Paist's Petition
Paist's Petition
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting Opinion by
This appeal should be quashed for two unanswerable reasons. First, no appeal is given by the statute under which the proceeding was conducted. If it be conceded that a common law certiorari might properly issue, yet it would bring up nothing but the record and the record proper discloses no irregularity. But second, if an appeal was given no final order has yet been made from which an appeal will lie. The order complained of is in these words: “ It is therefore ordered that he answer the question unless there be other sufficient reasons for not answering.” This was not a final order. It left an open door before the defendant. It afforded him opportunity to be further heard before an attachment could be awarded or a commitment directed. No appeal lies from such an interlocutory order. A simple statement of the situation shows our duty so plainly that no amount' of argument could make it clearer. The appeal should be quashed and the defendant remitted to the forum he has so hastily fled, for his own final answer and a final order of the court.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
It appears that in January last by joint resolution of councils a special committee of those bodies was raised “ to investigate accusations against members of councils of the city of Philadelphia in reference to the passage of the ordinance approved July 2, 1894, granting privileges to the Mutual Automatic Telephone Company.” After reciting certain newspaper charges to the effect “that a large amount of the stock of said company was used in securing the passage of ” said ordinance, etc., and that “it is due to the members of councils, as well as to the public, that there should be a full, searching and impartial investigation of these charges,” the resolution provides for the appointment of “ a joint, special committee of five (5) members from each chamber ... to investigate the aforesaid accusations, with full power and authority to send for persons, papers, books and documents, in the hands and possession of whomsoever the same may be, and the production and examination thereof before the committee.” It also provides that “ the committee
In these enactments the legislature appears to have recognized the necessity for full, thorough and complete investigation, in certain cases that might thereafter arise, and to that end ample provision was made for necessary process and its proper enforcement. The authority to create such committee and invest it with the powers conferred by said acts cannot be doubted. In a similar case, which came into this court on appeal from Common Pleas No. 1 of Philadelphia, we said the investigation, then in progress under the provisions of same acts, was lawful, and that the witness who had been regularly subpoenaed by the committee was bound to obey the process, etc. : Eckstein’s Petition ; Yard’s Appeal, 148 Pa. 509.
In the case before us, it is alleged by the appellees that on February 11th last, appellant appeared before the joint committee and testified to certain matters in relation to which he was interrogated, but refused to say for whom he acted in purchasing certain stock from the personal representative of Hugh Pigott deceased. Whereupon it was resolved by the committee that the refusal of the witness to testify as to that fact should be certified to the court for its action in the premises. That was accordingly done in the form of a petition by the clerks of select and common councils purporting to set forth said proceedings before the joint committee, and praying that an order be issued commanding appellant “ to testify before said committee as to whom he represented in the purchase of the stock of Hugh Pigott deceased, and all other matters necessary and pertinent in reference to said stock and the purchase thereof, in accordance with the 15th article of the act of June 1,1885.”
Upon presentation of the petition, February 18, 1895, the court granted a rule on appellant to appear and answer why he should not answer the questions propounded by said committee,” returnable at one o’clock U. M. same day. At twelve o’clock noon of same day notice of the rule was given to appellant, who was barely able, within the hour that intervened, to retain counsel in time to appear in court at one o’clock. The court was then fully informed of the facts by appellant’s counsel, who, among other things, stated that the petition upon which the rule to show cause was issued had just been handed to him
The reason for referring to the court, for its consideration and determination, questions involving the rights and duties of witnesses and others as proyided for in the 15th article of the act of June 1, 1885, doubtless was that they are strictly judicial questions of such importance, and sometimes fraught with such serious consequences that they could not be safely submitted to the determination of any investigating committee. While it is in every way desirable and necessary that such questions should be heard and decided as speedily as is consistent with the rights of the parties concerned, it was never intended that they should be so speeded as to deprive the respondent of both time aud opportunity of answering the petition or otherwise presenting his defence, as was done in this case. Appellant’s rights in that regard were wholly ignored. It was manifestly impossible for him or his counsel to prepare an answer to the petition and present his defence, if any he had, within the one hour that intervened between service of the rule to show cause and the time fixed for hearing. In Yard’s appeal, supra, opportunity was given for filing an answer, and the case was heard and disposed of in a regular
The decree is reversed with costs to be paid by the appellees, and it is ordered that the record be remitted to the court below with instructions to proceed and determine the case according to law.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.