70 A.2d 700 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1949
Argued November 14, 1949. This is appeal from a summary conviction of a violation of Section 1016(a) of The Vehicle Code of May 1, 1929, P. L. 905 as amended, 75 PS 591. The violation, which is admitted, occurred in O'Hara Township, Allegheny County. The information was filed before a justice of the peace of and for the Borough of Blawnox, which adjoins O'Hara Township. The defendant appeared before the justice of the peace, waived a summary hearing and posted bond for an appearance before the County Court of Allegheny County. In the county court it was stipulated that the justice of the peace before whom the information was filed was the nearest justice of the peace or magistrate to the place of the offense. It was further stipulated "that there are two elected justices of the peace for the Township of O'Hara and the commissions have been issued to both individuals *225 and that neither of them is active in the conduct of the business of their office of justice of the peace".
The gravamen of the defendant's argument in the court below was, and is now, that the justice of the peace in the Borough of Blawnox had no jurisdiction. Defendant's contention is that Section 1201 (a) of The Vehicle Code, 75 PS 731, permits the filing of an information before a justice of the peace of an adjoining municipality only where there is no personcommissioned as a justice of the peace in the municipality in which the violation occurred. For the Commonwealth two contentions are stressed: (1) That a defendant charged with a summary offense under The Vehicle Code, who voluntarily appears before a magistrate or justice of the peace and waives hearing cannot raise the question of jurisdiction for the first time before the county court or court of quarter sessions; and (2) that Section 1201(a) permits the filing of an information before a justice of the peace of an adjoining municipality where the Commonwealth shows that such justice of the peace was the nearest such officer to the situs of the alleged offense and that no justice of the peace was available within the municipality where the alleged violation occurred.
(1) May defendant raise the question of the jurisdiction of the justice of the peace for the first time in the court of quarter sessions? Section 1204 of The Vehicle Code, 75 PS 734, provides: "(a) Any person convicted in any summary proceeding under this act shall have the right of appeal as in other cases of summary conviction. (b) Any person charged with violating any of the summary provisions of this act may waive summary hearing, and give bond in a sum equal to double the amount of the fine and costs that might be imposed, for appearance for trial before a judge of the court of quarter sessions, or in the county court, or in the municipal *226
court, in counties wherein such court exists, and thereupon the magistrate shall, within fifteen (15) days, return the information to the said court." In Com. v. Burall,
We agree with the reasoning and the conclusion of the court in Com. v. Myers, 22 Pa. D. C. 586, where it was held that a defendant may waive a hearing and escape conviction by showing in the court of quarter sessions that the magistrate had not acquired jurisdiction over him. The court based its conclusion on the reasoning that clause (b) of section 1204, 75 PS 734 would have no significance if, when the case came to the quarter sessions, it could only be heard on its merits, since that relief is fully afforded under clause (a). The court stated that a proceeding under clause (b) is not an appeal but is intended to remove the whole case and is not intended to preclude the defendant from raising questions of jurisdiction in the quarter sessions.
Section 1201 (a) of The Vehicle Code, 75 PS 731, sets out the conditions under which the legislature intended that magistrates should acquire jurisdiction over summary prosecutions under The Vehicle Code. The provisions of this section are mandatory and it is only through strict compliance with such provisions that jurisdiction is acquired. It is well established that jurisdiction of the subject matter cannot be given to courts by consent. Mills v. Commonwealth,
(2) Was the information filed in compliance with the requirements of Section 1201(a) of The Vehicle Code? Our conclusion is that it was. Section 1201(a) provides: "Informations, charging violations of any of the summary provisions of this act, shall be brought before the nearest available magistrate within the city, borough, incorporated town, or township where the alleged violation occurred: Provided, however, That where there is no substantial difference between the respective distances from the place where the alleged violation occurred to the offices of more than one magistrate, any such prosecution may be brought before any one of such magistrates, or if there is no person holding the office of magistrate in such city, borough, incorporated town, or township, then such information shall be brought before such nearest available magistrate in any adjoining city, borough, incorporated town, or township, within fifteen (15) days after the commission of the alleged offense and not thereafter. . . ." A reasonable construction of this section would seem to be that it sets up as a general rule that any information charging a violation of a summary provision of The Vehicle Code must be laid before the nearest available magistrate within the municipality in which the alleged violation occurred. The general rule is qualified to the extent that where there is no substantial difference in the distances from the place of the offense to the offices of two or more magistrates within the municipality the information may be filed with any one of such magistrates. To the general rule, so qualified, there is only one exception, that is where there is "no person holding the office of magistrate" in the municipality in which the offense occurred the information may be filed with the *229 nearest available magistrate in an adjoining community. It is with the exception to the general rule that we are now concerned. The narrow problem is the meaning of the phrase "holding the office of magistrate". If, by these words, the Legislature meant to permit the information to be filed in an adjoining municipality only when there is no personcommissioned to act as magistrate in the municipality in which the offense occurred, the present information must be held invalid since it is stipulated that there are two persons commissioned as justices of the peace in O'Hara Township. If, on the other hand, by these words the Legislature meant no person actively exercising the duties of a magistrate, then the conviction appealed from must be affirmed.
In determining the intention of the Legislature, we are aided by such cases as Com. ex rel. Dugan v. Ashe,
Judgement affirmed. *230