41 Pa. Super. 638 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1910
Opinion by
The plaintiff brought this action of assumpsit to recover the sum of $730 alleged to be due him for services rendered as official stenographer of the court of common pleas No. 2, of Philadelphia county, for copies of his stenographic notes, in a large number of trials, furnished to counsel, and for nine copies of his stenographic notes furnished to as many defendants in a certain trial in the court of quarter sessions of said county, asserting his right to recover of the defendant under the provisions of the Act of May 1, 1907, P. L. 135. The parties agreed upon the facts in a case stated, which divided the cases in which the plaintiff asserted the right to recover for copies of the proceedings furnished into three classes: (1) Civil proceedings between private parties tried in the court of common pleas, after the court had, on December 11, 1907, adopted and promulgated the following general order or rule, viz.: “Unless otherwise ordered by the trial judge, the official stenographer shall furnish one typewritten copy of his notes of the proceedings at each trial to the plaintiff or plaintiffs therein, and one copy thereof to the defendant or defendants therein, not more than two copies in all of the notes taken at any trial to be supplied to the parties, regardless of the number concerned;” and before the rule recited had, on March 6, 1908, been rescinded
The learned counsel for the defendant contend that so much of the Act of May 1, 1907, P. L. 135, as authorizes the placing upon the county of the burden of paying for typewritten copies of the stenographic reports of trials furnished to the plaintiff
The statute has general reference to public judicial proceedings and the rights of the parties engaged therein. The general subject is, therefore, one in which the public have an interest, with regard to which legislative action, in the interest of the public, is absolutely necessary. The public generally, as well as every individual citizen of the commonwealth, have an interest in the prompt, efficient and certain administration of justice. There was a time when the volume of litigation was much less than at present and the system of judicial procedure then prevalent was sufficient to meet the requirements of public justice and dispose with reasonable promptness of legal controversies between the citizens of the commonwealth. All offers of testimony, exceptions thereto, the rulings of the court thereupon, and the testimony admitted under the bill of exceptions were written out at length. This process consumed time, it was slow; but the parties knew as the trial proceeded just what would appear in the record when finally made up. The increase in the volume of business made necessary the introduction of a new system, and the use of stenographers to report judicial proceedings has become general. This device expedites judicial procedure, economizes the time of the public tribunals, and so promotes the prompt administration of justice and reduces the amount of public moneys in that behalf expended! The record as now made up, however, is not primarily within the reach of the parties, it is written in symbols which they cannot comprehend. They cannot be absolutely certain as to what it will show until it has been transcribed in longhand, and when that has been done it may not show what they think it ought to reveal. If the parties obtain from day to day, during the progress of a long trial, typewritten copies of the stenographic notes of the proceedings, they are thus made aware of how the record is being made up, while it is being made up. If the reporter has made a mistake the attention of the court can be directed to it, at the time, and it can then be corrected; if anything has been omitted, the omission can be supplied. We cannot, therefore, say that
We are not required, in this case; to determine whether a law which provided that copies of the proceedings in all cases should be furnished at the public expense to private litigants would be valid. This statute does not require anything of that kind, nor do its provisions authorize the courts to so direct by any general order. The third section of the act requires official stenographers, "when engaged in such courts” to take full
The judgment of the court below is reversed and judgment is now entered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant in the sum of 1125.90, with interest from January 28,1909.