Alms v. Indiana County

45 Pa. Super. 137, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 10
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 3, 1911
DocketAppeal, No. 179
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 45 Pa. Super. 137 (Alms v. Indiana County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alms v. Indiana County, 45 Pa. Super. 137, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 10 (Pa. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion by

Porter, J.,

The appellee presented to the court below a petition setting forth that he was a duly appointed and commissioned “Deputy Game Protector” for the commonwealth, under the provisions of the Act of April 11, 1903, P. L. 163, entitled, “An act to provide for the appointment of deputy game protectors, for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and defining their duties;” that said act provides that deputy game protectors, appointed under its provisions, shall “receive the same compensation that constables now receive for similar services;” that the Act of March 22, 1899, P. L. 17, provides that “Any constable or warden, upon the arrest and prosecution of any offender to conviction, under the provisions of this act, shall, in addition to the fees to which he' may be entitled under existing laws, be paid for his services the sum of ten dollars on a warrant to be drawn by the county commissioners on the county treasurer, one-half of which shall be paid out of the county treasury of the respective county, and the remaining half of said reward shall be paid by the state treasury into the county treasury &c.;” and that he, the appellee, as deputy game protector, had, in separate proceedings, arrested and prosecuted to conviction, before a justice of the peace [139]*139of the county of Indiana, three persons, stating their names, the nature of the proceedings and the magistrate before whom the prosecutions were held, “for violating the game law of May 1st, 1909, P. L. 325.” The petition further stated that, by force of the legislation above recited, the relator had become entitled to receive from the county of Indiana the sum of $30.00, for which sum he had demanded from the commissioners of the county a warrant upon the county treasurer and that the commissioners had declined to pay said claim and refused to deliver to the petitioner a warrant for the same upon the county treasurer. The prayer was for a mandamus upon the commissioners of the county to deliver a warrant for the amount stated to the relator. The court below granted a rule upon the county commissioners who filed an answer denying liability for the claim, under the legislation referred to, and upon the further ground that the relator was indebted to the county in the sum of $26.99 for costs in a case in the court of quarter sessions of Indiana county, in which the grand jury had ignored the indictment and found that the costs should be paid by the prosecutor, this relator. The appellee demurred to this answer and the court thereupon issued a peremptory mandamus requiring the county commissioners to draw and deliver to the relator a warrant upon the county treasurer for the sum of $30.00. The county appeals from this decree.

The authorities representing the county contend that .the Act of April 11,1903, P. L. 163, does not impose upon counties the duty to pay to deputy game protectors a reward of $10.00 for each case in which such deputy may succeed in securing a conviction for violation of the game laws, and that if the body of the act can be so construed as to require such payment by the county, then the act is to that extent unconstitutional, for the reason that its title failed to give any indication that the statute contained such a provision. The statute is entitled, “An act to provide for the appointment of deputy game protectors, for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and defining their [140]*140duties.” The act contains but one section, the material provisions of which are as follows: “That the Board of Game Commissioners shall have the power and authority to appoint one or more competent men for each and every county of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to be called and designated as a Deputy Game Protector, who shall have the same power and perform the same duties as the present game protectors, authorized by law, now have and perform and receive the same compensation that constables now receive for similar services.” The office of deputy game protector was a new one, created by this statute, which declares that they shall have the same power and perform the same duties as the present game protectors. The game protectors were at that time and still continue to be employees of the state; the powers and duties of the new officers thus created, deputy game protectors, were, therefore, those of employees of the state. The title of the act as well as the substance of the legislation render it impossible to classify these officers as anything but employees of the state. And they are to be appointed by a board of commissioners who are administrative officers of the commonwealth. The office of game protector had been created by the Act of June 25, 1895, P. L. 273, which provided for their appointment by the board of game commissioners, defined their powers and duties, and, in its fourth section, explicitly provided “That no commissioner, protector or other officer authorized by this act shall claim or receive any compensation for his services or for expenses incurred in the discharge of his duties.” The third section of the same statute enacted that the “protectors” should receive, “for the use of the said board,” one-half of all the fines and penalties collected in actions brought upon informations furnished by them. Thus it appears that even as to the one-half of the fines and penalties to which the informer was entitled, under various statutes, the game protectors received it for the use of the board of game commissioners, and not for themselves personally. The game protectors were [141]*141given extensive powers, but there were no revenues attached. This was the condition of affairs until changed by the Act of May 21, 1901, P. L. 266, which in its fifth section enacted, “That the game protectors, so appointed, shall receive salary or pay per day, as may be agreed upon by the Game Commission, with expenses not to exceed two dollars per day outside of the traveling expenses; said expense account to be itemized and presented under oath.” This statute again provided that all money coming to any game protector as his part of any fine or penalty, under existing law, wherein he is the prosecutor, shall belong to the game commission. This statute provided for compensation, by a fixed salary or a rate per day agreed upon, and it was to be paid by the state. The counties never had been in any manner liable to pay these game protectors for their services, unless that liability arose as incidental to some service performed in legal proceedings, for which the county was made liable under some other statute. The protectors were authorized to execute warrants, and search warrants and to serve subpoenas, they may have been entitled to the fees allowed by law for such services, and in some criminal proceedings the counties may have become liable to pay the costs. • The county could not be called upon to pay more than the legal fees for executing such writs, simply because they were executed by state employees. When, therefore, the statute of April 11,1903, was enacted the game protectors were not entitled to receive from counties any compensation or reward, the counties had nothing to do with their compensation, nor could the counties be required to pay them any reward for their efforts in securing the conviction of any offender. The maintanance of the game protectors imposed no special burden upon the county treasuries. The title of the act of April 11,1903, gave notice that its effect was “To provide for the appointment of deputy game protectors, for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and defining their duties.” This title referred to a subject with which counties before that time had had nothing to do, [142]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 Pa. Super. 137, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alms-v-indiana-county-pasuperct-1911.