjects of the protection of this legal principle.

A careful reading of the various citations in note in Russell on Crimes, quoted above, throws some light on the question of “legal care and control,” and the meaning of the language thus used in the Pennsylvania statute, as also of the other language, “being legally liable to provide for such . . . infant.”

The learned attorney for the defendant at bar ably contends that the Pennsylvania statute includes as those of such “legal care and control” and “legally liable to provide” for an infant only those so held at common law, such as parent, guardian, master of apprentice and the like, and necessarily excludes an employer of the nature of the defendant at bar.

The English case of Regina v. Marriott, 8 Car. & P. 425, 34 Eng. Com. L. Rep. 461, was a prosecution under the Statute of 16 and 17 Vic., ch. 6, § 9, for the protection of lunatics, providing for the prosecution of a “person having care and charge of a lunatic,” the defendant being charged in an indictment for the murder of an insane woman by confining her, not “providing her with meat, drink, clothing,” etc., and held that “if the jury was satisfied that he acted wilfully, so gross he must have contemplated her death, then he was guilty;” verdict, guilty of manslaughter.

Patterson, J., in his charge, said: “The cases which have happened of this description have been generally cases of children and servants where the duty has been apparent. This is not such a case, but it will be for you to say whether, from the way in which the prisoner treated her, he had not by way of contract in some way or other taken upon him the performance of that duty which she, from age and infirmity, was incapable of doing.” Then, referring to the evidence of contract, he continued: “This is the evidence on which you are called on to infer that the prisoner undertook to provide the deceased with necessaries, and though he broke the contract, he might not be indicted during her life, yet if by his negligence her death was occasioned, then he became criminally responsible.”

Again, in commenting upon the provisions of the statute, the court said: “It is very clear that the legislature never intended to interfere with the care and charge, which is purely of a domestic nature and arises from the relation ■ of husband and wife or other similar relations. It was not intended to add to the common law obligation of the master or head of a family, who, whether husband, guardian, relative or otherwise, is liable to be punished if he ill-uses any person under his control; I do not think the words ‘any person’ were intended to apply to persons having a control of a purely domestic character.”

By analogy of reasoning from the above, and it appears to us necessarily, the Pennsylvania statute must be subject to the same rule of interpretation, [155]*155and instead of including as those subject to prosecution under its provisions, instead of including those occupying domestic relations, such as parent and children, husband and wife, etc., actually excluding them by implication, resting upon their responsibilities and criminal liabilities under the well known rules of the common law — sufficiently effective to protect the unfortunates provided for — we must decide that the words “any person,” so used in our statute, mean “any person” other than those otherwise at common law liable criminally for the same acts or omissions enumerated therein. This conclusion is emphasized by the fact that none of these so-termed “domestic relations” are enumerated in the statutory classifications, for naturally they would be the first thought of and designated were they in the mind of the legislature passing the law. We are, therefore, of the opinion that the defendant is a proper person so designated as “any person;” and, further, that by the contract of hiring the infant, James Herliky, he became “legally liable to provide him necessary food, clothing and lodging,” within the terms of the statute, during the period of the employment in which the alleged injured party, Herliky, was an employee or a “servant” of the defendant, coming within the definition of that term by all the dictionaries and adopted by legal decisions.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Coyle
28 A. 576 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1894)
Commonwealth v. Scherer
109 A. 867 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1920)
Commonwealth v. Taylor
78 Pa. Super. 386 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Pa. D. & C. 153, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-colwell-paqtrsesssusque-1922.