94 Pa. Super. 486 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1928
Argued October 2, 1928. Defendant was convicted before a justice of the peace under the Act of April 14, 1905, P.L. 169, which provides that it shall be unlawful for any person wilfully to enter upon any land where the owner or owners of said land has caused to be permanently posted *488 thereon printed notices that the land is private property, and warning all persons from trespassing thereon, under the penalties provided in the act. It appears by the transcript of the justice of the peace that after a hearing held May 25, 1928, at which defendant was present, he was adjudged guilty and sentenced to pay a fine of $5 and the costs of prosecution. By special allowance of the court of quarter sessions, granted upon his petition on May 31, 1928, by COPELAND, P.J., defendant appealed and duly filed in that court a transcript of the proceedings. When the case came on for hearing in the quarter sessions before another judge of that court, counsel for the Commonwealth made a motion to strike off the appeal and, after argument on the motion by counsel for the respective parties and without hearing any evidence on the motion, the trial judge struck off the appeal on the ground that the reasons assigned in the petition for the allowance of the appeal were insufficient and inadequate to justify its allowance. In this appeal by defendant, we are asked to review that action so taken.
It is well settled that an appeal by a defendant from a summary conviction before a magistrate or court not of record should not be allowed save for cause shown: Thompson v. Preston,
The judgment is reversed and the appeal is reinstated and the record is remitted to the court below with direction to hear the cause and enter judgment as the law and evidence require. *491