56 Pa. Super. 131 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1914
Opinion by
This is an appeal, by the prosecutrix, from the order of the court of quarter sessions dismissing, after hearing, the desertion proceedings instituted by her. The proceedings were in all respects regular, but the argument of appellant’s counsel suggests the propriety of some reference to the subject of the extent of our revisory jurisdiction in such cases. It is well settled by numerous decisions that the Act of May 9, 1889, P. L. 158, providing that all appellate proceedings theretofore taken by writ of error, certiorari, or appeal should thereafter be taken in a proceeding called an appeal, did not extend the right of review, or change its extent, in cases already provided for, or modify in any manner its exercise. Under this construction of the act of 1889 it necessarily results, and the decisions uniformly hold, that an appeal from a final order made by the court of quarter sessions in a prosecution for desertion instituted under the Act of April 13, 1867, P. L. 78, operates only as a common-law writ of certiorari, that on such appeal. the appellate court can pass on nothing but the regularity of the proceedings as disclosed by the record, and that the evidence given on the hearing is not part of the record. It follows that, though a transcript of the evidence be sent up and be printed in the appellant’s paper-book, we cannot go into it for the purpose of ascertaining whether the court’s findings of fact, which are necessarily implied in its finftl order, are correct or not. This conclusion, which, in effect, accords finality to the court’s decision on questions of fact arising upon the evidence given on the hearing, does not rest on a mere technical rule of pleading or procedure which the court has adopted and may rescind, but upon the broader ground that the jurisdictional limitations attached to review by certiorari still remain and must be observed by the appellate court until they are changed by the law-making power. These principles have been very strictly adhered to in appeals
All the assignments of error are overruled and the order is affirmed.