Commonwealth v. Moller
Commonwealth v. Moller
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
From the record before us the following facts appear: On May 13, 1911, an information, supported by affidavit, was lodged before a justice of the peace charging that the defendant, at Lewistown, Pa., “ had unlawfully operated and run a motor-vehicle recklessly and at a greater rate of speed than one mile in five minutes, contrary to the act of assembly in such cases made and provided.” A warrant issued on May 15, and on the same day the defendant was arrested and brought to the magistrate’s office, “and after a full hearing is convicted of violating the act of assembly regulating the running and the speed of motor-vehicles on the streets of the borough of Lewis-town, and I do adjudge him to forfeit and pay a fine in the sum of ten dollars and all costs.” Two days later, on May 17, the defendant, by his counsel, appeared and demanded that the defendant have the right of trial by jury and entered a bond with security. On October 28, the defendant filed in the court of quarter sessions a petition reciting the facts, and prayed the court to allow him a trial by jury, as provided by the act of April 27,
Looking first at the proceeding in the quarter sessions alone, as it is above outlined, it is apparent that the learned judge below found no facts from the evidence and convicted the defendant of no specific act which is a violation of the statute under which the proceedings were begun. The judgment entered indicates that the learned judge felt himself to be, not determining the guilt or innocence of the defendant upon facts found by himself from the testimony adduced before him, but exercising the supervisory powers of a court in reviewing the proceeding of an inferior tribunal: “The proceedings before the justice and the summary conviction of the defendant .... are hereby affirmed.”
Unless then the situation, from the standpoint of the commonwealth, can be saved by the action of the magistrate, the defendant cannot be punished on the ground that the court of quarter sessions duly ascertained a violation by him of the provisions of a penal statute and convicted him thereof. Turning then to the record of the magistrate, we direct our attention first to the information,
There is no intimation of a charge that the speed exceeded -twenty miles an hour, which, under ordinary conditions, would, at least prima facie, be presumed to be lawful. There is no averment of the existence of any of the conditions mentioned by the statute as indicative of the circumstances under which the usual rate of speed allowed should be cut down, to wit, the width of the street or
Pursuing the record of the magistrate one step further, we observe that he does not convict the defendant of the offense charged in the information, which would be a good record if the information charged an offense. Nor does he find him guilty of doing any specific act or thing set forth in the record. He simply convicts him of violating an act of assembly which described many different offenses followed by as many different penalties. It appears to us therefore that the information which is the
We have already seen that, regarding the proceeding in the quarter sessions merely as an appeal, the record there discloses no foundation for further holding the defendant because the learned judge convicted him of nothing. Regarding the proceeding in the court below as a certiorari to determine whether the judgment of the magistrate should be affirmed or reversed, we think the judgment cannot be sustained for the reasons indicated. If authority be needed in support of these principles, it it may be found in Com. v. Borden, 61 Pa. 272; Com. v. Davison, 11 Pa. Superior Ct. 130; and Com. v. Gelbert, 170 Pa. 426. The general attitude of the appellate courts towards summary proceedings may be gathered from the following language taken from the opinion of Mr. Justice McCollum in the case last cited, some of it being in turn approved quotations from the most eminent of early authorities: “But if a complaint in writing is resorted to, being the substratum of the magistrate’s jurisdiction, and in the nature of an indictment, it should contain a complete statement of the offense; for the evidence given upon the trial can only support the original charge, and can by no means extend or supply what is wanting in the complaint. The complaint must also contain a direct and positive charge against the defendant and not merely facts amounting to a presumption of guilt. ... It is claimed by the commonwealth’s counsel that this view of the subject is purely technical, but we cannot so regard it. The defect complained of is. substantial and jurisdictional. A like defect in an indictment is ground for arresting judgment upon it, and it seems reasonable that such a defect in the complaint which is the basis of a summary proceeding should vitiate the latter. In Pennsylvania none of the common-law or statutory essentials of a summary conviction have been
The judgments of the magistrate and of the court of quarter sessions are reversed and set aside.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.