Commonwealth v. Donovan

6 Pa. D. & C. 333, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 385
CourtSusquehanna County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedOctober 6, 1924
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Pa. D. & C. 333 (Commonwealth v. Donovan) 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. Donovan, 6 Pa. D. & C. 333, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 385 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.,

While all court proceedings are public in their hearings, generally speaking, the matters in controversy are of private import, interesting chiefly to the immediate parties thereto, and abbreviated discussions and short orders are only required, but instances occur when the principles involved are such as to affect the public. Their only method of information is what the court may put on record by way of an opinion, and this properly calls for a full discussion of the law and reasons which control the decisions rendered. Such is that under consideration here, in view of the novelty of the cause assigned for parole, as being within the Parole Act of May 11, 1923, P. L. 204, which explains the lengthy character of this- opinion.

Upon pleas of guilty by D. J. Donovan in two separate and consecutive prosecutions for violation of the 1923 Act, relating to traffic, etc., in intoxicating liquors, we imposed sentence in one of imprisonment for one year in the county jail, $1000 fine and costs, and suspended sentence of one year imprisonment in the other. Eleven days later, on his petition for parole, a hearing, after due notice, was had, at which witnesses testified for the petitioner and for the Commonwealth. . . .

The Parole Act of May 11, 1923, P. L. 204, provides that “courts of record having jurisdiction are authorized, after due hearing, to release upon parole any convict confined in the county jail,” etc.; this being the third and last statute by amendment upon this subject, commencing with that of 1911, P. L. 1059.

While several courts, including this, have acted under this legislation and granted paroles, only five written opinions appear in the reports of lower court decisions, viz.: Com. v. Zimmerman, 19 Dist. R. 248; Com. v. Collins, 11 Del. Co. Reps. 167; Com. v. Walker, 11 Del. Co. Reps. 171; Com. v. McZulski, 12 Lacka. Jurist, 380; and Com. v. Ferraro, 12 Lacka. Jurist, 291, all before the last amendment, 1923, which substituted the words “after due hearing” for “after due inquiry” in the earlier statutes, with the evident commendable purpose of better enabling the courts to ascertain all the facts after hearing sworn testimony, upon due notice and opportunities for examination and cross-examination, authority to adjudge upon substantial grounds rather than the uncertainties which were likely to follow their separate “inquiry.”

[334]*334The fact, however, remains, as stated by Edwards, P. J., of Lackawanna County, that “the main consideration is the individual himself. The object to be accomplished is his reformation, ... is he for any reason worthy of the clemency he claims from the State under the provisions of the Parole Act?” 12 Lacka. Jurist, 291, 292.

In his general recital of the proper subjects-matter for consideration, we observe they relate to the circumstances and character of crime committed, the moral status and environment of the defendant, and the like; his serious illness and precarious physical condition, endangering his life by further unmodified confinement, are not mentioned; but as they were not material to the case before him, we do. not understand he would exclude them in a proper case, and for the further reason that, earlier in his opinion, he says: “The matter is evidently left to the discretion of the judges, because the power to release is to be exercised ‘after due inquiry’ (now ‘after due hearing’) ; it is difficult to lay down rules that will be exactly applicable toi all cases. Each case must be decided upon its own facts.”

It will be noted that by the Act of 1923 “the courts are authorized” to extend the clemency mentioned therein. “Authorized” means they shall, in their discretion, grant or withhold, as the facts justify. This judicial discretion, as defined by legal authorities, means “a legal discretion founded on good reason:” Lyons v. Miller, 4 S. & R. 279, 280. As was said In re Report of Auditors, 1 Woodw. 270, being “not at liberty to admit the influence of its appeals as the legislature or governor of the state,” meaning, for the purposes of legislation, commutation or pardon. Quoting further from case last cited: “Nothing would be more capricious than the decision of judges produced by what may appear to be at the moment the current of popular opinion, or the views of the political majority for the time being in a township, county or a state. If the theory were once recognized that judges should act independently of rules and without regard to their own precedents at the dictation of popular majorities, the office would be a by-word and a sham. Acting upon settled rules, the bars, suitors and community can depend upon safe and permanent action.” The same jurist warns against the arbitrary exercise of discretion by saying: “Mere discretionary power has always been mere despotism. ... It must not be settled by impulse, prejudice and caprice.” And we may add, or sympathy. -By one of the most learned Pennsylvania jurists, of whom we are proud to know that early in his judicial career he presided, locally in this county, as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of this State, it is said in Green v. Hern, 2 P. & W. 167, 169: ‘‘Unfortunately, a love for novelty is abroad; and it has become the fashion with a class of reformers to despise the black-letter maxims of a system to which our forefathers clung as their best birthright and noblest inheritance. There would be just cause for alarm did the same fashion obtain on the bench,” to which all thoughtful persons will give present assent. We shall endeavor to avoid this fault by adhering to what is well and beneficially established.

JWe refer without quotation to an informing discussion of this important quality of the judges in Endlich on Interpretation of Statutes, § 147, etc., which puts a weighty responsibiltiy on the court in such a case as at bar that both a “just and humane administration shall be attained:” Com. v. Zimmerman, 19 Dist. R. 248, wherein Wanner, P. J., of York County, was moved to a reduction of prison sentence because the defendant was suffering from tuberculosis, on certificates of physicians that “long confinement in jail will prevent proper treatment of and aggravate the same, so that recovery thereafter may be impossible.”

[335]*335Any clemency at bar by way of mitigation of sentence is beyond our reach, because of expiration of term and time when imposed, and were it not for the Parole Act of 1923, it is possible the relief prayed for could avail only by appeal to the Pardon Board or to the Governor: See Com. v. Mayloy, 57 Pa. 291.

Obviously, not all cases of physical weakness or disease conditions of those under sentence would warrant judicial intervention. Not all convicted persons are healthy, but no one, even the most charitable and humane, would presume upon indiscriminate release for such reasons, and imposition must be guarded against; only extreme and serious conditions justify indulgence, and the evidence before us presents such, for Dr. E. R. Gardner testifies that the valvular heart trouble affecting the defendant is “one of the most serious ailments, chronic ailments, that we have to deal with.”

To determine the mode and extent of relief we should grant at bar, which is not on the ground assigned in the petition, clearly expressed in the Parole Act, we adopt rules of interpretation and application established by our appellate court decisions.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Pa. D. & C. 333, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-donovan-paqtrsesssusque-1924.