Commonwealth Ex Rel. Horner v. Houk

96 Pa. Super. 363, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 165
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 17, 1929
DocketAppeal 114
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 96 Pa. Super. 363 (Commonwealth Ex Rel. Horner v. Houk) 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
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Horner v. Houk, 96 Pa. Super. 363, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 165 (Pa. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion by

Linn, J.,

This is an appeal from judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense in a suit on a township tax collector’s bond. We may assume that the suit resulted from the decision in Lawrence County v. Horner, 281 Pa. 336. Horner, as county treasurer of Lawrence County for the year 1922, was collector of state and county taxes pursuant to the Act of April 3, 1851, P. L. 317 (extended to Lawrence County by the Act of March 27, 1852, P. L. 197) and the Act of May 6, 1854, P. L. 600, supplementary to the Act of 1851. It was his duty (section 3) as to such taxes unpaid by September 1st, to issue his warrant with a schedule of unpaid taxes, etc., “to the constable of the proper, township ’ ’ requiring him to collect the taxes from the persons named in the schedule unless exonerated. For that service the constable Avas entitled to specified compensation. It would seem that for many years, such collecting constable retained as compensation 10% of the amount of the tax payable. The suit, Lawrence County v. Horner, supra, growing out of the audit of Horner’s account as county treasurer foil the year 1922, determined that the applicable statutes permitted a deduction of only 5% for the township collector’s service, Avith the result, that for 1922 the treasurer, Horner, was surcharged Avith the amount so *367 unlawfully retained by the constable, it being the county treasurer’s duty to see that all the tax payable was collected. That but 5%, and not 10%, was the constable’s compensation was determined once for all in that case. Generally speaking one result of the decision was that any such collecting constable who had not paid over all the tax payable in 1922 less only the lawful compensation for collecting, had not performed the duty cast upon him by the law and assumed by him in taking office. Such collector and his sureties were therefore liable for the amount so withheld. An important question in the case is, at whose suit are they liable.

Accordingly, the present suit was brought to require the defendant, Houk, the collector who received the county treasurer’s warrant to collect the taxes in Shenango Township, and the sureties on his official bond, to pay $178.26, averred to be the amount retained and not paid by him to the county treasurer as it should have been paid pursuant to the construction of the statutes made in Lawrence County v. Homer, supra, which, though made in 1924, represents what the law had been ever since the approval of the statutes, notwithstanding that a different view of the amount of the tax collector’s compensation had been accepted locally.

The statement of claim set forth the statutes mentioned above, the duties assumed by the defendant collector, the retention by him and his refusal on demand to pay over the sum claimed, the filing and approval of his bond and the resulting liability of himself and his sureties. The affidavit of defense is defective and clearly insufficient; we must disregard its general denials, under familiar decisions construing the Practice Act: Kirk v. Showell Fryer Co., 276 Pa. 587, 590. The 17th paragraph of the statement makes this essen *368 tially important averment: “The said John M. Houk [defendant collector for Shenango Township] made default in the payment of said taxes to the county treasurer of Lawrence County and did not pay over to him the full amount of said state and county taxes but kept and retained therefrom and appropriated to his own use $178.16 and still neglects and refu&es to pay the same.” Instead of finding in the affidavit of defense a specific denial of the averment that the collector received the money and appropriated it to his own use and refused to pay it to the county treasurer, we find (disregarding, as we must, the general denial) an evasion of the charge. The 17th paragraph of the affidavit is as follows: “The facts alleged in the 17th paragraph of the plaintiff’s statement of claim are denied. There is nothing due and owing to the County of Lawrence on account of the bond upon which this suit is brought and the sum of $178.16 has been fully paid to and received by the County of Lawrence.”

It will be noticed that the statement averred specific default by defendant Houk and that he did not pay $178.16 to the treasurer; there is no averment in the affidavit that Houk or any designated person on his behalf, did in fact pay the amount in dispute to the use-plaintiff or to the county treasurer. It is not enough to aver that nothing is due to the county; such an averment is merely defendant’s opinion of the state of the account; the purpose of the suit and of the averment was to determine whether anything is due as alleged, and how much, not to ascertain defendant’s opinion on the subject, for that opinion, however* honestly entertained, might be based on a misunderstanding of the law governing the accounting; unless there was a specific traverse of the specific charge, the required issue was not made for trial. The same adverse comment applies to defendants’ averment that *369 the sum “has been fully paid to and received by the County of Lawrence.” When was it paid? Who paid it? Who received it on behalf of the county and what was his authority to release? Why are defendants careful to omit averring that it was paid by them or on their behalf, and to whom, if it was so paid? These are some of the obvious inquiries that at once suggest themselves as among the matters that defendants should have covered when charged with liability by .direct averment of default, non-payment and refusal to pay; such evasion and uncertainty have been repeatedly held to be insufficient to stop judgment: Fulton Farmer’s Association v. Bomberger, 262 Pa. 43, 46; South Hills Trust Co. v. Baker, 278 Pa. 481, 484; Wayne Tank Co. v. Petroleum Co., 83 Pa. Superior Ct. 158, 161; Fairbanks & Co. v. Flotron Co., 87 Pa. Superior Ct. 288, 290. As this defect in the affidavit is not cured by other averments in it, further discussion of the insufficiency of the affidavit is unnecessary.

Indeed, appellants’ brief shows that they have not properly understood the statement of claim and for that reason have not sufficiently answered it; in the brief it is said ‘ ‘ The highest point to which the allegations of the statement of claim can rise is that the amount sued for was not. paid by the defendants. That is not enough. Unless something is due and owing to the County of Lawrence, a stranger to the proceeding cannot collect from these defendants in this action and a careful reading of the statement of claim is conclusive that there is no allegation that anything remains yet due and unpaid to the taxing authorities.” 'While the first part of that quotation inferentially concedes the inadequacy of the affidavit in the respect indicated in this opinion, the second part of the quotation brings *370 up the only other matter considered in appellants’ brief that we need refer to, and to that we now turn.

Defendants also contend that this suit will not lie in the name of the Commonwealth to the use of Horner, and in support of their contention, say, that under section 13- of the Act of March 21, 1806, 4 Sm. L. 326, this suit must be brought as specified in section 7 of the Act of 1851, supra. We think the suit is so brought.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 Pa. Super. 363, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-ex-rel-horner-v-houk-pasuperct-1929.