Preno Petition

77 Pa. D. & C. 193, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 414
CourtPhiladelphia County Court of Oyer and Terminer
DecidedApril 25, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 77 Pa. D. & C. 193 (Preno Petition) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Philadelphia County Court of Oyer and Terminer primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Preno Petition, 77 Pa. D. & C. 193, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 414 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

Flood, J.,

We have before us the petitions of two constables, one elected for the twenty-second ward of the City of Philadelphia, and the other [194]*194for the forty-first ward of the city. Each petition asks for the appointment of a deputy constable, and recites that the elected constable, “reposing special trust and confidence” in the person named as deputy, appoints and deputes him to be deputy constable of the ward “with power to officiate in said office, and to do whatsoever, by the laws of the State, appertains to the said office”. No reason is given as to why the appointment should be made, nor is it stated that there is a necessity for the appointment.

The petitions were presented to us without supporting testimony. The constable and the proposed deputy in each case appeared at the bar of the court but were not questioned as to the necessity for the appointment. The district attorney stated that the suggested deputies had no criminal records and nothing further was developed at the hearing.

These petitions and this type of hearing have become customary in Philadelphia, and the court of quarter sessions has generally approved all such applications if no evidence of a criminal record or of bad character of the proposed deputy is produced at the hearing.

We have been deterred from following this routine in these cases for a number of reasons. Hon. James J. Clothier, the chief magistrate, has informed the court that there are many more constables and deputy constables active in the city than are necessary. The district attorney, who is at present investigating certain activities of constables, deputy constables and private detectives which are under criticism says in his brief that there are too many deputies today and competition among them leads to abuses. He has suggested to us that no deputies should be appointed without a hearing and a showing of need for the appointment.’ As a result we felt that we should reexamine the subject before approving the appointments requested.

[195]*195There is evidence of the appointment of deputy constables very early in the history of the common law. The office of constable itself is very ancient, and goes back, according to Blackstone, at least to the time of Edward III: 1 Blackstone 355-56. Evidence of the right of constables to appoint deputies appears in the cases of Midhurst v. Waite, 3 Burr. 1260, 97 Eng. Rep. 821 (1761), and King v. Stubbs, 2 T. R. 395, 398, 100 Eng. Rep. 213, 214 (1788), and in the literature of a much earlier period. Cf. Shakespeare, Measure for Measure, Act II, Scene II.

At the time of the American Revolution constables were the chief conservators of the peace. This meant that in the cities a considerable number of deputies were necessary if the peace were to be preserved. The watchmen in eighteenth century London, mentioned by Fielding and Dickens, while authorized by statute, were, in effect, deputy constables with all the powers of constables while they were on duty: 1 Blackstone 357.

The constables and their deputies’ were very ineffective preservers of the peace in cities. During the Lord George Gordon riots in London in 1780 the mob had the streets to themselves until the military was called. At the first march of the mob against the House of Parliament only 5 of 80 sworn constables could be found to attempt a stand against them. During the next three or four days of the riots the constables and their deputies disappeared and remained in hiding while the mob invaded the House of Commons and burned down many of London’s houses, climaxing their activities by burning down Lord Mansfield’s mansion as is so dramatically portrayed by Dickens in Barnaby Rudge, and in Lord Campbell’s Life of Mansfield. This experience, among other things, led Parliament to establish a metropolitan police force for London and the surrounding area. Similar situations [196]*196in America led to the establishment of city police forces here.

Stephen Girard, in his will, left money to the City of Philadelphia to enable it to establish a police force. The result of all this is that now the police force has taken over the duty of preserving the peace in Philadelphia as it did previously in London and many other cities, and the constable’s function as a preserver of the peace has withered away. However, no statute has ever deprived him of that function.

According to Blackstone, writing in 1776, constables had the duty of keeping the peace in their district. For that purpose they were armed with powers of arresting, imprisoning and breaking open houses and the like “of the extent of which powers”, Blackstone observed, “considering what manner of men are for the most part put into these offices, it is perhaps very well that they are generally kept in ignorance”: 1 Blackstone 356.

Blackstone’s opinion that the powers of the constable should be more restricted than they were in his day appears to be shared by the judiciary which periodically seems to feel called upon to write opinions telling the constables what their duties are, and particularly what they are not. See In re Application for the Appointment of Deputy Constables, 11 Phila. 391 (1875) and Deputy Constables, 4 Dist. R. 217 (1895), discussed infra.

Be this as it may, the constable still has the powers of a peace officer in Philadelphia. If he were still the sole conservator of the peace it is easily seen that he would need a great many deputies, since only two constables are to be elected for each ward in the city, except perhaps in the twenty-first, twenty-second, twenty-third and twenty-fourth wards, or in wards later created out of those wards. See Act of March 30, 1858, P. L. 185; Act of February 2, 1854, P. L. 21, [197]*197sec. 26; Petition of Robert McKinney, 18 Phila. 480, 43 L. I. 250 (1886). At any rate only a few more than 100 constables are to be elected in Philadelphia, and if the responsibility to keep the peace still rested upon them they would have the right very freely to appoint deputies. They evidently had this right in the eighteenth century when the duty did rest upon them. There is nothing to indicate that in Pennsylvania they did not once have the same right of freely appointing deputies as they had in England in the eighteenth century.

In 1820 we find the first Pennsylvania statute affecting this right. This statute provided that no general or partial deputation be made by any constable without the approval of the quarter sessions court except in a civil suit or proceeding at the request and risk of plaintiff and required by the urgency of the occasion: Act of May 28, 1820, 7 Sm. L. 308, sec. 5. Since that time deputies can be appointed by constables in Philadelphia only with the approval of the quarter sessions court.

The act which now controls the subject is the Act of June 19, 1913, P. L. 534, 13 PS §21. This act provides for the appointment of deputies in any ward by the constable of that ward subject to the approval of the quarter sessions court, and contains a provision that no person shall be appointed unless he be a bona fide resident of the ward and so continue for the time during which the appointment is made. It has been uniformly held since the passage of the Act of 1820 that the court of quarter sessions has discretion in the approval of deputy constables, and in every case which we have seen the constable was required to show a necessity for the appointment before the court would approve it.

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Related

In re Fry
110 A.3d 1103 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2015)
In re Appointment of Hunter
782 A.2d 610 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2001)
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Bluebook (online)
77 Pa. D. & C. 193, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preno-petition-paoytermctphila-1951.