Commonwealth v. Preston

Argued November 15, 1927. An information was made before an alderman of the city of Pittsburgh against the defendant charging violation of the Act of May 13, 1915, P.L. 286, known as the Child Labor Act. The magistrate adjudged the defendant guilty and imposed a fine, with the alternative of a commitment to the Allegheny County jail in default of payment thereof. The County Court, upon *Page 161 petition of the defendant, allowed an appeal and, after a hearing, the defendant was "adjudged not guilty of the offense of violating the Child Labor Law, wherewith he stands charged." The Commonwealth then took this appeal from that decision. Counsel for the defendant has moved the court to quash the appeal, upon the ground that the court below having adjudged the defendant not guilty, no appeal lies by the Commonwealth.

No question as to the constitutionality of the Act of 1915 is involved in this proceeding, it is upon all hands admitted that the statute is a constitutional exercise of legislative power. The statute undoubtedly constitutes a violation of its provisions a criminal offense. Such a proceeding is essentially different from a proceeding to compel a husband to support his wife and children, under the Act of April 13, 1867, P.L. 78, as amended by the Act of March 5, 1907, P.L. 6, which is of a quasi criminal nature only: Com. v. Demott, 64 Pa. 305. The decisions in cases in which a defendant has been discharged upon the ground of the invalidity of a city ordinance have here no application, for in those cases the court below did not pass upon the question whether the defendant had violated the ordinance, but based its judgment on the finding that there was no valid ordinance. We have in this case, therefore, a criminal proceeding, in which the court below passed upon the merits and adjudged the defendant not guilty. Does an appeal by the Commonwealth lie in such a case?

The Act of March 31, 1860, P.L. 427, sec. 33, gave defendants in indictments for murder or voluntary manslaughter the right to except on the trial to any decision of the court upon any point of evidence or law, and the Act of May 19, 1874, P.L. 219, extended the same right to defendants in all criminal cases, and to the Commonwealth in cases of nuisance, forcible entry, and forcible detainer. "To erroneous decisions made *Page 162 in the trial which may cause the acquittal of the accused, except in the three misdemeanors already mentioned, the Commonwealth cannot except, and such decisions cannot be reviewed. But for error in quashing an indictment, arresting judgment after verdict of guilty, and the like, the Commonwealth may remove the record for review without special allowance of the proper writ:" Com. v. Wallace, 114 Pa. 411; Com. v. Steimling, 156 Pa. 400; Com. v. Coble, 9 Pa. Super. 215; Com. v. Stillwagon, 13 Pa. Super. 547; Com. v. Weber, 66 Pa. Super. 180. The correctness of the construction of the statute by the Court below may involve an important question, but the more important the question the stronger the reason for withholding an expression of an opinion upon it until it arises in a real dispute, where the appellate court has jurisdiction of an appeal by a defendant alleging that he has been improperly convicted. When the question argued on this appeal arises upon the record of a case properly before us, it will deserve most careful and serious consideration. The defendant having been adjudged not guilty by the court which had jurisdiction to try him, we are without authority, in the circumstances here presented, to reverse that judgment and order a new trial.

The appeal is quashed.