Commonwealth v. Franklin

92 A.2d 272, 172 Pa. Super. 152, 1952 Pa. Super. LEXIS 468
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 12, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 92 A.2d 272 (Commonwealth v. Franklin) 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. Franklin, 92 A.2d 272, 172 Pa. Super. 152, 1952 Pa. Super. LEXIS 468 (Pa. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

172 Pa. Superior Ct. 152 (1952)

Commonwealth, Appellant,
v.
Franklin.

Superior Court of Pennsylvania.

Argued October 7, 1952.
November 12, 1952.

Before RHODES, P.J., HIRT, RENO, DITHRICH, ROSS, ARNOLD and GUNTHER, JJ.

Thomas M. Reed, Assistant District Attorney, with him Samuel Dash, Assistant District Attorney, Michael von Moschizisker, First Assistant District Attorney, Malcolm Berkowitz, Assistant District Attorney, and Richardson Dilworth, District Attorney, for appellant.

William J. Woolston and Raymond Pace Alexander, for appellee.

Herman I. Pollock, Voluntary Defender, amicus curiae, in propria persona.

William Allen Rahill and Julian E. Goldberg, filed a brief, for American Civil Liberties Union, amicus curiae.

The facts are stated in the opinion by MILNER, J., of the court below, as follows:

There is before us for consideration a rule granted upon the district attorney to show cause why a recognizance demanded of the petitioner should not be quashed and discharged.

It is stated in the amended petition that Edward J. Franklin, the petitioner, was indicted for assault and battery and for unlawfully resisting arrest, as of December Term, 1950, No. 347, in the Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace for Philadelphia County. The matter came on for trial before a judge and jury and the petitioner was found not guilty. The trial judge, nevertheless, thereupon ordered that the defendant be "held in $1,000.00 bail to keep the peace for a period of two (2) years. Defendant permitted to sign own bond," and the order was duly endorsed upon the bill of indictment upon which petitioner had been acquitted. The petitioner that day entered bail so that he would not be committed for failure to enter such bond.

*153 The amended petition sets forth, and the district attorney has not controverted, that "neither the Commonwealth nor others had produced evidence upon which there could be found that the defendant had a previous criminal record or had been previously indicted for offenses other than those on which he had been that day acquitted, or that the defendant had the reputation of being a dangerous character in any respect, or that petitioner was `not of good fame.'" We have examined the record of the trial of defendant Franklin and can find no evidence that he had a reputation of being a dangerous character in any respect or that he was not of good fame. The petitioner contends that the trial judge did not have the power or authority to order him held in such bail; that the "order was without factual or legal justification"; and that the order is in contravention of petitioner's rights under the 13th and 14th amendments to the Constitution of the United States and of Article I, Sections 9, 10 and 13, of the Pennsylvania Constitution.

Because we are aware that many judges in this state have exercised a similar power to that which we are now called upon to subject to inquiry, and because we regard the matter as involving fundamental civil rights, we shall undertake an extended review of the authority upon which the power to bind after acquittal is alleged to rest. Preliminary we must limit our inquiry by noting that we are not here concerned with the admitted common-law power of a judge to impose as part of a sentence, after conviction, a requirement that a defendant enter security for his good behavior. Nor are we considering the statutory peace bond which may be required of a defendant upon complaint of a third person that such defendant has threatened the person or property of the complainant: see Act of March 31, 1860, P.L. 427, section 6, 19 P.S. 23, *154 and see also Acts of March 18, 1909, P.L. 42, 19 P.S. 24-26, April 27, 1909, P.L. 260, 19 P.S. 27-28, and see I Edw. III, Stat. 2, c 16 (1327). We are here concerned only with the assertion that a trial judge, following a trial resulting in an acquittal of the accused, may require such defendant to post such security, to assure his good behavior, as the trial judge shall, in his discretion, direct and for such period of time as such judge may in his discretion direct.[1]

In undertaking this inquiry into the legality of the asserted authority we are aware of the fact that our Supreme Court over a century ago would seem to have already passed upon and confirmed the existence of such power. In such circumstance there would ordinarily remain nothing further for consideration by a lower court but compliance with the law as pronounced by the highest tribunal of this Commonwealth. But, as we shall hereinafter indicate at greater length, none of the judicial authorities relied upon is of even comparatively recent date and there are raised in this proceeding, for the first time,[2] constitutional questions of grave import. In the circumstances, we are bound to consider the impact of the adoption of the Fourteenth *155 Amendment to the United States Constitution upon the statutes of this Commonwealth. We have been unable to find any binding authority in this Commonwealth, or, indeed, in any of our sister states, which considered the validity of the ancient English statute of 34 Edw. III, c. 1, in the light of modern constitutional concepts. In Quong Wing v. Kirkendall, 223 U.S. 59, 64 (1912), Mr. Justice HOLMES stated, "Laws frequently are enforced which the court recognizes as possibly or probably invalid if attacked by a different interest or in a different way."

From our survey we have been unable to find any other state in our Union in which it is maintained that a defendant acquitted in a criminal trial can be held under bond to keep the peace. Yet the practice has persisted for many years in Philadelphia County. The Public Defender, in his excellent brief as amicus curiae, states that the Report of the Board of Inspectors of the Philadelphia County Prison for the years 1939 to 1949 indicates that in that period 478 men, after acquittal of criminal charges, were compelled to serve an aggregate of over 600 years in the Philadelphia County Prison in default of bonds aggregating $613,200. Hundreds of defendants, acquitted by juries of their peers, have been placed under the restriction of a bond to keep the peace and many who have been unable to furnish bond or have failed to enter their recognizance have languished in jail and some are now in jail as a result of this practice. The authority for this practice is said to lie in an old English Statute adopted six centuries ago. In the first place we believe, from our review of the history of the Statute of 34 Edward III, that neither it nor the cases relating to it, including the Bamber case decided by our Supreme Court over a century ago, justify the practice, and that in any event, since the adoption of the Fourteenth *156 Amendment to the Constitution of the United States in 1868, and the adoption of the present Constitution of Pennsylvania in 1873, the practice is contrary to our fundamental law, is against common sense and an enlightened sense of justice, and is indefensible.

The Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution declares that no state shall deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law. This amendment is a limitation on the powers of the states (12 Am. Jur., Const. Law, Sect. 567, p. 258).

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Bluebook (online)
92 A.2d 272, 172 Pa. Super. 152, 1952 Pa. Super. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-franklin-pasuperct-1952.