Berks County v. Linderman

30 Pa. Super. 119, 1906 Pa. Super. LEXIS 31
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 13, 1906
DocketAppeal, No. 206
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 Pa. Super. 119 (Berks County v. Linderman) 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
Berks County v. Linderman, 30 Pa. Super. 119, 1906 Pa. Super. LEXIS 31 (Pa. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Opinion by

Morrison, J.,

This appeal by the defendant, and the appeal of Charles E. Stangier from the same court to No. 207, October Term, 1905, involve precisely the same questions and, while this opinion will be filed in No. 206, what is said in it is intended to apply to both cases.

The defendants were elected commissioners of the county of Berks on November 3, 1896, for the term of three years and they were inducted into office on the first Monday of January, 1897, and continued in office until the first Monday in January, 1900.

The appellants claimed compensation under the provisions [122]*122of the Act of Hay 7, 1889, P. L. 109, fixing the compensation of county commissioners within this commonwealth. This is a general act. At the time the appellants went into office the local Act of March 30, 1869, P. L. 581, was in full force in Berks county, and it fixed the compensation of county commissioners at $500 per annum. That act was not repealed by the act of May 7, 1889, supra: Commonwealth v. Lloyd, 2 Pa. Superior Ct. 6; Same v. Same, 178 Pa. 308. The very plain reason why the repealing section of the act of May 7, 1889, does not repeal the local act of March 30, 1869, is that the latter act fixes the compensation of county commissioners of Berks county at $500 per annum, and the repealer in the act of 1889 only repeals local laws fixing a rate of per diem compensation, less than is provided in the act of 1889. Under the local law the commissioners of Berks county were not entitled to per diem compensation. It is, however, argued that sec. 3 of the act of 1889 is unconstitutional and void. We can see no merit in this contention. The title is: “ Regulating the compensation of county commissioners within this commonwealth.” The purpose of the act is to provide per diem compensation for county commissioners. In our opinion, sec. 3 which reads : “ All local laws fixing a pen diem compensation, less than is provided in this act, be and the same are hereby repealed,” is in strict harmony with the act and it is sufficiently indicated by the title. It is further contended that the Act of May 5, 1897, P. L. 42, repealed the local act of 1869, in Berks county, and, therefore, the act of 1889, went into full force in that county. It is true that the act of May 5, 1897, repealed so much of the act of March 30, 1869, as fixed annual compensation for the commissioners of Berks county; but the defendants were elected and went into office prior to the passage of the act of May 5, 1897, and, therefore, they could reap no benefit from the repeal of the local act because of article III, sec 13, of the constitution of this commonwealth, viz.: “ No law shall extend the term of any public officer, or increase or diminish his salary or emoluments after his election or appointment.”

We are of opinion that, upon the merits, the county auditors and the learned court below were clearly right in surcharging the defendants with the respective amounts which [123]*123they drew from the county over and above the salary fixed by the local law in force in Berks county. Nor do we think there is any error in refusing to allow the appellants the money used by them in attending state conventions. We know of no law authorizing the county to pay such expenses. And, indeed, it is practically conceded at the argument that this was an improper expenditure of the county funds.

The remaining question requiring consideration is the jurisdiction of the auditors, and the court below on appeal from their report. As to the jurisdiction over the subject-matter, there is not the slightest doubt. Such jurisdiction is clearly conferred by the Act of April 15, 1834, P. L. 537. But the contention is that the appellants were not summoned to appear before the auditors. That they did not appear and, therefore, there was a lack of jurisdiction of their persons. It is very clear that the auditors did meet, at the proper time and place, and attempt to settle and adjust the accounts of the appellants in accordance with law; that they made their report in writing and filed the same in the court of common pleas ; that appellants filed petitions and moved the court to strike off so much of the reports as charged them with money; that pending rules to show cause on these petitions, the appellants and the county appealed from the county auditors’ report to the court of common pleas, and these appeals were duly entered and issues framed, and the cases tried and judgments entered therein, and these are the judgments from which the present appeals were taken.

The ground on which the appellants asked the court to strike off the auditors’ report is that they were surcharged without notice. On argument and consideration the court discharged the rules to strike-off, holding, in substance, that the auditors had jurisdiction and therefore the rules were discharged. It should not be overlooked that the appellants appealed to the court of common pleas while their motions and rules to strike off the auditors’ report were pending and undecided. In addition to this it appears by the replication to the appellants, pleas to the jurisdiction of the court, that they claimed compensation, by statements presented to the auditors, in accordance with the provisions of the act of 1889, supra.

An examination of the record does not disclose any serious

[124]*124denial, on the part of the appellants, to the averment in the replication that they presented their statements of claim to the auditors. It is true this is denied by way of argument and perhaps in a very guarded manner otherwise. In view of the condition of this record, we think it comes with bad grace for the appellants to now deny that they had knowledge that the auditors were settling their accounts and that they claimed compensation at the rate of $3.50 per diem before the auditors. So far as we are aware it has never yet been held that the auditors’ report must show, on its face, that the officers whose accounts were settled had notice. But clearly' such showing of notice is not necessary where the officers appealed from the auditors’ report to the common pleas. In Godshalk v. Northampton Co., 71 Pa. 324, it was said by the Supreme Court: “ The record shows that a paper purporting to be the auditors’ report, was filed in the prothonotary’s office, among the records of the common pleas, on March 23, 1868, and that the defendant appealed from it on May 11, 1868. But it is contended that the paper from which the defendant appealed not only does not purport to be an auditors’ report, but that it has not a single earmark of such report except that it is signed by the county auditors. If it was not a report of the auditors, why did the defendant appeal from it ? The appeal is an admission that the paper filed by the auditors was their report, otherwise the defendant not being affected by it had no right to appeal .... and that their report thereof, though in some respects defective, Wilson v. Clarion Co., 2 Pa. 17, was sufficient to warrant the appeal, and give the common pleas jurisdiction of it.”

“The law and justice of the case are clearly with the county. Public officers should be held to a strict and rigid accountability, and in no case should charges for services exceeding the compensation allowed by law be sanctioned or tolerated.”

In Brown v. The Commonwealth, 2 Rawle, 40, it is said by the Supreme Court (p. 44): “ If no notice was given to him, and the report had been made and filed, and no appeal, and an execution had issued, the court, on application, would have set it aside.

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Lytle v. Rupert
44 Pa. Super. 493 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Pa. Super. 119, 1906 Pa. Super. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berks-county-v-linderman-pasuperct-1906.