Borger v. Alliance Borough

28 Pa. Super. 407, 1905 Pa. Super. LEXIS 212
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 13, 1905
DocketAppeal, No. 218
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 28 Pa. Super. 407 (Borger v. Alliance Borough) 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
Borger v. Alliance Borough, 28 Pa. Super. 407, 1905 Pa. Super. LEXIS 212 (Pa. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Opinion by

Porter, J.,

The plaintiff brought this action to recover the value of certain goods alleged to have been furnished by him to the inmates of certain houses in the defendant borough, which had been placed under quarantine by the board of health, during an epidemic of smallpox. The board of health had been duly appointed and organized under the provisions of the Acts of May 11, 1893, P. L. 44, and June 18, 1895, P. L. 203. It was admitted at the trial that the plaintiff had during the period that the houses were quarantined furnished to those resident therein the goods in question, but the defendant borough denied all liability therefor.

All the parties to whom the goods were furnished had been customers of the plaintiff, who was a grocer, before the board of health subjected the houses to quarantine regulation, and the plaintiff charged these particular goods to the parties to whom they were respectively delivered, but the parties to whom he thus charged them failed to pay the bills and he now seeks to hold the borough.

The learned judge of the court below, after explaining in his charge the nature of quarantine regulations and the manner in which citizens are thus confined within their residences, charged the jury that it thereupon became the duty of the board of health of a borough to furnish food for the inmates of the house and provide whatever is necessary to support the lives and protect the health of the people thus imprisoned, and then proceeded to direct the jury in the application of this principle to the present case, in doing which he thus states the facts as developed by the evidence : “ In the case at bar, under the undisputed evidence, whilst the board of health appointed Mr. Kleppinger to attend to this duty, Mr. Kleppinger did not himself go around and purchase provisions for these parties who were imprisoned. In that situation, no provision having [410]*410been made by the borough for supplying these families with food, the merchants of the borough supplied what was necessary .in that direction, and among these merchants is the present plaintiff, Mr. Borger, and he is now before you claiming the amount of a bill which he furnished to a number of families, demanding that it should be paid by the borough of Alliance.” Careful consideration of the evidence has convinced us that this statement of facts by the learned judge was correct, The plaintiff did attempt to prove that he bad delivered the goods upon the orders of one Nicholas, and that Nicholas had been authorized by the board of health to make the purchases, but the attempt failed. The minutes of the board of health showed no such delegation of authority to Nicholas. The action of the borough authorities may, it is true, be established by evidence other than their records, but in order to sustain a finding that a subordinate employee, such as was Nicholas, of the board of health, has authority to bind the borough by a contract for supplies of this character, the delegation of authority must be shown by some competent evidence. It must be shown that the board of health as a bodyr has acted on the proposition, and evidence as to indefinite remarks made by individual members of the board at different times to the alleged agent is insufficient to warrant the submission. to the jury of the question of the delegation of authority by the organized body. The plaintiff was not entitled to recover upon the theory that the goods had been contracted for by an officer authorized to bind the borough.

• We do not decide that a borough is in all cases bound to pay for the food consumed by the inmates of a house which has been quarantined, without regard to whether or not such inmates have means to provide for their own maintenance. The board of health is bound to afford such means of communication with the.outer world as will enable the persons quarantined to obtain necessary supplies, and to furnish such supplies in case such persons cannot with reasonable effort obtain the same. The discretion to determine what supplies are reasonably necessary is vested in the board of health; whether .they may-lawfully delegate that discretion to a subordinate officer is a question which we do not now decide, but the evidence in this case was certainly insufficient to warrant a finding that the board of [411]*411health of the borough of Alliance had delegated such authority to Nicholas.

Having thus, very properly, withdrawn from the consideration of the jury any question of a contract relation between the plaintiff and the borough, the learned- judge proceeded to submit to the jury the question of the liability of the defendant to pay for supplies which no one authorized to represent the borough had ever bought. The court charged the jury, in the language which is the subject of the fourteenth specification of error, as follows : “ I have already said to you that it was the duty primarily of the borough to have purchased these articles through its own agents, but I have also .said this they did not do ; and I instruct you that under these circumstances that these merchants had a right to furnish the articles that were necessary under the circumstances.” This was clearly erroneous. The court undertook to declare as matter of law that a borough is bound to furnish and pay for the supplies for all persons, no ' matter how wealthy they may be, who chance to be inmates of a house in which a case of smallpox has de-. veloped, and about which the health authorities have stationed guards to prevent an epidemic. This would take from the board of health the discretion to determine, in the first instance, whether the financial circumstances of those quarantined were such as to require that their food should be paid for out of the public treasury, and after that question has been determined in favor of the maintenance of the individuals at the public expense, it would transfer from the board of health to a jury the discretion to determine what articles were necessary for the proper support of the individuals under the circumstances. Let it be assumed that it was the duty of the borough authorities to furnish the necessary supplies ; in case of their failure to do so the law furnishes a remedy for that default, but it does not authorize enterprising merchants, who may desire to retain profitable customers after the epidemic has passed to undertake the discharge of the public duty at the public expense.

The learned judge again fell into error when he said to the jury: “ I say to you that under the undisputed evidence that even if Mr. Borger did not have a right originally to furnish these articles' to the different families that were quarantined, that the undisputed evidence shows that the board of health [412]*412subsequently ratified his act, and that being so it leaves a single question for your determination and that is whether the articles furnished were necessary or not.” We have carefully read the evidence, and find that all that has even the remotest reference to ratification by the board of health is oral, and therefore the fact of ratification must have been for the jury and not for the court, even if there had been evidence which raised that question.

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47 Pa. Super. 248 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 Pa. Super. 407, 1905 Pa. Super. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borger-v-alliance-borough-pasuperct-1905.