Opinion by
The Secretary of Revenue, acting pursuant to authority conferred by Sec. 615 (b) 2 of The Vehicle Code of May 1,1929, P. L. 905, as amended (75 PS §192 (b) 2), cited Kenneth Strobel, the present appellant, for a violation of the Code and, following a hearing, suspended his operator’s license for a period of three months. The offense alleged was that Strobel had driven an automobile on a highway at a speed considerably in excess of fifty miles per hour. He appealed the suspension to the Court of Common Pleas of Butler County which entered upon a hearing of the matter as provided by Sec. 616 of The Vehicle Code as amended. The court did no more, however, than receive the testimony of the witnesses produced and, at the conclusion of the hearing, prepared and signed an order summarily dismissing the appeal at the cost of the appellant. At the end of the hearing, the court had stated that “. . . the position that I take is that the Supreme Court ought to designate what is proper *294 emergency under the circumstances that would justify the Court to renew a license. That is what I think of it. You will have to take an appeal.”
The effect, if not the intendment, of the lower court’s action was to pass the record on to this court for our independent conclusion from the testimony as to whether.the suspension was warranted. But, that is not within our province. Such a proceeding does not even come before us by appeal but is here only on certiorari:
Bureau of Highway Safety v. Wright,
Section 616 of The Vehicle Code contemplates that the hearing on an appeal to a court of common pleas from an order of the Secretary of Revenue suspending an operator’s license shall be
de
novo:
Bureau of Highway Safety v. Wright
and
Commonwealth v. Herzog,
supra. In
Commonwealth v. Cole,
Order reversed and case remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
