Commonwealth v. James Hall

91 Pa. Super. 485, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 219
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 27, 1926
DocketAppeal 140
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 91 Pa. Super. 485 (Commonwealth v. James Hall) 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. James Hall, 91 Pa. Super. 485, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 219 (Pa. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Porter, P. J.,

The indictment involved in this case contained three counts: The first charging the defendant with assault and battery; the second, charging assault and battery *487 and the infliction of grievous "bodily harm, and the third, charging the commission of such assault and battery and that the defendant did “unlawfully cut, stab and wound the prosecutrix.” It appears from the docket entries that the defendant entered the plea of not guilty, in open court, upon which plea the district attorney, for the Commonwealth, joined issue. There was then filed of record a writing signed by the defendant and stipulating as follows: “Defendant having entered a plea of not guilty waives his right to trial by jury under this bill of indictment, to which he is entitled under the Constitution and Acts of General Assembly of the State of Pennsylvania, requests the court to determine the issues of fact and law involved and enter such verdict and impose such sentence as the facts and laws require. ’ ’ The judge presiding then proceeded to hear the evidence presented upon the part of the Commonwealth and of the defendant, which evidence was conflicting as to the facts, Avithout the intervention of a jury, and after such hearing found the defendant guilty as indicted. The defendant thereupon filed motions for a new trial and an arrest of judgment, averring in support of said motions the following reasons: “(1) Because the defendant has not been tried by a jury, as required by the Constitution and the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the alleged verdict in this case having been found by a judge Avithout a jury. (2) Because the court has no jurisdiction over the defendant in that, contrary to the protection afforded him by the Constitution of the State of Pennsylvania, the case was tried by a judge Avithout a jury of twelve men. (3) Because the defendant, by waiver of jury, could not confer jurisdiction on the Court so that the cause could be heard- and judgment passed in the absence of a jury, there being no provision under the Constitution and laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for a trial in a Court of Quarter Sessions, before a judge *488 without a jury. ’ ’ The judge, after hearing arguments on the motions for a new trial and an arrest of judgment, overruled said motions and sentenced the defendant, whereupon the latter took this appeal.

We are not in this case to consider the question whether the Legislature might, without violating the constitutional provisions guaranteeing to a defendant the right of trial by jury, enact a law which would make it possible for one accused of crime to waive those constitutional rights. The Legislature of Pennsylvania has never enacted a law conferring jurisdiction upon the judges of the Court of Quarter Sessions to try the issues of fact arising when a prisoner indicted for the crimes here involved enters a plea of not guilty and attempts to confer jurisdiction upon the court to try such issues of fact without the intervention óf a jury. The authority of the Legislature, without violating the Constitution, to establish a new tribunal, to proceed, with the express consent of a prisoner, to try without the intervention of a jury certain minor offenses, or to confer jurisdiction upon the common law courts, upon the express consent of the defendant, to vary the established criminal procedure is here, for the same reason, not involved and the decisions in Van Swartow v. Commonwealth, 24 Pa. 131; Lavery v. Commonwealth, 101 Pa. 560; Commonwealth ex rel. v. Francies, 250 Pa. 496; Commonwealth v. Andrews, 24 Pa. Superior Ct. 571 have here no application, save that they clearly indicate that the authority to change the long established manner of criminal procedure or modify the jurisdiction of the courts is vested in the Legislature.

The Court of Quarter Sessions is a tribunal established by the Constitution, but the Constitution does not define its jurisdiction nor the powers vested in its judges. Courts are founded on express authority; and their duty is to hear and determine according to law. The power exercised in this case by the learned judge *489 of the court below is not to be found based on any express authority constitutional or statutory; nor in any express right of the prisoner to its exercise: Commonwealth v. Mayloy, 57 Pa. 291. Is it an inherent common law power, or a customary power?

It is contended on behalf of the Commonwealth that as the several counts of this indictment only charged misdemeanors, petty offenses, it would be convenient and save expense if such cases were tried in the manner pursued in this case. The third count of this indictment, upon which the judge of the court' below found the defendant guilty, would have subjected the defendant, had he been regularly tried, “to pay a fine, not exceeding one thousand dollars, and to undergo an imprisonment, either at hard labor, at separate or solitary confinement, or to simple imprisonment, not exceeding three years.” It can hardly be said to be the view of the law that this was a petty offense. It is sufficient, however, to say that, with regard to the question here presented, there can be no real reason for distinguishing between felonies and misdemeanors, so far as a waiver is concerned: Commonwealth ex rel. Ross v. Egan, Warden, 281 Pa. 251. It is contended, also, that it is not a case of want of jurisdiction, because the Court of Quarter Sessions has jurisdiction of the offense. With regal’d to such a contention it was said in Mills v. Commonwealth, 13 Pa. 629: “True, but it must be a court of quarter sessions, acting and speaking according to law. Jurisdiction in courts is the power and authority to declare the law. The very word in its origin imports as much; it is derived from juris and dico; I speak by the law. And that sentence ought to be inscribed in living light on every tribunal of criminal power. It is the right of administering justice through the laws, by the means which the law has provided for that purpose.” And again, “The jury being an essential part of the court in a criminal cas.e, must be lawfully constituted as wéll as-the court *490 proper. ’ ’ In Beale v. Commonwealth, 25 Pa. 19 it was said: “We know that a jury and witnesses are indispensable to a constitutional and legal trial.” It is argued on behalf of the Commonwealth that because the prisoner may waive a jury trial by entering a plea of guilty, it ought, therefore, to be held that he should have the right to waive a jury trial and consent to a trial by a judge alone when he raises issues of fact by pleading not guilty. The function of the jury, at common law, was to pass upon issues of fact raised by the pleadings. When the prisoner entered the plea of guilty, there was no issue of fact to be tried and no' necessity for a jury trial; the confession ivas recorded and nothing done till the judgment: 1 Chitty’s Criminal Law 416 and 428 ; 4 Blackstone’s Commentaries 329. “The founders of this state brought with them to their new abode the usages to which they had been accustomed in the land from which they emigrated. Among them was trial by jury. That mode of trial had long been considered the right of every Englishman, and it had come to be regarded as a right too sacred to be surrendered or taken away ......

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Bluebook (online)
91 Pa. Super. 485, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-james-hall-pasuperct-1926.