58 Pa. Super. 362 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1914
Opinion by
In the court of quarter sessions of Allegheny county one John Moran, Jr., entered a plea of guilty to a charge of fornication and bastardy and was sentenced to pay the usual fine, the costs of prosecution and $2.50 per week for five years for the maintenance of the child and to enter into a bond with surety in the sum of $500. The fine, costs and lying-in expenses were paid and the bond given with his father, John J. Moran, the present defendant, as surety. About a year later John Moran, Jr., the principal in the bond, died, having paid all of the $2.50 per week payments up to the date of his death. This suit was then begun in the name of the commonwealth to the use of Blanche Bruce against the surety alone to recover from him or his estate—he having died since the action was begun—the weekly payments, specified in the sentence and bond, that had matured since the death of the principal.
Under the circumstances noted it must be apparent the order overruling the demurrer was not the equivalent of a final judgment for the plaintiff. The legal defense arising from the facts averred in the affidavit had not been finally adjudicated adversely to the defendant and the first position assumed by the appellant is untenable.
Turning then to the main question involved, we may observe that although it has never reached an appellate court in Pennsylvania, we are not without the benefit of several adjudications of questions so closely connected with it as to be helpful in pointing the way to a correct conclusion.
Prior to the conviction and sentence of the putative father, no obligation to pay money to anybody rested on him which the law recognized as sufficient to support an action either by the mother of the child, by its guardian, by the commonwealth, or any of its political subdivisions. His liability to pay money, therefore, was created by and resulted from the sentence of a criminal court following his conviction of a violation of the public law of the commonwealth. That sentence was imposed by the authority of the Crimes Act of 1860. That statute provides that the convicted criminal “shall be sentenced in addition to the fine aforesaid .... to give security .... to perform such order for the maintenance of the said child as the court .... shall direct and appoint.” The obligation of the convicted defendant to pay the money named, and to furnish the collateral se
No such conclusion can be justly drawn from the case of Duncan v. Com., 4 S. & R. 448. In that case a defendant convicted of adultery and bastardy, when called for sentence, pleaded a pardon. The court, after an inspection of the executive act, determined it was a partial not a plenary pardon, and gave judgment accordingly. But in Com. v. Ahl, 43 Pa. 53, the defendant was convicted of the offense of fornication and bastardy. Before sentence he obtained a plenary pardon from the executive which he pleaded in bar of any sentence. The learned court below was urged to determine that, notwithstanding the pardon', the defendant could still be lawfully ordered to pay a certain sum of money for the maintenance of the child. The court, after quoting the language of the act of clemency, said: “In using these words, the governor evidently intended that the pardon should set aside and annul the verdict, and arrest the judgment. I cannot perceive how any vested right, order or decree can be founded upon, or flow from a conviction thus circumstanced. But the case of Com. v. Duncan, is cited as in point; there the adultery only
Again most of the states of the union have either enacted statutes or adopted constitutional provisions prohibiting imprisonment for debt. Could a defendant, who had been sentenced by a criminal court to pay money in installments, successfully urge that he could not be coerced to pay them by imprisonment because they were simple debts flowing from a contract into which he entered when he signed the bond demanded by his sentence? In many states a negative answer has been made to this contention. The precedents are collected and reviewed in an elaborate note to the case of State of Tennessee v. Yardley, 95 Tenn. 546, reported in 34 L. R. A. 656. The principle running, through the decisions of the various courts may be thus stated: “And the Ohio courts have held that the proceedings under
In State of Michigan v. Kemppainen, reported in 128 N. W. Repr. 183 and 30 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1166, a defendant, who had ‘been convicted of fornication and bastardy and been denied a new trial, appealed to the Supreme Court. In the opinion, holding that there is nothing to survive the death of the defendant in such case, Mr. Justice McAlvay quotes the following language from the Supreme Court of Maine in McKenzie v. Lombard, 85 Me. 224, viz.: “The process, though held to be a civil proceeding, is criminal in form and is an extraordinary means to compel a father to assist in the support of his illegitimate child or suffer imprisonment for his neglect to do so. There is no fitness in the proceeding that would adapt itself to the principle of survivorship. If the impending action survives, then the cause of action would survive as well, and the process could be originally instituted against the administrator of the deceased.” The Michigan court thus proceeds: “Such a right of action would not survive at the common law. The true test was whether the injury on which the cause of action was based affected property rights or affected the person alone. In the former case
In our own case of Com. v. Dunn, recently decided at Pittsburg and not yet reported, we held that the death of the defendant, after conviction and sentence and before the hearing of his appeal ‘in this court, necessarily abated that appeal and ended the proceeding, and this would be true no matter how manifest the errors disclosed by the record which attended the entry of the judgment appealed from. Could the commonwealth then, after the death of the sentenced defendant, successfully invoke the process of the courts to compel the performance by his heirs, his surety, or other person of that portion of his sentence which, by the interposition of an act of God, he was no longer able to perform? All of these lines of reasoning seem to converge to the support of the proposition that the death of one convicted in and sentenced by a criminal court worked a discharge of every obligation imposed by and rooted in his sentence.
Was the undertaking of the surety broader than that of his principal? To state the question is almost to answer it. Let us for a moment turn our attention to the bond itself, upon which this action against the surety is based. It in the first instance acknowledges that both
When the act of God, that is the death of the defendant, made impossible his further compliance with the sentence of the criminal court, there was no default within the true meaning of the obligation entered into by the surety. The learned court below, in his opinion refusing to enter a summary judgment, relied largely on the case of City v. Haslitt, reported in 14 Phila. Rep. 138. There a situation arose precisely like the one in the case at bar except that the bond given by the convicted defendant and his surety contained a warrant for the entry of a judgment and the warrant was im
Because of the novelty of the question and the very able and earnest argument presented to us by counsel for the plaintiff, we have given the case most careful consideration and expressed our views at more than usual length. We are all of the opinion the learned court below reached a correct conclusion. If sound reason, good morals or wise policy demand a change in the legal status of the father of an illegitimate child, such change must be wrought by the legislative branch of
As the plaintiff’s right to appeal in such a case is statutory, we must follow the order prescribed by the statute in such cases. The assignment of error is overruled.
The appeal is dismissed at the costs of the appellant, without prejudice, etc.