216 Pa. 25 | Pa. | 1906
Opinion by
Plaintiff’s claim in this case was for removing certain prisoners, in pursuance of sentences and orders of the court, from the jail of Cambria county to the Western Penitentiary, the Dixmont Insane Asylum, the Polk Institute and the Hunting-don Reformatory, respectively. For these services he claimed fees under the Act of July 11,1901, P. L. 663, as follows: six cents per mile for each mile actually traveled by each prisoner ; ten cents per mile circular for each mile actually traveled or necessary to be traveled by plaintiff himself in case each sentence were separately executed, and for his assistants $4.00 each per day, three cents per mile circular for each mile traveled, and actual expenses necessary for such help.
Defendant contended (1) that the fees of the sheriff for the services upon which his claim was based, were to be determined,, not by the act of 1901, but by the Act of April 2, 1868, P. L. 3; and (2) if the act of 1901 is to govern, then the sheriff can claim mileage upon only one of several cotemporaneous com
The Superior Court held that “ the act of 1901 is so in conflict with the act of 1868, that the latter must fall as to the questions raised in this suit,” and therefore the fees were to be determined by the act of 1901. Also that the sheriff was entitled to charge his own mileage for each mile circular traveled by him, at the rate of ten cents per mile, and to charge this rate upon each commitment, whether cotemporaneous or not, and also to charge for reasonable help and expens.es in transporting and delivering convicts and lunatics to the penitentiary, asylum, etc. It was held, however, that it was a question for the jury as to what were reasonable help and expenses, and because this question was taken from the jury by the trial judge, the judgment was reversed and a new venire awarded. The decision of the Superior Court is amply buttressed by the reasoning of the opinion and the authorities therein cited, and we can add but little thereto. We are clear that the earlier act is inconsistent with the later one, and as the act of 1868 was a general law, it was evidently intended that its provisions should be repealed by the act of 1901. The latter statute fixes the fees “ for executing any process, warrant, capias, attachment, decree, sentence or order of court, where the defendant’s body is to be taken into custody.” This language is broad enough to cover the execution of a sentence committing a convict to the penitentiary or reformatory, and of an order committing a lunatic or feeble-minded person to an asylum. But we do not find any provision in the act of 1901 authorizing the sheriff to make a charge of • $4.00 per day for deputies used in the transportation of prisoners. Clearly there can be no charge of this character unless the law expressly authorizes it. The act of 1868 did have such a provision, but it was not retained in the act of 1901.
In support of the contention that the legislature, by the act of 1901, did not intend to repeal or supersede the provisions of the act of 1868 in regard to the removal of lunatics and convicts, defendant offered evidence of certain proceedings in the legislature preliminary to the passage of the former act, and this evidence was admitted by the court below. Such evidence was clearly inadmissible to show the legislative intent,
Endlich on Interp. Stat. sec. 30, p. 41, considering the English authorities, says: “ It is unquestionably a rule that what may be called the parliamentary history of an enactment is ‘wisely inadmissible’ to explain its meaning. Its language can be regarded only as the language of the three states of the realm, and the meaning attached to it by its framers or by members of either house of parliament cannot control the construction of it.”
The question of whether the sheriff was entitled to collect for mileage circular or direct, is no longer open for argument. It was expressly decided in Peeling v. York County, 212 Pa. 245, cited by the Superior Court, where our Brother Elkin pointed out that the plain meaning of the act of 1901 is to authorize a charge for “ miles circular.”
With regard to cotemporaneous writs, the allowance under the terms of the act is “ for traveling expenses or mileage, in serving or executing any of the writs, rules, orders, decrees, processes, or performing any of the duties or services herein specified, and intended so to be or authorized by law, the sheriff shall be entitled to receive and have taxed as costs ten cents a mile, for each mile actually traveled and necessary, the same to be allowed on each separate writ, rule, order, decree, process or service performed: Provided, that he shall not receive more than one mileage, where the plaintiff and defendant, or plaintiffs and defendants, in two or more cotemporaneous writs are the same.”
The plain import of this language is to give the sheriff mileage for executing all cotemporaneous writs or orders of the court, civil or criminal, unless where both plaintiffs and defendants are the same; in such case one charge for mileage only, is allowed. We see no room for distinction under the law, between orders issued in criminal and civil cases. It does seem
As the case goes back to have the jury determine what was a reasonable allowance for help and expenses in transporting prisoners, it should be borne in mind that allowance for extra' help is only to be made in case of actual necessity. Ordinarily there can be no reason why a sheriff or a deputy cannot take several prisoners to their destination at the same time.
With the modification herein indicated, as to the per diem charge for deputies, the judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed.