Sweigard et al., Appellants, v. Pennsylvania Department of Transportation.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
September 19, 1973
454 Pa. 32
“It would require us to disregard the vast changes in the status of woman—the extension of her rights and correlative duties—whereby a wife‘s legal submission to her husband has been wholly wiped out, not only in the English-speaking world generally but emphatically so in this country.
“... It would be an idle parade of learning to document the statement that these common-law disabilities were extensively swept away in our different state of society, both by legislation and adjudication. . . .” 364 U.S. at 54, 4 L. Ed. 2d at 1565-66, 80 S. Ct. at 1591-92.
We note that this decision does not concern the evidentiary means by which a conspiracy between husband and wife may be proven. Different considerations and other statutory provisions determine the appropriate rules for testimonial compulsion as between spouses. See Commonwealth v. Moore, 453 Pa. 302, 309 A. 2d 569 (1973).
Judgments of sentence affirmed.
Mr. Chief Justice JONES, Mr. Justice EAGEN and Mr. Justice POMEROY concur in the result.
F. Lee Shipman, with him Goldberg, Evans & Katzman, for appellants.
Edward V. A. Kussy, Assistant Attorney General, with him Edward A. Hosey, Assistant Attorney General, Robert W. Cunliffe, Deputy Attorney General, and Israel Packel, Attorney General, for Commonwealth, appellee.
Appellants commenced an action in trespass alleging injuries while proceeding along Pennsylvania Route 147, resultant from a rock fall due to negligent maintenance and construction by the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. This appeal arises from an order of the Commonwealth Court sustaining the Commonwealth‘s preliminary objections based on constitutional immunity, as found in
Appellants make three contentions: the doctrine of sovereign immunity in Pennsylvania is judicially, and not constitutionally established;
The pertinent portion of
Order affirmed.
DISSENTING OPINION BY MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS:
The majority again allows a judicially-created anachronism to deprive a litigant of his day in court. I dissent for the reasons set out in my dissenting opinion in Brown v. Commonwealth, 453 Pa. 566, 577, 305 A. 2d 868, 871 (1973) (joined by NIX and MANDERINO, JJ.), and Mr. Justice NIX‘s dissenting opinion in Biello v. Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, 454 Pa. 179, 187, 301 A. 2d 849, 853 (1973), in which I joined.1
In Brown, supra, we were presented with a situation in which the Legislature had mandated that the agency in question procure insurance. Likewise, here, the Department of Property and Supplies is, by statute, required to purchase liability insurance. As I emphasized in Brown, “there is no rational reason why the majority could not and should not now judicially abrogate the doctrine of sovereign immunity in toto, or at the least, refuse to apply it, where, as here, an instrumentality of the Commonwealth has obtained liability insurance (at the command of the Legislature) to compensate those injured through the fault of its agents.”2
The Splendour Shipping court squarely faced the inconsistency inherent in the Louisiana Constitution which, in addition to the so-called sovereign immunity clause, mandates that “every person for injury done him . . . shall have adequate remedy by due process of law and justice administered without denial, partiality
The same analysis applies to our own constitution.
“All courts shall be open; and every man for an injury done him in his lands, goods, person or reputation shall have remedy by due course of law, and right and justice administered without sale, denial or delay. Suits may be brought against the Commonwealth in such manner, in such courts and in such cases as the Legislature may by law direct.” The majority inexplicably chooses to prefer one sentence of our constitution over another—one right, the questionable immunity privilege of the Commonwealth, is preferred to the unequivocal right granted to “every man” of “have remedy by due course of law.” I cannot accept this conclusion.
“The Constitution is . . . neutral—it neither requires nor prohibits sovereign immunity. . . . The framers of the Constitution accepted the then prevalent concept of sovereignty to include immunity from suit, and attempted through this section to implement the power of the State to consent to actions brought against it.” Biello v. Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, supra at 189, 301 A. 2d at 854 (NIX, J., dissenting, joined by ROBERTS, J.).
Mr. Justice NIX and Mr. Justice MANDERINO join in this dissent.
DISSENTING OPINION BY MR. JUSTICE NIX:
I am still of the opinion expressed in my dissenting opinions in Biello v. Liquor Control Board, 454 Pa. 179, 187, 301 A. 2d 849, 853 (1973) (joined by ROBERTS, J.) and Brown v. Commonwealth, 453 Pa. 566, 579, 305 A. 2d 868, 871 (1973) (joined by ROBERTS and MANDERINO, JJ.).
