Commonwealth v. Murdock

27 A.2d 666, 149 Pa. Super. 175, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 346
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 23, 1942
DocketAppeals, 1-8
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 27 A.2d 666 (Commonwealth v. Murdock) 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. Murdock, 27 A.2d 666, 149 Pa. Super. 175, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 346 (Pa. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

These eight appeals were taken from orders of the Court of Quarter Sessions of Westmoreland County refusing to allow appeals from judgments and sentences imposed by the mayor of the City of Jeannetté on summary convictions for violations of ordinance No. 60 of said city, duly enacted March 21, 1898. This ordinance *177 forbids the sale of goods, wares, and merchandise of any kind within said city, by canvassing or soliciting, unless the person so canvassing or soliciting has first procured a license to transact said business, and paid the license fee required. 1

The Constitution of Pennsylvania (Art. V, sec. 14) provides for an appeal in cases of summary conviction “to such court of record as may be prescribed by law, upon allowance of the appellate court or judge thereof upon cause shown”. (Italics ours). In carrying this provision of the Constitution into effect, the General Assembly passed the Act of April 17, 1876, P. L. 29, which authorized appeals from summary convictions to the court of quarter sessions of the county in which the magistrate, etc., resided, within five days, upon allowance ~by said court or any judge thereof, upon cause shown.

Under our law, therefore, an appeal does not lie from a judgment on summary conviction, as of course. The appellant must first show cause for the appeal to a judge of the court of quarter sessions 2 and secure his allowance of the appeal.

These appellants were arrested on complaints charging them with having violated said ordinance in unlawfully soliciting the sale of, and in selling, certain books and pamphlets, from door to door, in the City of Jeannette, without obtaining a license, as provided in said ordinance. A hearing was had before the mayor of the city and notes of the testimony at the hearing were taken in shorthand and transcribed. They form part of the record considered by the court below and sent up on appeal.

The testimony establishes that all of the defendants— *178 these appellants — went about from door to door in the City of Jeannette soliciting people in their homes, etc. to purchase, and selling, two books entitled ‘Salvation’ and ‘Creation’ respectively, and certain leaflets or pamphlets, all published by the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Brooklyn, N. Y., for which the society fixed twenty-five cents each as the price for the books and five cents each as the price of the leaflets. Defendants paid twenty cents each for the books, unless they devoted their whole time to the work, in which case they paid five cents each for the books they sold at twenty-five cents. Some of the witnesses spoke of ‘contributions’ but the evidence justified a finding that they sold the books and pamphlets. As a preliminary to the sale, they brought with them a phonograph — which they purchased from the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society — on which they played a record, purchased from the same society, in which every other religion but their own was denounced as a ‘snare and a racket’. The testimony of the defendants themselves warranted a finding that they had sold these books and pamphlets for money and that they had not applied for or procured a license to do so as provided by ordinance No. 60. Their defense was that they were members of a sect, calling themselves ‘Jehovah’s Witnesses’, and that it. was against their religious convictions to apply for such a license, and that any prosecution against them for violating the provisions of the ordinance requiring such a license was an infringement of their rights under the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of Pennsylvania, and a restriction of the rights of freedom of worship, freedom of speech, and freedom of the press, secured to them by said Constitutions, and in direct violation of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

After a full hearing, covering eighty printed pages of testimony, the Mayor found all of the defendants guilty and imposed upon each of them a fine within the *179 limit fixed by the ordinance, in default of payment of which they would be committed to the county prison.

Within five days they applied by petition to the court of quarter sessions for an appeal, which was refused by Judge Gordon, President Judge of Common Pleas No; 2 of Philadelphia County, specially presiding, his reasons therefor being set forth as follows: “The appeal in this case was based upon the alleged unconstitutionality of an ordinance of the City of Jeannette requiring the licensing of peddlers and street vendors. The validity of the same ordinance under the Constitution of the United States was involved in the case of Stewart v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (City of Jeannette), 309 U. S. 674, [petition for certiorari from the judgment of the Superior Court of Pennsylvania in Com. v. Stewart et al., 137 Pa. Superior Ct. 445, 9 A. 2d 179. Appeal refused by Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, December 8, 1939, 137 Pa. Superior Ct. xxxm], in which the Supreme Court of the United States refused an appeal on March 25, 1940. The constitutionality of a similar ordinance under our State Constitution was also decided by the Superior Court in the case of Pittsburgh v. Ruffner, 134 Pa. Superior Ct. 192, [4 A. 2d 224]. The questions sought to be raised by the appellants here are, therefore, no longer disputable, and it was for this reason that we refused the appeal.”

The ease of Pittsburgh v. Ruffner, 134 Pa. Superior Ct. 192, 4 A. 2d 224 — appeal refused by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania on March 17, 1939, 134 Pa. Superior Ct. xxxm — was concerned with a somewhat similar ordinance of the City of Pittsburgh, in which the same constitutional defense was presented as in this case. On the argument of that case it developed that the appeal had not been taken within the time limited for appeals by our statute on the subject, and would have to be quashed. But counsel for the appellant— who was also a member of the Jehovah’s Witnesses sect —was so insistent in asking a decision on the merits, *180 in order that it might govern the disposition of similar cases, that we complied with his request and fully discussed the case, on its merits and ruled that such an ordinance, if nondiscriminatory and not unreasonable, was not in violation of the constitutional rights of freedom of worship and freedom of the press secured by our State Constitution and by the Federal Constitution as enlarged by the 14th Amendment.

We said, inter alia:

“I. The ordinance in question cannot, by any stretch of the imagination, be held to be directed against freedom of worship. It is concerned with hawking and peddling merchandise, and with selling merchandise from house to house and in buildings.

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Related

In re Wyckoff
196 F. Supp. 515 (S.D. Mississippi, 1961)
Williams v. State Board of Barber Examiners
25 N.W.2d 282 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1946)
Commonwealth v. Homer
34 A.2d 169 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1943)
Murdock v. Pennsylvania
319 U.S. 105 (Supreme Court, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 A.2d 666, 149 Pa. Super. 175, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-murdock-pasuperct-1942.