Reiners's License , 59 Pa. Super. 190 ( 1915 )


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  • Opinion by

    Rice, P. J.,

    The statute declares that the court of quarter sessions shall fix, by rule or standing order, a time at which *193application for liquor license shall be heard, “at which time all persons applying or making objections to applications for licenses may be heard by evidence, petition, remonstrance or counsel.” The right given by the statute is to be heard by evidence and petition, not simply by evidence or petition, and this implies a right to have both evidence and petition considered by the court when both are presented and are pertinent. Courts sit to administer the law fairly, as it is given to them, and not to make or repeal it. “The act of deciding is judicial, and not arbitrary or willful. The discretion vested in the court is, therefore, a sound judicial discretion; and to be a rightful judgment it must be exercised in the particular case and upon the facts and circumstances before the court, after they have been heard and duly considered; in other words, to be exercised upon the merits of each case, according to the rule given by the act of assembly. To say that I will grant no license to anyone or that I will grant it to every one is not to decide judicially on the merits of the case, but to determine beforehand without a hearing or else to disregard what has been heard. It is to be determined not according to law, but outside of law, and it is not a legal judgment, but the exercise of an arbitrary will:” Schlaudecker v. Marshall, 72 Pa. 200. Obviously, therefore, no judge whose duty it is to hear and decide has a legal or moral right to disqualify himself to render a just decision, by determining before hearing that he will grant all applications or refuse all applications. Of what avail is a hearing before such a tribunal? It would be a mere idle ceremony, discreditable to the court that conducted it and tending to bring the administration of law into contempt. As well might the judge refuse to hear, as to publicly pledge himself or secretly resolve not to consider and be guided by the pertinent facts and circumstances brought before him at the hearing or of which he has knowledge, and the law applicable thereto. Nowhere has the principle been more forcibly expressed than in the *194following excerpt from the opinion of Judge Dean in Gross’s License, 161 Pa. 344: “For example, if a judge should refuse a license, because in his opinion the law authorizing licenses is a bad law, or if he should grant all licenses because he believed the law wrong as tending to confer a privilege on a special few, in either case there would be no exercise of judicial discretion; both would be the mere despotic assertion of arbitrary will by one in power, that sort of lawlessness which is least excusable and excites most indignation.” There is no authoritative decision, or properly understood dictum in any authoritative decision, which gives countenance to a different doctrine.

    It is contended that these principles were violated by the associate judges; to be more specific, that they were disqualified to sit at the hearing of liquor license applications because each of them had made a pledge that in the event of his election to the office he would refuse all such applications. This is a grave charge. It implies an accusation that each of these judges had made a pledge the keeping of which would disqualify him, in this class of cases, to give such hearing and decision as the law and his oath of office require a judge of the quarter sessions to give. As was said in Gross’s License, supra, an appellate court will not assume the truth of such an accusation “without incontrovertible evidence of record.” Does the record furnish such evidence? Before the hearing the applicant for license presented to the court, all of the judges being present, a petition praying, in effect, that the two associate judges be declared disqualified to sit at the hearing of his application, and that the hearing be had before the president judge sitting alone. We shall not undertake to recite the averments of this petition at length. It is sufficient for present purposes to say that the petitioner averred that, prior to the election of the associates in the preceding fall, numerous appeals by circulars, by handbills, by newspaper advertisements *195and other publications, were made to the electors to vote for these two candidates, and in these appeals the assertion was made that if they were elected “applicants for licenses would have the prayers of their petitions refused.” The only one of these publications that was specifically set forth in the petition was an advertisement inserted by the “Inter-Denomination Temperance Committee” in a semiweekly newspaper published in the county. This publication was evidently intended to, and doubtless did, convey the impression to those who read it, that these men were “the two and the only two candidates on a no license platform.” But it is to be observed the petition did not allege that either of these candidates had ever said anything as to what he would do with regard to liquor license applications if he was elected; nor did it allege that these publications were made by their direction or by anyone authorized to speak for them; nor, so far as appears, was it asserted in the publications themselves that they were authorized by these candidates or made with their sanction. True, the petition averred that the candidates did not deny what had been ass'erted in these publications; also, “that it was common knowledge, and is still, in this community, that these two men, regardless of all else, are pledged to refuse all applications for liquor licenses that come before them;” also, “that were they not so to do they would be breaking a tacit pledge and understanding, that they publicly, openly and notoriously had with the influences behind their election;” also, that the “petitioner feels that the two associate judges have pledged themselves upon this question as specifically and plainly and literally as if they had signed a written statement or made a personal and public announcement at a mass meeting of the voters of the county.” Serious as are these averments, yet, when they are carefully scrutinized, it will be seen .that the petitioner’s assertion that the associates were bound by a tacit pledge and therefore were biassed, is, after all, an inference drawn *196by him, and, notwithstanding its plausibility, it is not an absolutely necessary inference from the facts alleged. Whether the associates were under or felt themselves under such tacit pledge, and whether the state of their minds on the license question was such as to constrain them to refuse all licenses regardless of the facts and circumstances developed, were matters of fact concerning which they knew more than anyone else. Their denial of the motion implies a denial of the imputed bias and prejudice, especially as the order was accompanied with the express statement: “The associates do not feel that they have done anything to disqualify them.” It is to be observed that no statutory disqualification, resting on interest or relationship to the parties, or the like, was alleged. The objection to the associates’ sitting was in the nature of a challenge for bias or prejudice. The determination of it rested with them and the president judge. As already intimated, nothing but a plain abuse of discretion would justify an appellate court in overturning their determination of it. In Phila. Library Co. v. Ingham, 1 Whart. 72, the defendant pleaded to the jurisdiction of- the president judge, that he had been concerned as counsel “touching the same subject-matter.” This plea was overruled, and, on writ of error, the ruling was sustained, Chief Justice Gibson saying: “But the exception to the jurisdiction is not sustained. We have already intimated that an objection to competency, under the act for the establishment of special courts, must be addressed to the discretion of the judge himself; and this is conformably to the principle of the common law, which exempts a judge from challenge. Nor can there be danger in leaving the matter to him. A sense of duty in keeping his administration not only pure but unsuspected; and the reprobation that would ensue an evident desire to favor a party by retaining the cause, must always incline him to surrender it where he may do so by the most comprehensive construction. Into *197the supposed relations of the parties, therefore, we are forbidden to inquire; and we are bound to suppose that the legal discretion of the judge, in holding himself exempt from the bias incident to the imputed causes of-it, has been soundly exercised.” The principle was recognized in Phila. v. Fox, 64 Pa. 169, 185, and, in addition to Phila. Library Co. v. Ingham, supra, Justice Sharswood cited Barrington v. Bank of Washington, 14 S. & R. 405, and Ellmaker v. Buckley, 16 S. & R. 71. In Wallace v. Jameson, 179 Pa. 98, where the validity of a plea asserting the disqualification of the president judge to try the case was involved, and it was asserted in the plea that he was “not an impartial, unprejudiced and indifferent judge with' respect to the matters in issue,” Justice Mitchell said: “Objections which merely relate to the judge’s personal opinions or feelings, and not to his legal interest in the case or the question, are not within the statute, and must be addressed to his discretion.” The principle established by these cases is applicable here, and, without further elaboration, we conclude that the assignments of error must be overruled.

    All the assignments of error are overruled and the order is affirmed.

Document Info

Docket Number: Appeal, No. 72

Citation Numbers: 59 Pa. Super. 190

Judges: Head, Kephart, Orlady, Rice, Trexler

Filed Date: 2/24/1915

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2022