Both books of Daniel O'Malley's series "The Rook Files" that I've read so far have a (to me) grating habit of omitting an opening punctuation mark if it would be the first character in a major subsection of the text. Said initial characters are always extra-large letters. I suspect the thought process was that the quotation mark would be wrong to put there by itself. And, if it was added alongside the letter, then there would be two large characters. Still, I find it annoying. The orthography is wrong.
Example from the start of The Rook's Chapter 3 (click for uncompressed version). While this is from a chapter start, it also occurs for intra-chapter scene breaks (example).
Is this practice precedented? For example from the days when typesetting involved literal type, and thus setting up an extra-large quotation mark would have been difficult?

