Commonwealth v. Hopkins

53 Pa. Super. 16, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 123
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 27, 1913
DocketAppeal, No. 78
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 53 Pa. Super. 16 (Commonwealth v. Hopkins) 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. Hopkins, 53 Pa. Super. 16, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 123 (Pa. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

Head, J.,

Following a hearing in the county court of Allegheny county, the defendant appellant was ordered by that court to pay the sum of $40.00 per month “for the support of his four minor children,” etc. From that order he appeals. His principal assignment of error is “the court erred in assuming jurisdiction in this case.”

Whether or not the county court was lawfully invested with jurisdiction to hear and determine a desertion case could not, we think, depend on the form of the recognizance entered into by the appellant before the magistrate who took the information and issued the warrant of arrest. That recognizance, it is true, obliged •the defendant to appear at the next term of the court of quarter sessions. It would not have been adequate to compel his appearance in the county court. But he did appear there in person and by counsel and had his case beard on its merits. If then that court had? under the law. [19]*19jurisdiction of his cause, he cannot be heard now to complain that it had none of his person.

Had the county court jurisdiction of his cause? It is conceded that since the decision in Gottschall v. Campbell, 234 Pa. 347, it cannot here be successfully argued the legislature overstepped any constitutional limitation of its powers in creating that court. It is further conceded the act creating the court expressly conferred upon it jurisdiction to hear and determine desertion cases. To deny the jurisdiction thus expressly conferred is necessarily to assert the lack of power in the legislature to do what it had clearly undertaken to do. The supporting argument chiefly rests upon both clauses of sec. 26 of art. Y of the constitution, and may thus be briefly and fairly stated:

(a) It is not competent for the legislature to so legislate that, for instance (we use the illustration of the appellant’s brief), the court of quarter sessions of Beaver county should possess and exercise powers the court of quarter sessions of Allegheny county may not possess and exercise.

(b) When jurisdiction had been, prior to the constitution of 1874, conferred by the legislature on any of the courts expressly recognized in that instrument, such powers are, by force and effect of the constitution itself, permanently and finally lodged in such courts or the judges thereof and may not be transferred, by subsequent legislation, to a different court or the judges constituting the same.

1. Much of the strength of the appellant’s argument, on the first proposition stated, is but a repetition of what was unsuccessfully urged upon the Supreme Court in Gottschall v. Campbell, 234 Pa. 347. It is true that, owing to the unusual manner in which the question was raised in that case, it was not necessary for the Supreme Court to determine the exact nature or extent of the jurisdiction which had been conferred upon the new court created by the Act of May 5,1911, P. L. 198. The real question raised by that record was answered when it was determined that [20]*20it was competent for the legislature to create the county court and, therefore, the proper authorities of the county could not be enjoined from providing suitable accommodations for the transaction of the public business of the new court. But it was clearly and forcibly pointed out in the opinion of Mr. Justice Potter that the statute creating, as it did, a new court for Allegheny county alone, was not in violation of the first clause of sec. 26. It was shown that the constitution itself so classified the counties of Philadelphia and Allegheny, that acts of the legislature affecting only the courts of either one of those counties were still general and not special legislation. Therefore they could not be successfully assailed merely because their result would be that such county would possess courts that did not exist in other counties, or that thereafter the jurisdiction of the court of quarter sessions, for instance, in such county might be different from that appertaining to courts of quarter sessions in the remaining counties of the state. We can see no necessity for now repeating or elaborating the reasoning of the Supreme Court on this branch of the case.

2. The act of 1911 not only conferred upon the new court jurisdiction of what may be called, for the sake of brevity, desertion cases, but declared that such jurisdiction should be exclusive in that court. The result of this legislation would be, it is argued, to take away from the court of quarter sessions of Allegheny county some constitutional power theretofore lodged in it and the statute, to this extent at least, would be in contravention of the s,econd clause of sec. 26, art. Y. We quote it: “And the general assembly is hereby prohibited from creating other courts to exercise the powers vested by this Constitution in the judges of the courts of common pleas and orphans’ courts.” A brief consideration of the question along somewhat broad lines will indicate the reasons for our conclusion on the question now immediately before us.

Article V of the constitution deals with the judicial branch of our government. It contains twenty-seven [21]*21separate sections. It opens with the declaration that “the judicial power of this commonwealth shall be vested in” the several courts therein designated “and in such other courts as the general assembly may from time to time establish.” Here then is a clear and express recognition of the legislative right to create “other courts.” When lawfully created they take their place in the class of courts in which “the judicial power of this commonwealth shall be vested.” From the expressly recognized right to create new courts we naturally and necessarily deduce the further legislative right to define the jurisdiction of the courts created save in so far, and so far only, as such right may be denied or limited by the constitution itself. Certainly that instrument does not undertake to define or describe affirmatively what jurisdiction or powers the legislature may confer upon the courts which it may from time to time establish. How far does it prohibit legislative action in this direction?

We have quoted the clause which prohibits the general assembly “from creating other courts to exercise the powers vested by this constitution in the judges of the courts of common pleas and orphans’ courts.” What is the nature of the powers thus referred to as being vested by the constitution in the judges of the courts named? We have seen the declaration in the first section of the article that the judicial power of the commonwealth shall be vested in, inter alia, courts of common pleas and courts of quarter sessions of the peace. The legislature may not therefore deny to these courts their proper share in the judicial power of the state. Section nine provides that “judges of the courts of common pleas learned in the law shall be judges of the courts of oyer and terminer, quarter sessions of the peace,” etc. The legislature may not say otherwise. Section ten affirms the right, in the judges of the common pleas, to issue writs of certiorari to magistrates and inferior courts not of record, and this right the legislature must respect. These sections, and one or two more that might be quoted, clearly indicate the in[22]*22tent of the framers of the constitution to deal only with a few matters that were considered fundamental and, only in such respects, did the constitution itself vest in the courts named or the judges thereof powers, which it finally declared the legislature might not thereafter take from them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 Pa. Super. 16, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-hopkins-pasuperct-1913.