Commonwealth v. Moogerman

122 A.2d 804, 385 Pa. 256, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 462
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 25, 1956
DocketAppeal, 104
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 122 A.2d 804 (Commonwealth v. Moogerman) 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. Moogerman, 122 A.2d 804, 385 Pa. 256, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 462 (Pa. 1956).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Musmanno,

Miss Lois Moogerman, 20 years of age, and student at the University of Pittsburgh, drives a Cadillac car. On May 15, 1955, while returning with a girl friend from a visit to Penn State College and proceeding over a back road, she was arrested for driving at a speed not warranted by the conditions of the highway. She was charged with violating The Vehicle Code, Section 1002(a), 75 PS 501(a), and paid a fine of flO. On September 3, 1955, less than four months later, she was apprehended by a State trooper while driving over Route 22 at a speed of 85 miles per hour near Blairsville, Indiana County, where the speed limit was 50 miles per hour.

Upon the showing of these facts, the Secretary of Revenue suspended Miss Moogerman’s motor vehicle operating privileges for a period of 90 days. She appealed to the County Court of Allegheny County which, by sustaining the suspension and yet allowing the defendant a limited license, both approved and disapproved the Secretary’s action. This self-contradictory order cannot be sustained. In its disposition of this case the County Court misapprehended its authority and function under The Vehicle Code. Section 615(b) of the Code, as amended, authorizes the Secretary of Revenue to suspend the operating privilege of any person whenever he finds upon sufficient evidence that such person has violated the motor vehicle laws. Section 616, as amended, provides that any person whose operator’s license has been so suspended may petition *258 for a hearing in the Court of Common Pleas of the county where he resides (County Court in Allegheny County), and it shall then be the duty of such court to take testimony, examine into the facts of the case, and “determine whether the petitioner is subject to suspension of operator’s license . . . under the provisions of this act.”

Although the Court then hears the case de novo it must in its decision still stay Avithin the limits of its jurisdiction as bounded by the Code and by the decisions of the appellate courts of the Commonwealth. In the case of Commonwealth v. Garman, 361 Pa. 643, the operator’s license of B. S. Garman was suspended by the Secretary of Revenue on the grounds of incompetence. The motorist appealed to the Court of Common Pleas of Snyder County Avhich sustained the suspension “in so far as it prohibits B. S. Garman from operating a motor vehicle genei*ally,” but it still alloAved him to “operate a motor vehicle in his business as a carpenter and planing mill operator.” This Court reversed the action of the Snyder County Common Pleas Court and remanded the record for the entry of an order, “which sustains or reverses the action of the Secretary of Revenue,” saying: “As far as The Vehicle Code is concerned, it provides, as already stated, that the court hearing the matter is to determine ‘whether the petitioner is subject to suspension of operator’s license’; that question must be answered by the court either affirmatively, in which case it should sustain the suspension ordered by the Secretary, or negatively, in which case it should reverse the suspension and direct a reinstatement of the license. The order made by the court below failed to adopt either of these alternatives and was therefore beyond the limits of the discretion entrusted to it by the statute.” (Emphasis supplied.) In the case at bar the County Court of Alie *259 gheny did just the opposite. It acted both affirmatively and negatively. Such an action must fail.

In Bureau of Highway Safety v. Wright, 355 Pa. 307, this Court said: “Upon an appeal from a suspension by the Secretary of Revenue of an operator’s license, it is not only the duty of the court to hear de novo the witnesses for the Commonwealth and those for the licensee, but it is also the court’s duty ‘to determine anew [from the testimony taken] whether the operator’s license should be suspended’: see Commonwealth v. Funk, supra, at p. 399, quoted in like connection a number of times and uniformly followed.”

Thus, the question before the Court below was a simple one: From the testimony in the case ivas Miss Moogerman’s operator’s license to be suspended? If the facts supported a suspension, the appeal was to be dismissed, and if they did not, the appeal was to be sustained. The County Court did not follow that procedure. It adopted a parens patriae attitude. It acted like a philosophical but indulgent parent who recognizes and deplores the mischief committed by his child but lacks the hardihood to discipline him for it.

We said further in the Wright case: “The jurisdiction conferred by Sec. 616 of the Vehicle Code upon courts of common pleas [and County Court] does not authorize them to act either arbitrarily or capriciously with respect to the reinstatement of a suspended license. There must be a justifiable factual basis for the court’s action in the premises.”

The decision of the County Court in the case at bar, if unreversed, would tend to give ballast to the unsubstantiated notion that the Courts may be called upon to function as ex officio pardon boards to mitigate the penalties which the Legislature empowered the Secretary of Revenue to impose under given conditions. But the County Court and the Courts of Common Pleas are *260 not boards of clemency; they are strictly courts of law; they are bound by rules of legal procedure and their decisions must be founded on firm jurisprudence, not fluctuating policy. There is no warrant in statute for the County Court to say as it did here: “The Court in the instant case in its decision is following a policy of the County Court of Allegheny County in granting restricted licenses in cases of similar circumstances.” Courts interpret and expound laws; they do not lay down policies.

The Court below said further: “If mere speed alone, in excess of the speed limits fixed by the Code, was sufficient to justify the Secretary of Revenue in suspending driving privileges, there would be no point in the Legislature’s vesting of broad discretionary powers in the courts of this commonwealth.” With this type of argument the lower Court takes a rather detached view of the awesome phenomen of speed. To speak of excessive speed as “mere speed alone” is like saying “mere dynamite alone.” Speed invariably connotes danger of some kind. It is speed that makes a bullet a mortal instrument. Without speed a bullet would be an innocuous bit of lead or steel with which a child could play harmlessly. It is the speed of a car which converts it from a carriage of pleasure and usefulness into a juggernaut of destruction. * The motorist in this case was driving at 85 miles per hour, which is an illegal speed, except at auto races, on any highway in Pennsylvania.

It is perhaps too late to attempt to slacken the furious tempo of the 1950’s. Everyone seems to be in a vertiginous hurry to get somewhere, although not everyone knows why. But in this headlong racing for near *261 or distant destinations, motor journeys often end at unintended termini.

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Bluebook (online)
122 A.2d 804, 385 Pa. 256, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-moogerman-pa-1956.