Benson, Sheriff v. Bradford Co.

189 A. 577, 125 Pa. Super. 209, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 34
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 17, 1936
DocketAppeal, 317
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 189 A. 577 (Benson, Sheriff v. Bradford Co.) 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
Benson, Sheriff v. Bradford Co., 189 A. 577, 125 Pa. Super. 209, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 34 (Pa. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Baldrige, J.,

This appeal originated by a petition for a declaratory judgment. The question in dispute is: May the sheriff in the county of Bradford, a county of the seventh class, collect and retain for his own use money covering the mileage prescribed by the existing fee bill, or is he required to pay it into the county treasury as the property of the county? The learned court below rendered a judgment for the defendant, and the plaintiff appeals. We find no ground for reversal.

*211 By the Act of March 17, 1933, P. L. 14, §1 (16 PS §2814), the animal salary of sheriffs of the seventh class was fixed at |3,000, “in addition to any expenses which may be incurred by such sheriff in the performance of his duties.” The same session of legislature, by the Act of June 1, 1933, P. L. 1141, §1 (16 PS §2661a), established an entire and complete fee bill for sheriffs in all counties, and fixed 10 cents a mile circular as mileage in serving or executing writs, etc. Section 2 (16 PS §2661b) of the fee bill provides that in all the counties where the sheriff is compensated by a salary, all fees and commissions which he shall be required or entitled to charge or receive for official acts or services shall belong to the county, “but [he] shall be entitled to all mileage and other allowances for costs and expenses chargeable by him ...... and such a sheriff shall be entitled to deduct from any fees or commissions collected by him and due to the county any overdue items for his salary or the compensation of his deputies, clerks, or other agents, or for mileage or other allowances aforesaid......provided he shall furnish the county treasurer of the county with itemized statements of such deductions......”

The county commissioners notified the sheriff to pay into the county treasury, without deduction, all fees, commissions and mileage, offering, however, to reimburse him for his actual expense of travel, including depreciation of his personal automobile, or to supply him with an automobile at the expense of the county. The sheriff contends that under the provisions of the sheriff’s fee bill, supra, he is entitled to retain for his own use the mileage allowed by law and furnish such mode of transportation as, in his judgment, is necessary; that mileage is not a fee within the meaning of the Constitution, but is merely a reimbursement for travelling expenses: 2 Bouvier’s Law Dictionary 2209. The county commissioners’ position is that the sheriff *212 is entitled only to actual expenses and that the Act of 1933, supra, in so far as it permits the sheriff to retain mileage for his own use, is in contravention of article XIY, §5, of the present Constitution Of Pennsylvania, which provides, in part, as follows:

“The compensation of county officers shall be regulated by lav/, and all county officers who are or may be salaried shall pay all fees which they may be authorized to receive, into the treasury of the county or State, as may be directed by law.”

Definitions are not conclusive, as the constitutional question involved depends upon the sense in Avhich that document refers to and uses the term “fees.” The answer to the question, Is mileage a fee as that word is used in the section of the Constitution quoted? depends on whether it is used in its broad and inclusive meaning, embracing all emoluments of office. If so, then mileage is within its contemplation.

An examination of the various fee bills enacted by the legislature reveals that both before and after the adoption of the Constitution (1874), mileage, although referred to as travelling expenses, was allowable only by virtue of statutes fixing the fees of sheriffs. The Sheriffs’ Fee Bill of February 22, 1821 (7 Sm. L. 367), §3, included under the term “fees,” an allowance per mile for “traveling expenses for each mile actually traveled ......” The Sheriffs’ Fee Bills of July 11, 1901, P. L. 663, §1, and June 1, 1915, P. L. 677, use the term “traveling expenses or mileage.” Thereafter, “traveling expenses” is omitted in the fee bills; they simply designate “mileage” as charges allowed the sheriff for travel in the performance of his official duties.

When compensation was paid by fees, a sheriff could save for his own use part of the mileage as the allowance therefor was generally liberal. .The entire fee system, Avith its opportunity for abuses, undoubtedly was intended to be regulated by the Constitution, and *213 the word “fees” was not used in a restricted, bnt in a comprehensive, sense. That the intent of the framers of the Constitution was so understood is indicated by the Act of March 31, 1876, P. L. 13, entitled, “An Act to carry into effect section five, of article fourteenth, of the constitution, relative to the salaries of county officers and the payment of fees received by them into the state or county treasury, in counties containing over one hundred and fifty thousand inhabitants.” The salaries of county officers were fixed by the act, and section 15 (16 PS §2240)' provides:

“The salaries fixed and provided by the foregoing provisions, shall be in lieu of all or any moneys, fees, perquisites or mileage which are now or may hereafter be received by any officer named in this act; and all said moneys, fees, mileage or perquisites, received by any of them as compensation, fees or perquisites, from any source whatever, shall in all cases belong to the county, and shall be paid into the treasury, (except where required to be paid to the state) as provided in this act.” (Italics supplied.)

That section of the statute appears to be still in force and unamended, unless that portion of the Act of 1933 which we are considering is constitutional. The Act of 1876 does not, by its terms, affect counties of the seventh class, but, following so closely the adoption of the Constitution and intended to carry it into effect, it is indicative of the interpretation that should be given to the term “fees” as used in the Constitution. In Com. v. Mann, 168 Pa. 290, 298, 31 A. 1003, the court stated:

“The Act of 1876 following so soon the Constitution of 1874, it may be presumed the legislature knew the old law, the mischief or abuses under it, as well as did the members Avho framed the Constitution, and the people who adopted it. The large compensation of officers paid by fees in large counties for years before *214 was felt to be a wrong on the public......It is difficult for those who have come to the bar since to realize the abuses of the fee system in large counties before that time......When, as to such counties, the legislature, as part of a new system, declared ‘all fees’ which the county officers were ‘entitled to charge or receive shall belong to the county in and for which they were severally elected or appointed,’ it meant, and could only mean all the fees pertaining to the county office, and which, from the character of the office, the incumbent earned and received. It did not mean one half the fees over and above a certain amount, or the act would have said so.”

See, also, McCleary v. Allegheny County, 163 Pa. 578, 30 A. 120. In Schuylkill County v. Wiest, 257 Pa. 425, 428, 101 A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 A. 577, 125 Pa. Super. 209, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benson-sheriff-v-bradford-co-pasuperct-1936.