Commonwealth v. Allen

2 Pa. Super. 175 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1896

Opinion by

Wickham, J.,

(after stating the

facts as above) :

The surety on the bond, who is the appellant here, contends: First, that Maud Bell Scott, not having obtained an assignment of the bond, has no interest therein and cannot use the name of the commonwealth in bringing suit against the obligor. A sufficient answer to this will be found in Com. v. Snyder, 1 Super. Ct. 286, where a similar question was raised and decided. The court say in that case: “ The mode of proceeding on bonds given to the commonwealth by public officers and persons executing private trusts by legal appointment is directed by statute. The action is to be brought in the name of the commonwealth to the use of the persons interested and at their instance. No assignment or authorization by any officer of the commonwealth is required. Though the bond in this case does not, in strictness, belong to that class of obligations, the analogy between them is such that, in the absence of other statutory direction, a similar proceeding for its enforcement may be sustained; otherwise the bond must fail of its purpose, for no officer of the commonwealth has authority to assign it or direct suit on it.”

The appellant urges further, that the bond should have been given to the prosecutrix instead of to the commonwealth, and that therefore she cannot in any way be permitted to obtain any benefit from or through it, and should not he allowed to interfere to enforce its collection. Section 4 of the act of 1836 provides that the bond shall be given to the plaintiff in the suit or proceeding, by virtue of which the applicant is imprisoned. Section 47 provides inter alia that one confined upon a conviction of fornication and bastardy may be discharged “on his malting application and conforming to the provisions herein-*178before directed in the case of insolvent debtors.” As the commonwealth was the plaintiff in the criminal proceeding against the appellant, and therefore the arresting creditor, the bond was properly given to the commonwealth. The fact that the prosecutrix, through the sentence imposed upon Doyle, was to receive certain moneys did not, in any sense, make her the plaintiff in the case. The main purpose of the allowance was not to benefit her, but to prevent the child from becoming a public charge, and the amount may be lessened and its recipient changed at any time if circumstances so require. As was said in Phillipi v. Com., 18 Pa. 116, “ the benefit to her is incidental and operates to protect not only the township but her offspring, by lessening her inducement to abandon it to the overseers of the poor, or the charity of the world. She is constituted by the sentence a trustee for the township and her child. Her allowance for child bed expenses is all that she can call her own. The policy which deprives her of the capacity to sue for her child’s allowance deprives her of the capacity to release it. She is the steward, not the owner of it.” The commonwealth it will be thus seen retains its control in the matter.

If the appellant’s position is correct it follows that, to make his discharge legal, an insolvent bond like the one in suit should have included as obligees the magistrate who issued the warrant, the officers who served it, the clerk of the court of quarter sessions, the district attorney, every witness called for the commonwealth at the preliminary hearing, the investigation before the grand jury and the trial, together with the prosecutrix and, perhaps, the overseers or directors of the poor. Such a practice has never prevailed so far as we know anywhere in the state. The proper and general, if not universal usage, is indicated in Com. for use v Grimes, 116 Pa. 450, where the bond, as in the present case, was given to the commonwealth alone, and no objection was made on that ground to a recovery by the prosecutrix. Judgment was properly entered against the appellant for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense.

The judgment of the court below is affirmed.

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