21 A.2d 472 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1941
Argued April 14, 1941. Separate appeals were taken to this court from the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County dismissing a jointpetition for writ of habeas corpus filed by seventeen persons held in the county jail of Westmoreland County, who had been individually convicted and sentenced by the Mayor of the City of Jeannette for violation of a city ordinance.
The errors in the institution of this proceeding, in the caption of the suit, and on the hearing before the court, illustrate the danger of attorneys from outside jurisdictions, who are not familiar with our laws and practice, attempting to institute and conduct legal proceedings in this state. The petition should have been dismissed on presentation. A commitment to prison acts individually on each person committed and a writ seeking his discharge on habeas corpus must likewise be individual. Seventeen persons cannot join in one petition for a writ of habeas corpus, any more than seventeen persons convicted of crime and sentenced to prison could take one appeal. The sentence of imprisonment acts upon each convict personally and separately and each must take a separate appeal: Durbin v. Com.,
These appellants, along with Charles H. Stewart, were arrested on April 2, 1939 for violating ordinance No. 60 of the City of Jeannette regulating canvassing for the sale of merchandise within the city. A hearing was had before the mayor and witnesses were heard. The mayor adjudged all of them guilty and imposed a fine of $50 and costs on each defendant, which was within the penalty prescribed by the ordinance.1 The defendants petitioned the Court of Quarter Sessions of Westmoreland County for allowance of an appeal, pursuant to the provision of the Constitution (Art. V, sec. 14), and the Act of April 17, 1876, P.L. 29, and its amendments of July 11, 1917, P.L. 771, and April 1, 1925, P.L. 98, carrying it into effect. See Com. ex rel. Marshv. Lindsey,
After five days' imprisonment in the jail, these seventeen appellants presented to the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County a joint petition for a writ of habeas corpus, using the same caption as the petition to the court of quarter sessions for an appeal from the judgments in the summary conviction before the mayor.
A hearing was had in the course of which the sitting judge properly refused to go into the merits of the original conviction (see Gordon, Secy. of Banking v. Hartford Sterling Co., Lofland'sAppeal,
The petitioners appealed to this court.
The appeal, not being specially allowed by statute, is in the nature of a certiorari, requiring us to examine into the jurisdiction and the regularity of the proceeding. *452
Jurisdiction in habeas corpus is specially committed to the courts of common pleas and the judges thereof (Acts of February 18, 1785, 2 Sm. L. 275 and April 13, 1791, 3 Sm. L. 28).
The record shows that the petitioners were committed to the custody of the keeper of the county jail by the Mayor of Jeannette for default in payment of fines and costs separately imposed on each petitioner for violation of a city ordinance.
It has been decided by our Supreme Court in Com. v. Borden,
The initial error of the appellants' counsel in assuming that the commitment was for five days in the county jail, which was apparently acquiesced in by counsel for the city, seems to have been responsible for the subsequent irregularities in the train of events.
The mayor in issuing his warrant of commitment should have specified a definite period of imprisonment in the county jail, not exceeding thirty days. He may have been misled by the averments and allegations of the petitioners.
On the other hand seventeen prisoners confined in the county jail under separate commitments cannot be released or discharged on one petition for writ of habeas corpus. Such a proceeding is too irregular to be sustained. But we feel that, in the circumstances of this case, the appellants have already served a sufficient imprisonment as an alternative punishment for their failure to pay the respective fines imposed and costs, pursuant to the ordinance.
We shall dismiss the appeals for the reasons hereinbefore set forth, but are of opinion that the warrant of commitment should be amended so as to fix a definite period of imprisonment, and suggest that it would be proper to fix it for the period covering the date of the appellants' actual commitment until May 10, 1940, the date of their actual release; and that upon such amendment they be discharged.
Appeals dismissed.