Commonwealth v. Hill

39 A. 1055, 185 Pa. 385, 1898 Pa. LEXIS 728
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 11, 1898
DocketAppeal, No. 35
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 39 A. 1055 (Commonwealth v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme 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. Hill, 39 A. 1055, 185 Pa. 385, 1898 Pa. LEXIS 728 (Pa. 1898).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Mitchell,

The errors assigned are of the most formal and perfunctory kind, and are sufficiently answered in the opinion of the learned judge below refusing a new trial. There is nothing in the case to justify bringing it here, and indeed there is considerable ground for belief that it was never intended in good faith to [387]*387reach a hearing in this Court. It is a flagrant example of the perverted standard of professional ethics which assumes that counsel should help his client to escape the proper consequences of his act by any move or device, short perhaps of actual fraud or imposition. This is a very serious error, and apparently becoming more widespread, especially in cases involving life. The boundaries of professional privilege and professional obligation are clearly defined and in no way doubtful. Counsel represents the prisoner to defend his rights. In so doing he is bound to exercise competent learning, and to be faithful, vigilant, resolute. But he is at the same time an officer of the court, part of the system which the law provides for the preservation of individual rights in the administration of justice, and bound by his official oath to fidelity as well to the court as to the client. It was well said by the Chief Justice in Commonwealth v. Jongrass, 181 Pa. 172: “There is no code of professional ethics which is peculiar to the criminal courts. There are no methods of practice to be tolerated there that are not equally entitled to recognition in the civil courts.” The duty of the counsel is to see that his client is tried with proper observance of his legal rights, and not convicted except in strict accordance with law. His duty to his client requires him to do this much, his duty to the court forbids him to do more. An independent and fearless bar is a necessary part of the heritage of a people free by the standards of Anglo-Saxon freedom, and courts must allow a largo latitude to the individual judgment of counsel in determining his action, but it must never be lost sight of that there is a corresponding obligation to the court, which is violated by excessive zeal or perverted ingenuity that seeks to delay or evade the due course of legal justice.

The serious question in this case, and the only one, is whether the appeal to this Court without special allocatur was a supersedeas of execution. The appellant was sentenced on July 81, 1897, and the governor fixed December 8 as the day of execution. On the morning of that day the counsel of appellant entered the appeal in the office of the prothonotary of this Court at Pittsburgh, and the sheriff of Allegheny county, being advised that the question of supersedeas was at least open to doubt, deemed it his duty to postpone the execution. The practical importance of the matter is so great that we think proper [388]*388to considér it, although not specifically raised by any motion of record. The doubt seems to have arisen under the Act of May 19,1897, P. L. 67, regulating the practice, etc., on appeals to the Supreme and Superior Courts. But an examination of the provisions of that act in connection with the prior acts repealed by it, shows that the doubt is not well founded.

Without going farther bade in the history of the law than the statutes in force in 1897 we find that by the act to “consolidate, revise and amend the laws ” relating to penal proceedings and pleadings, passed March 31,1860, sec. 33, P. L. 439, all persons indicted in the Quarter Sessions or any county court of Oj^er and Terminer might remove the indictment and all proceedings thereon, into the Supreme Court, by certiorari or Avrit of error, but only upon special allowance by the Supreme Court or a justice thereof. By section 57 of the same act, P. L. 444, the defendant in an indictment for murder or voluntary manslaughter may have a bill of exceptions to the decision of the trial court on any point of eAudence or law, and a Avrit of error thereon, after conviction and sentence; but by section 59 no such writ could issue except by special allowance made upon application Avithin thirty days after sentence. By the Act of February 15, 1870, P. L. 15, in cases of murder and voluntary manslaughter, a writ of error was made of right, and might be sued out on the oath of the defendant as in civil cases. And as to all cases of felonious homicide, a revieAV by the Supreme Court is made a constitutional right by section 24 of article 5 of the constitution of 1874. At that time the statutory limitation for Avrits of error was two years, and the inconvenience and dehiy of justice by a review at the mere will of the prisoner for such a period was too great to be long endured. By the Act of March 24, 1877, P. L. 40, “ to prevent delay in the review of capital offenses in the Supreme Court,” it was enacted that no Avrit should issue in such cases after tAventy days from sentence unless specially allowed by the Supreme Court or a judge thereof.

It thus appears that by the state of the law hi 1897, an appeal in any case of felonious homicide was of right upon the mere oath of the prisoner that it was not intended for delay, but in capital cases by the act of 1877 it could not issue more than twenty days after sentence Avithout special allowance. The act of May 19, 1897 expressly repealed the act of March 24, 1877, [389]*389and lienee, apparently, arose the questions whether an allocatur is necessary in any case, and whether an appeal does not operate as a supersedeas of execution, without regard to the time when it is taken. These questions however overlook the purpose and language of the act of 1897. The act of 1877 and many other acts, including most of those heretofore cited, were expressly repealed, not necessarily to change the law as therein enacted, but in order, in the words of the last clause of section 22, that the act of 1897 “shall furnish a complete and exclusive system in itself on all appeals to such appellate courts.”

Turning then to the act of 1897 as the exclusive guide, we find that all appeals of every kind in civil and criminal cases are classed together and put under the same limitation of time. The language of section 1 is “ in every case in which an appeal is taken to the Supreme or Superior Court,” etc., and by section 4, “no appeal shall be allowed in any case unless taken within six calendar months from the entry of the sentence, order, judgment or decree appealed from, nor shall an appeal supersede an execution issued or distribution ordered, unless taken .... within three weeks from such entry.” This limitation includes criminal as well as civil cases, not only by the generality of the language and the use of the appropriate word “sentence,” but also by the clear intent as shown in the latter part of the same section that appeals taken after the time specified shall be quashed on motion, “ provided that in civil cases in which the right of appeal to the Superior Court has now expired,” i. e., at the date of the act, an appeal may be taken within three months from the time the act goes into effect.

It is therefore clear that, although appeals in criminal cases, including capital cases, are allowed as of right upon the oath of the prisoner as in civil cases that they are not for the purpose of delay, yet they do not supersede execution issued unless taken out within three weeks from sentence. As already noted the governor had issued his mandate to the sheriff of Allegheny county appointing December 8,1897, as the day of execution of the appellant.

The origin of the issue of a mandate by the governor in capital eases is not entirely clear. It was called in question by an assignment of error in Cathcart v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 A. 1055, 185 Pa. 385, 1898 Pa. LEXIS 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-hill-pa-1898.