Commonwealth v. Hawbaker

17 Pa. D. & C. 253
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Franklin County
DecidedNovember 28, 1931
DocketNo. 473
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Pa. D. & C. 253 (Commonwealth v. Hawbaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Franklin County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Hawbaker, 17 Pa. D. & C. 253 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1931).

Opinion

Davison, P. J.,

— The defendant was arrested for violation of section eighteen (a) of the Act of March 10, 1927, P. L. 27, and was adjudged guilty after a hearing before John G. Palmer, Esq., a justice of the peace, and on April 14,1931, was sentenced to pay a fine of ten dollars, together with costs, and in default to be committed to the county jail for a period of five days.

A certiorari was issued out of this court to bring before us for review the record of said justice of the peace in said proceedings, and exceptions were duly filed to said record as follows:

“1. The Act of March 10,1927, P. L. 27, is entitled:

“ ‘An act relating to the protection of agriculture and horticulture from plant pests, and amending, revising, consolidating, and changing the law relating thereto; defining the powers and duties of the Department of Agriculture relating thereto; providing penalties, and repealing present laws.’

[254]*254“Section two (c) of said act provides as follows:

“ ‘The term “plant or plant product” shall mean any plant or portion thereof, whether living or dead.’

“The Act of May 8,1929, P. L. 1681, is entitled:

“ ‘An act to amend section eighteen of the act approved the tenth day of March, one thousand nine hundred and twenty-seven (Pamphlet Laws twenty-seven), . . . permitting certain payments to be made for plants required or caused to be destroyed.”

“Section eighteen (c), as amended, provides as follows:

“ ‘If, under the provisions of this section, the Secretary of Agriculture shall require or cause to be destroyed or removed any growing and living plant or plants of the common red cedar ... or of the European barberry ... or of cultivated currants and gooseberries . . . other than nursery stock,’ etc.

“Said amendment of May 8, 1929, as above quoted, is unconstitutional and void for the reason that the title to the original Act of March 10,1927, refers to plants as such, and the amending Act of May 8,1929, although referring in the title to plants in the amended section eighteen (c), attempts to embody trees of the red cedar variety within the general designation of living plant or plants.

“2. The Act of 1927 and the amending Act of 1929 are unconstitutional and void, being contrary to article one, section one, of the Declaration of Rights of the Constitution of Pennsylvania, and, also, article one, section nine, of said Constitution and of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States as depriving a citizen of his property without just compensation and without due process of law.”

The matter was argued before the court fully by both sides on said exceptions, and the matter now before us is to pass upon them.

The Act of 1927, supra, is entitled: “An act relating to the protection of agriculture and horticulture from plant pests and amending, revising, consolidating, and changing the law relating thereto; defining the powers and duties of the Department of Agriculture relating thereto; providing penalties, and repealing present laws.”

Section two (c) of said act provides: “The term ‘plant or plant product’ shall mean any plant or portion thereof, whether living or dead.”

By Act of Assembly approved May 8, 1929, P. L. 1681, which by its title is an act amending section eighteen of said Act of 1927, permitting payments to be made for plants required or caused to be destroyed, an additional clause (c) is added to said section eighteen, reading as follows: “If, under the provisions of this section, the Secretary of Agriculture shall require or cause to be destroyed or removed any growing and living plant or plants of the common red cedar (Juniperus virginiana), or of the European barberry (Berberís vulgaris), or of cultivated currants and gooseberries (Ribes species), other than nursery stock, upon any land the grower of which was in no way responsible for the existence of the condition which, in the opinion of the Secretary of Agriculture or his representatives, necessitated such destruction or removal, the Secretary of Agriculture shall, upon claim duly filed and approved by him, pay to such grower, or other person entitled thereto, compensation for such plants so required or caused to be removed or destroyed, in an amount not in excess of seventy per cent, of the value of the plants so required or caused to be removed or destroyed, as determined by the Secretary of Agriculture.”

It is urged on us on behalf of the defendant that this amendment is unconstitutional because the title to the original act, that of 1927, refers to plants as such, and the amending act includes the common red cedar under its provisions, thus including trees under the designation of plants, and thereby [255]*255extending the purpose of the original act to the red cedar, which is a species of tree, without sufficient notice in the title of the act.

This brings us to the question of what is meant by the title of the Act of 1927 when it states that it relates to the protection of agriculture and horticulture from plant pests, that is, what is included under the term “plant.”

In determining the meaning of a word used in a- statute, the court is warranted in considering the scope and purpose of the act, its history, other statutes in pari materia, and judicial construction of similar statutes in other jurisdictions: Lipstein v. Provident Loan Society of New York, 139 N. Y. Supp. 799. In construing the word plant as used in the act in question, we, therefore, may consider its scope and purpose as shown from its context and from its title. That we may consider the title of the act in this connection is set forth in Endlich on Interpretation of Statutes, section 58, page 74, where the learned author says: “In this country, whilst the title of a statute is not, in general, regarded as a part of the same, it is nevertheless regarded as a legitimate aid in ascertaining the intention of the legislature when the language and provisions in the body of the act are ambiguous and of doubtful meaning and application.”

The title of the Act of 1927 is, in part, “relating to the protection of agriculture and horticulture from plant pests.”

Agriculture is defined by Webster’s Dictionary to be the “art or science of cultivating the ground, including harvesting crops and rearing and managing live stock.”

Horticulture is defined: “The cultivation of a garden, or orchard, the science and art of growing fruits, vegetables and flowers or ornamental plants.” From these definitions we see that orchards and fruits were part of that intended to be protected from plant pests, and this assists us in determining what the legislature had in mind in using the term plant pests. Was it used merely to draw a distinction between plants and shrubs or trees and other things of that nature, or was it intended in a broader sense to differentiate between plant organism or life and animal organism or life? If the former, it would not, perhaps, include a cedar tree; if the latter, it would include it. To assist in determining this, we must look at the purpose of the act and to such authorities as will assist us to that end.

In Webster’s International Dictionary, 1930 edition, under the word plant, we find this definition: “Any member of - the group of living organisms exhibiting irritability in response to stimuli, though generally without voluntary motion or true sense of perception; a vegetable in the broad sense as distinguished from an animal.”

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Related

Miller v. Schoene
276 U.S. 272 (Supreme Court, 1928)
Lipstein v. Provident Loan Society of New York
154 A.D. 732 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1913)
Bowman v. Virginia State Entomologist
105 S.E. 141 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1920)

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Bluebook (online)
17 Pa. D. & C. 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-hawbaker-pactcomplfrankl-1931.