167 Pa. Super. 323 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1950
Opinion by
The Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County dismissed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus presented by the relator, Mike Turk, an inmate of the Western State Penitentiary, and he appealed. The relator requested counsel on his appeal, and this Court
On January 28, 1948, Turk was indicted in Washington County for consensual rape upon his daughter, Esther Turk, and the case went to trial in the oyer and terminer on February 9, 1948. Throughout this trial Turk was represented by counsel chosen and employed by him. On February 10, 1948, the jury returned a verdict of guilty. There was no motion for a new trial. On February 17, 1948, Turk was sentenced to a term of not less than seven and one-half years nor more than fifteen years, effective from February 10, 1948. From this judgment he did not appeal.
It is an admitted fact that when the case was tried in the Oyer and Terminer of Washington County neither the testimony nor the charge of the court was stenographically reported.
It is alleged that this omission constituted a violation of the due process provision of the Federal Constitution, and also of the Pennsylvania Constitution of 1874, Article I, Section 9, to the effect that a person shall not be deprived of his liberty unless by “the law of the land.”
Court stenographers or reporters were unknown to the common law. Their appointment and duties are purely statutory and there is no constitutional require
It is admitted that neither the defendant nor his counsel (chosen and employed by him) requested the trial court to have the case reported stenographically.
As to appeals in criminal cases, the common law writ of error was not of right but of grace, and was procured by a petition setting forth probable cause. Under the Constitution of 1790, Article Y, Section 5, and the Constitution of 1838, Article V, Section 5, the party accused “may, under such regulations as shall be prescribed by law, remove the . . . proceedings . . . into the Supreme court.” (Italics supplied). Various statutes provided that an appeal was only on allowance by one of the justices of the Supreme Court or sued out with the consent of the Attorney General.
Under the Act of 1895, P. L. 212, creating the Superior Court, an appeal from the courts of oyer and terminer is of right.
At common law, and until the Act of 1856, supra, an appeal in a criminal case was, in effect, merely a motion in arrest of judgment. Neither the sufficiency of the evidence nor any trial errors were reviewable.
The relator claims that there were trial errors in the admission and rejection of evidence, and that the testimony was insufficient to sustain the verdict. These are but generally described in his petition. He then avers that the absence of a court reporter made it impossible to have the alleged errors reviewed.
Since “the law of the land” provided that a criminal trial shall be stenographically reported, at any stage
But stenographic reporting of the trial would merely have enabled his lawyer to take exceptions orally. Even without such reporting he could still take any exceptions he desired. Certainly a defendant represented by counsel cannot keep silent at the trial, gamble on the verdict, and when it is found to be adverse, demand a new trial on the ground that he took no exception.
The relator was therefore not deprived of his liberty except in exact accord with “the law of the land”; nor was his conviction obtained without “due process of law.”
The order dismissing the petition for a writ of habeas corpus is affirmed.
The Constitution of 1776, Article I, Section 9, of the Declaration of Rights, contains substantially the same phraseology. The Constitution of 1790, Article IX, Section 9, and the Constitution of 1838, Article IX, Section 9, are in the exact words of Article I, Section 9, of the Constitution of 1874.
The Act of 1874, P. L. 182; Act of 1876, P. U. 140; Act of 1887, P. L. 199.
The Act of 1881, P. L. 107; Act of 1907, P. L. 135.
Act of 1791, Sec. 7, 3 Sm. L. 30; Act of 1848, P. L. 25, relating to Philadelphia. Under the Act of 1722, I Sm. L. 138, Sec. 9, apparently appeals were of right.
Act of 1860, P. L. 427, Sections 83, 57, 58 and 59.
Taken from the Act of 1870, P. L. 15. See Sayres v. Commonwealth, 88 Pa. 291, 306.
Section 7 (b), 17 PS Sec. 183.
Section 7 (a), 17 PS Sec. 182.
Middleton v. Commonwealth, 2 Watts 285; Hopkins v. Commonwealth, 50 Pa. 1, 13.
Constitution of 1790, Article V, Sec. 3; Constitution of 1838, Article V, Sec. 4; Constitution of 1874, Article V, Sec. 3.
See 3 Binney 533, 608; Commonwealth ex rel. v. Arnold, 161 Pa. 320, 29 A. 270; Altoona v. Nycum, 156 Pa. Superior Ct. 445, 446, 41 A. 2d 219.
vonMoschzisker’s “Trial by Jury,” sections 222, 223.
Middleton v. Commonwealth, 2 Watts 285; Hopkins v. Commonwealth, 50 Pa. 1, 13; Fife, Jones & Stewart v. Commonwealth, 29 Pa. 429, 435.
Fife, Jones & Stewart v. Commonwealth, 29 Pa. 429.
As to tike practice under stenographic reporting see Rosenthal v. Ehrlicher et al., 154 Pa. 396, 26 A. 435; Connell, Sheriff, v. O’Neil, Executrix, 154 Pa. 5S2, 26 A. 607, limiting Janney v. Howard, 150 Pa. 339, 24 A. 740.