Carabello Appeal
Superior Court of Pennsylvania
February 18, 1976
238 Pa. Super. Ct. 479
Stephen Arinson, Chief Deputy City Solicitor, with him Arnold I. Kalman, Assistant City Solicitor, and Sheldon L. Albert, City Solicitor, for appellant.
Mark J. Biros, Assistant Attorney General, with him J. Donald McCarthy and Nancy J. Moore, Assistant Attorneys General, and Walter M. Phillips, Jr., Deputy Attorney General, for appellee.
This is an appeal from a lower court Order denying the Appellant‘s Motion to Quash a Subpoena. The Subpoena (No. 1190) was issued in connection with the proceedings of the January, 1974 Special Investigating Grand Jury.1 The appellant moved to quash the subpoenas on grounds more fully set forth later in this Opinion. After argument on the appellant‘s Motion, the lower court declined to quash the subpoena. In doing so, the Honorable Matthew W. BULLOCK, JR., in his Order, stated the belief that a controlling question of law, to which there is substantial ground for difference of opinion, existed and that immediate appeal from his Order would materially advance the ultimate termination of the matter. In so doing, Judge BULLOCK certified this appeal as appropriate for immediate appellate review, pursuant to the Appellate Court Jurisdiction Act, Act of July 31, 1970, P.L. 673, No. 223, Section 501,
Appellant moved to quash the subpoenas on several grounds. Especially emphasized by appellant is his first contention that the subpoena in question was invalid since it was allegedly not issued by a lawful procedure.2 Both the appellant and the Commonwealth agree that the
As appellant has pointed out, the assigned judge has a duty to be diligent in his supervision and control of proceedings of an investigating Grand Jury. See Commonwealth v. Columbia Investment Corp., 457 Pa. 353, 325 A.2d 289 (1974); Commonwealth v. Hubbs, 137 Pa. Superior Ct. 229, 8 A.2d 611 (1939). Of course, the judicial supervisory role includes within its purview the subpoena process. However, contrary to arguments raised by appellant, we must hold that the judge has no duty to investigate the propriety of each subpoena prior to its issuance.
The customs and practice with respect to subpoena procedure are long-standing and well-known in judicial proceedings. When any party to a judicial proceeding desires a subpoena to compel the testimony of a witness or the production of some matter, he sees the appropriate officer of the court to secure a blank subpoena form. He then fills in the appropriate blank spaces and has the form properly served. Our statutes provide for issuance of subpoenas; the Act of June 16, 1836, P.L. 784, § 22 (
“ISSUE OF WRITS OF SUBPOENA Each of the said courts is empowered to issue writs of subpoena, under their official seal, into any county of this commonwealth, to summon and bring before the respective court any person to give testimony in any cause or matter depending before them, under the penalties hitherto appointed and allowed in any such case by the laws of this commonwealth.”
Beyond this broad statutory provision, the statutes and rules of procedure provide scant guidance with respect to practices involved in the issuance of subpoenas. Rule 144(a) of the Pennsylvania Rules of Criminal Procedure empowers “issuing authorities”3 such as district justices to issue process for witnesses at the preliminary hearing stage of a criminal case.4 In civil cases, our practice is partially guided by Rules 234 and 1357 of the Rules of Civil Procedure which provide the form to be used for subpoenas. While not specifically set forth in our written statutes or rules, our subpoena process has nonetheless evolved, as stated above, into a set and orderly procedure, uniformly followed in our courts. It has been held that a settled usage universally acquiesced in throughout the Commonwealth over a long period of time, may assume the proportions of a common law rule. Commonwealth v. Hubbs, supra, 137 Pa. Superior Ct. at 236, 8 A.2d at 614-615. It is clear that subpoena practice in our Commonwealth has so evolved and may be considered to be a common law rule. Our legislature, which has not acted
While dismissing appellant‘s claims regarding the procedure followed in subpoena practice, we must nonetheless examine appellant‘s substantive claims that the procedure followed worked to deny him (and others) of rights. Appellant contends that by not reviewing the proposed testimony sought of each prospective witness and the relevancy of any other matter sought prior to the issuance of each subpoena, the supervising judge is abdicating his responsibilities to supervise Grand Jury proceedings. It may not be denied, as stated earlier, that the lower court certainly has the clear responsibility to supervise Grand Jury proceedings to avoid abuses, including abuses in the use of subpoenas. See Commonwealth v. Columbia Investment Corp., supra; McNair‘s Petition, 324 Pa. 48, 187 A. 498 (1936); Commonwealth v. Hubbs, supra. However, the appellant has not convinced us that the court cannot perform this vital function, and provide the necessary safeguards to those served with subpoenas, by entertaining and considering appropriate motions to quash or limit the scope of a subpoena after it is served. Appellant would have us mandate a two step procedure for court review of each subpoena where a single step is more than adequate to prevent abuse. The appellant‘s rationale, if logically extended, would compel the conclu-
The appellant has also raised an issue on appeal, which, in simplified terms is aptly described by the lower court as an assertion “... that it has not been established that the subpoena is relevant to the Grand Jury‘s investigation.”6 As a general rule, of course, such claims are interlocutory at this stage of the proceedings. See United States v. Ryan, supra; In re: Petition of Specter, supra. The lower court specifically limited its certification in this case to the first issue discussed above, in this opinion. In view of the interlocutory nature of appellant‘s second contention and the lower court‘s refusal to certify that issue as ripe for appeal, we do not deem it proper to review such claims of appellant at this time, but rather limit the scope of our review and decision to the sole issue of procedure discussed earlier.7
Affirmed and remanded for further proceedings in the lower court.
DISSENTING OPINION BY PRICE, J.:
This appeal presents the same question as in Tracey Service Co. Appeals, January, 1974 Special Investigating Grand Jury, 238 Pa. Superior Ct. 476, A.2d
I would quash the appeal.
HOFFMAN, J., joins in this dissenting opinion.
