Commonwealth v. Leet

6 Pa. D. & C.4th 97, 1989 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 31
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Armstrong County
DecidedFebruary 27, 1989
Docketno. 1988-194
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Pa. D. & C.4th 97 (Commonwealth v. Leet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Armstrong County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Leet, 6 Pa. D. & C.4th 97, 1989 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 31 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1989).

Opinion

HOUSE, P. J.,

In this case we must confront an issue of considerable interest and importance. Does a deputy sheriff have legal power to make a traffic stop and/or arrest? We agree with the commonwealth that, in general, law enforcement authorities have such powers as are granted them by statute. In the case of sheriffs and their deputies, however, there are no statutes which specifically define the duties of or powers exercisable by such officials. In the absence of statutory authority, the sheriffs police powers, if any he has, must of necessity be based upon the common law. Historically, the sheriff has been a most important figure and, in medieval England, that officer was described as “the principal conservator of the peace within his bailiwick.”

The office of sheriff, as it has evolved through the centuries, has had two primary functions: First, there has been the above-mentioned function of the keeping of the public peace and order and, second, the still-evolving function of action as an arm of the courts by serving the court’s process, executing and [98]*98enforcing the court’s orders, taking custody of the court’s prisoners and providing security for the court’s operations.

Insofar as the sheriff’s duties in connection with the courts are concerned, there can be no doubt whatsoever that the sheriff and his deputies do have the power (derived from the court itself) to enforce the court’s directives by stop and arrest at least where violation of the directives occurs in the presence of the sheriff and/or his deputies. Likewise, there can be little doubt that the sheriff and his deputies retain their historic powers as peace officers, that is, the power to stop and/or arrest where breaches of the public peace or public order occur in the presence of such officers or concerning which they have reliable information.

Bouvier’s Law Dictionary (Francis Rawle’s 3d Revision) 8th ed., West Publishing Co. (1914) contains a rather comprehensive discussion of the office of sheriff and of powers of arrest generally.

Bouvier indicates that “any peace officer...sheriff...may without a warrant arrest any person committing a felony in his presence;...or committing a breach of the peace, during its continuance or immediately afterwards;...whether acting on his own knowledge or facts communicated by others ...and not unless the offense amount to a felony.” Bouvier at 243.

Bouvier quoting others states that in feudal times the sheriff “grew to be the ruler of the country, responsible for its revenues, military force, police, gaols and courts, and the execution of the writs of the Curia Regis.” Bouvier at 3058. But Bouvier goes on to outline the later history of the office in which most of the above powers waned and/or were stripped away and the sheriff had evolved into “an attendant of the courts of law.” Indeed Bouvier [99]*99quotes Maitland as stating that “the whole history of English justice and police might be brought under this rubric — the Decline and Fall of the Sheriff.”

Thus, it is quite safe to conclude that the sheriffs office which crossed the ocean and was embedded in the Pennsylvania Constitution was a much less powerful and comprehensive office than that which existed in England in the early centuries after the Norman Conquest.

Bouvier ascribes to the sheriff the power “to pursue and to take all traitors, murderers, felons and rioters” and states that it is the sheriffs duty “to preserve the peace within his bailiwick or county.”

Thus, it does appear that the office of sheriff, at the time of its enshrinement in the Pennsylvania Constitution, carried with it the power to arrest for felony violations as well as for breaches of the peace.

At the time of the initial adoption of our constitution, virtually all felonies were then common-law felonies as opposed to statutory felonies. Today, by statute, all common-law felonies have been abolished and we now have nothing but statutory felonies. Thus, a question exists as to whether the sheriffs powers to arrest for felony still survives. However, that question is not before us and we do not decide it.

Neither Bouvier, supra, nor any other source we have been able to find attributes to the sheriff the power to arrest on view or upon information for misdemeanor offenses or for statutory offenses of any description.

“Peace officer” is defined in Webster’s New International Unabridged Dictionary (2d ed.) as “A civil officer whose duty it is to preserve the public peace, as a sheriff or constable. Policemen are made peace officers by statute.” (emphasis supplied)

[100]*100By contrast, “police” is defined, inter alia, as: “the department of government charged with the prevention, detection, and prosecution of public nuisances, crimes, etc.”

While there may be room for controversy, it does appear that there is an historic and fundamental difference between the duties and functions of-sheriffs and the duties and functions of police.

The Pennsylvania Constitution in Article 9, section 4 provides that county officers shall include, inter alia, “sheriffs.” However, neither the constitution nor statutes define “sheriff’ or the powers of the office.

Under the Pennsylvania Constitution the legislative power is vested in the General Assembly. That body has seen fit to enact statutes which create or authorize the creation of state and municipal police departments. The General Assembly has further selected these police arms so created by it to be the enforcers in the execution of the laws enacted by it. Perhaps by inadvertence, but almost certainly by design, the General Assembly has never seen fit to enact legislation either defining the áheriff s powers or specifying that the sheriff shall have general police powers insofar as statutory enactments are concerned.

The commonwealth argues in the case at bar that the sheriff has common-law police powers but, as shown above, we do not have an exclusively common-law government. Ours is a constitutional government and the powers granted to the branches of that government are therein defined. The constitution taken together with the lawful enactments of the legislature constitute the “policy” of the commonwealth and the “police” are the designated enforcers of that “policy.” It is, thus, no accident that these two words “policy” and “police” [101]*101are from the same word root and that, indeed, in earlier times they were used interchangeably.

Obviously, since the police are but creatures of the legislature, they can have and exercise only those powers delegated to them by legislative enactment. Thus, the conclusion seems compelled that in Pennsylvania, at least, the powers of police officers are purely statutory. Does this mean that there are and can be no “common-law” police powers?

Pennsylvania unquestionably is a common law state in the sense that Pennsylvania has always considered that its body of law incorporates the so-called English common law. But that does not mean that the powers wielded under feudal English common law by the lord of the manor or local knight or sheriff are now necessarily to be attributed to the modern counterparts of those ancient officers. The lord of the manor, the knight and the sheriff all then had a hand in maintaining peace and order and in enforcing the “law,” i.e. the king’s will.

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Related

Venneri v. County of Allegheny
316 A.2d 120 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1974)
Allegheny County Deputy Sheriff's Ass'n v. Commonwealth
504 A.2d 437 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1986)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Pa. D. & C.4th 97, 1989 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-leet-pactcomplarmstr-1989.