Commonwealth v. Osterstock

28 Pa. D. & C. 376, 1936 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 241
CourtNorthampton County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedNovember 16, 1936
Docketno. 73
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Pa. D. & C. 376 (Commonwealth v. Osterstock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Northampton County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Osterstock, 28 Pa. D. & C. 376, 1936 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 241 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

Stewart, P. J.,

— The first paper taxing the costs was signed by the three attorneys for all the 10 defendants. It was dated July 3, 1936, and was filed in the quarter sessions on July 27,1936. It contains in its several paragraphs the names and the fees for each witness, and alleges that the testimony of the witnesses mentioned was not directed to the conspiracy charge, or that their testimony “was as much in support of the counterfeiting charge as that of the conspiracy”; that the testimony was cumulative and immaterial. Some paragraphs contained the names of a large number of witnesses whose names were upon the subpoena, but it is alleged they were not called. Other paragraphs contained the allegations that the witnesses were officers and employes of the State at the time of the trial, and were not entitled to witness fees. We understand that the district attorney admits these to be the facts, and that the fees of State officers have been deducted from the bill.

The main question raised by the paper referred to was that it was improper to place all the witness fees in the conspiracy charge. The record shows that the clerk of quarter sessions, Mr. Ritter, on August 11, 1936, held a [378]*378hearing. It is admitted no testimony was taken before Mr. Ritter. He was practically asked to decide the matter without any knowledge of the specific contention that the costs should be ápportioned between the indictments, nos. 73, April term, 1935, 74, April term, 1935, 65, April term, 1936, and 67, April term, 1936. He declined to apportion them, in a written opinion filed August 13, 1936. On August 21,1936, Leon Wise et al., by their counsel, appealed from the decision of the clerk, and attached as reasons for their appeal, a carbon copy of the paper dated July 3,1936, and filed before Mr. Ritter on July 27,1936, and averred as an additional reason:

“That L. D. Ritter, Clerk of Quarter Sessions Court of Northampton County, erred in not making a division of the costs in the above matter between or among the four (4) indictments tried at the same time in this matter namely, indictments No. 73 April Term, 1935; No. 74 April Term, 1935; No. 64 April Term, 1936, and No. 67 April Term, 1936, for the reason, that the evidence adduced in the trial went to matters pertaining to the four (4) indictments and not to one (1) indictment alone.”

That appeal was filed eight days after Mr. Ritter’s decision, and it was not signed by “the party aggrieved by the taxation,” but was signed by counsel, and it is not verified by an affidavit.

On August 24, 1936, Samuel Buehman, a defendant, and one of those mentioned in the appeal referred to, filed his appeal, and he gave reasons which are an exact copy of the paper dated July 3,1936, and filed July 27,1936. Mr. Buehman signed his appeal, and swore to it. It was filed on August 25,1936, four days after the first appeal. In the answer to the rule to strike off the appeal it is stated that the attorney for appellants did not receive notice of the decision of the clerk until August 17th, and that the first appeal, filed on August 21st, was in time. If it be admitted that he did not get notice of the clerk’s decision until August 17th, nevertheless the notice itself disclosed that the opinion had been filed on August 13th, and the time would [379]*379be up on August 18th. That appeal was too late. In the brief of the learned counsel it was stated that the appeal of Mr. Buchman, filed on August 25th, was to be considered, not as an appeal, but as a specification under our Rule of Court 99. The difficulty with that view is that the appeal of August 21st is not technically a'n appeal within the wording of the court rule because not signed by the parties aggrieved and because there was no affidavit. The appeal of Mr. Buchman, although properly signed and sworn to, would clearly be too late.

Courts have uniformly construed rules of court on the subject of taxation of costs strictly. In Bard-Will Co., Inc., v. Groff, 41 Lanc. L. R. 21, the syllabus is:

“Under Section Two of Rule Thirteen of Common Pleas Rules of Court an appeal from the taxation of costs will be dismissed when taken more than five days after the date of taxation.

“Taxation of costs will be presumed to have been made on the day the rule was returnable in the absence of anything to show to the contrary.”

In connection with the last paragraph, we suggest, following the analogous decisions in justice of the peace cases, where a hearing is had before the clerk, and the decision is not announced at once, that he should inform counsel at the hearing of the day on which decision will be filed.

In Burrell v. Bolling, 19 Westm. 83, the syllabus is:

“Under rule No. 80 of the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County, which provides that the affidavit of the party, his agent or attorney, attending the correctness of the bill, and the attendance and materiality of the witnesses shall be conclusive of all the facts in the bill filed, as well to the officers as to the court, on appeal, unless specially contradicted under oath, means that unless testimony is taken by a party appealing from the taxation of the costs tending to contradict the facts set forth in the bill of costs and sworn to by the party filing the same, or his agent or attorney, those facts must be taken as conclusively proven.”

[380]*380That case is of value as showing that in the instant case testimony should have been produced to the clerk in support of present appellants’ contention. See Bogle v. Pratt, 12 D. & C. 808. In our own case of Shover’s Estate, 16 Northamp. 111, no specifications were filed. We said, referring to the then Court Rule 52: “If that section had been invoked, this appeal would be dismissed.” It is, however, argued that there is no rule in the quarter sessions applicable to the taxation of costs; that Rule 99 only applies to the common pleas. We cannot believe that this contention is made seriously. The rules of court that went into effect last year give Rule 99 under the heading “Common Pleas and Quarter Sessions Rules.” The rule is as follows:

“All bills of costs shall in the first instance be taxed by the prothonotary and either party may have such taxation on five days’ notice to the opposite party.

“The party aggrieved by the taxation may appeal therefrom within five days after the taxation, but the party appealing shall within five days after the appeal file a specification, verified by affidavit, of the items to which he objects, otherwise the appeal will be dismssed.”

Of course there is no prothonotary in the court of quarter sessions, but there is a clerk, whose duties are very much like those of the prothonotary, and very little light would be added by making the rule read “All bills of cost shall in the first instance be taxed by the Prothonotary or Clerk.” The learned counsel for appellants never construed the rule as not applicable to the quarter sessions when they taxed these costs. It should be noted that Rule 99 is an exact transcript of Rule 58 of the last rules of court which were adopted in 1919, including the word “prothonotary.” The only difference between the two sets of rules is that in the old rules there was a section 272, as follows:

“The foregoing rules of the court of common pleas, mutatis mutandis, are hereby extended to this court as far [381]*381as they are applicable, and not in conflict with the rules in this schedule.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Com. v. Benz., Com. v. Routley
178 A. 390 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1935)
Commonwealth v. Wm. Strauss
89 Pa. Super. 82 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1926)
Commonwealth v. Bartilson
85 Pa. 482 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1877)
Commonwealth v. Kocher
23 Pa. Super. 65 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 Pa. D. & C. 376, 1936 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-osterstock-paqtrsessnortha-1936.