Green v. Hern

Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
Green v. Hern, 2 Pen. & W. 167 (Pa. 1830)
Gibson

Green v. Hern

Opinion of the Court

The opinion of the Court was delivered by '

GibsoN, C. J.

To allow a prisoner in execution the liberty of the jail-yard, is certainly not an escape. But taking the yard to *169be part of tbe goal, as it doubtless is, there was an actual escape from it, which according to the common law since the day of Roll’s abridgment, has uniformly fixed the goalor, who can avail himself of nothing as matter of defence but an act of God or of the common enemy. This is not denied; but it is pressed upon us that the common law is unnecessarily rigorous in this particular, and in some parts of the state unsuitable to the circumstances of the inhabitants. There cannot perhaps be a greater calamity than a disposition in the judges to dispense with or modify the law according to their notions of the exigencies of times and circumstances. It destroys, at once, all confidence in the security of person or property; and that too without even a distant prospect of a return to any system whose principles are known or whose authority is acknowledged. Surely there has been sufficient time since the foundation of the colony for experience to mark the necessary variations from the common law; and even had the colonists started with a new, instead of a mature system, it would be unreasonable to treat the jurisprudence of their descendants, at the end of a century and a half, as still in a state of fusion. It was an express condition of the charter, that the laws should conform, as nearly as possible, to those of the parent country ; and accordingly we find but few alterations, and these, for the most part by the legislature. Is it not then too late to begin the work of devastation in order to make room for experiments? Unfortunately a love of novelty is abroad; and it has become the fashion with a class of reformers, to despise the black letter maxims of a system to which their forefathers clung as their best birthright and noblest inheritance! There would be just cause for alarm did the same fashion obtain on the bench.

But conceding th,e competency of judicial legislation, I am unable to perceive how the edds of justice, or even of convenience, would be better answered by a new rule here. The prisons in the more remote counties being insecure, it is said, sheriffs and goalors would be subjected to an unreasonable risk by being held to the rule of the common law; and for this we have a nisi prius dictum of Chief Justice Shippen in Shewel v. Fell, 2 Yeates, 21. Butin proportion to the insecurity of the goal, ought it not to be the policy of the law to increase the vigilance of the goaler; and would that be effected by decreasing his responsibility? The office of a sheriff is a responsible, but a lucrative one; and I am unable to perceive thejustiee, more than the policy, of a rule that would require us to lose sight of the creditors rights in attending to the. officer’s'convenience. Whatever may have been ílíeistale of oi r prisons thirty years ago, they are with an exception or two, as secure as those in other countries; and little woufd-perhaps b® gained, even on the score of convenience, by establishing tempora*170ry rules of various degrees of responsibility in different parts of the sfate*. Nothing but the* hurry of a trial could have prevented the Chief Justice from perceiving the uncertainty and confusion of’ such a state of things, and the danger there would be in disturbing a fundamental principle of the common law. Never was remark more just, than that “whenever a standing rule of law, of which the reason perhaps could* not be remembered, hath been wantonly broken in upon by statutes or new resolutions, the wisdom of the rule hath in the end appeared from the inconveniences that have followed from the innovation.” Plere however, the wisdom of' the particular rule appears in relief too prominent to be unperceived or forgotten. Is it to be credited that if the checks and;* restraints of the common law were removed, sheriffs and goalers would be inaccessible to those causes which have made instances of corruption* in* almost every sort of pecuniary trust so deplorably’ frequent? Let it be known that the question of liability is to depend on what a jury may deem the proper degree of vigilance, and escapes will be as common in civil as they are in criminal cases. Responsibility will be at an end ; and the interest of the creditor, who- from the very nature of the case, must be unable to shew negligence or connivance, will be deemed beneath the attention of the goalor, although the disposable force of the county is placed at his command for its protection. No lawyer ever disputed the rule which determines the liability of ferrymen and common carriers; yet the reason of it in regard to these is precisely the same as in regard to the species of bailment under consideration. We are of opinion, then, that the Court erred in receiving evidence of the insufficiency of the goal, and in putting the cause to the jury on the point of negligence.

■ Judgment reversed, and a venire de novo awarded:,.

Reference

Full Case Name
JAMES GREEN for use against DANIEL HERN
Cited By
1 case
Status
Published