Commonwealth, to Use v. Kauffman

171 A. 572, 314 Pa. 396, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 513
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 22, 1934
DocketAppeal, 58
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 171 A. 572 (Commonwealth, to Use v. Kauffman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme 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, to Use v. Kauffman, 171 A. 572, 314 Pa. 396, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 513 (Pa. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

The County of Franklin brought an action in assumpsit against David Kauffman, a former tax collector of Washington Township, that county, and the Maryland Casualty Co., surety on the bond filed by Kauffman, as *398 such collector for the tax year 1928, in the penal sum of $20,000. Plaintiff claimed the sum of $7,527.96, with interest, as the amount owing on the 1928 duplicate for county taxes. Kauffman admits in his affidavit of defense that the tax duplicate for 1928 was properly delivered to him and that he did not collect and pay over or account for the whole amount charged against him on this duplicate, hut both defendants deny that the amount due and owing thereon was ever properly ascertained according to law and they aver that such ascertainment was a prerequisite to the establishment of liability against them or either of them.

After two affidavits raising questions of law had been disposed of, affidavits of defense to the merits were filed and the case was tried before a jury. A verdict was rendered under binding instructions in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $8,492.69, inclusive of interest. The casualty company (the defendant’s surety) entered rules for judgment n. o. v. and for a new trial. Both rules were discharged. The surety appealed.

Appellant’s first proposition is that a suit by a county upon the official bond of a tax collector against him and his surety is premature when there has been no settlement by the county auditors of the tax collector’s liability to the county for the amount claimed. Appellant contends that the proper tribunal to ascertain the amount due the county by a township tax collector is the county auditors. Appellant cites sections 363 and 378 of the Act of May 2, 1929, P. L. 1278, 16 P. S., pages 109 and 116, in support of its contention or at least as the basis of its argument. These sections read, respectively, as follows:

“Section 363. Audit of Accounts. — The auditors shall audit, settle, and adjust the accounts of the commissioners, treasurer and sheriff and coroner of the county, and make report thereof annually to the court of common pleas of such county, together with a statement of the balance due from or to such commissioners, treasurer, *399 sheriff, or coroner.” This is in substance a reenactment of section 48 of the Act of April 15, 1834, P. L. 537, 1 Pardon’s Digest (13th ed.), page 861, section 10.

“Section 378. Filing Report. — The report of the controller or auditors shall be filed among the records of the court of common pleas of the county, and, from the time of such filing, shall have the effect of a judgment against the real estate of the officer who shall thereby appear to be indebted either to the Commonwealth or to the county.” This is in substance a reenactment of section 55 of the Act of 1834, supra.

It will be observed that the only officials referred to in the sections quoted are the commissioners, treasurer, sheriff and coroner. There is nothing in the act requiring that a tax collector’s liability to the county be determined by the county auditor.

It is the Act of June 25, 1885, P. L. 187, section 11, which provides for the settlements to be made by tax collectors with the proper authorities. Section 11 of that act reads as follows: “The accounts of collectors of taxes shall be settled by township or borough auditors of the proper township or borough, and he shall state a separate account for each different tax collected by him; but collectors of county and state taxes shall settle with the county commissioners as heretofore.”

As to this, President Judge Davison of the court below aptly says: “This designates the tribunal with which settlement is to be made, not the manner in which it is to be made with that tribunal....... We find nothing in any law in our search which attempts to lay down a rule setting forth the manner in which such settlement is to be made.” The Act of June 25, 1885, changed the method of settling township and borough taxes, but expressly provided that “collectors of county and state taxes shall settle with the county commissioners as heretofore.” We agree with the court below “that the law provides for a settlement of the duplicate by the tax collector with the county commissioners and a granting of *400 certain exonerations by that board, which determines the amount which the tax collector must subsequently account for and pay over, and that this amount having been so ascertained is a fixed sum ascertained by the tribunal raised by law for that purpose and for which' suit will lie.”

Appellant also calls attention to the Act of June 8, 1891, P. L. 212, section 1, 72 P. S., page 402, section 5521, which provides that “when any state, county and poor taxes are placed in the hands of a collector for collection in accordance with any existing law,......the amount of the same shall be credited to the treasurer of the county, if previously charged to said treasurer, and charged to the collector; and such collectors shall give bond to the county, with sureties,” etc.

The argument appears to be that the treasurer’s records must constitute the only proof of what collectors of county taxes owe the county. We cannot so construe this act. In Alcorn v. Com., 66 Pa. 172, a constable who had given bond, with surety, for the collection of taxes, was in default and had moved into another county. In a suit against the constable-collector and his surety, it was held, inter alia, that where a county treasurer in settling with a constable-collector charged him with too little, and the county auditors settled with the treasurer on the same basis, this could not avail the constable-collector in a suit to recover the amount actually due by him. This court said that the settlement of the treasurer’s accounts by the auditors, had “no effect upon the constable’s liability for the taxes, one way or the other......it was not a settlement of the constable’s account.” We find no statutory provision so limiting the evidence of the liability of a collector of county taxes and we would not be justified in construing any existing law of this Commonwealth as prescribing that the audit of the county treasurer’s books by the county auditors was either a prerequisite to the establishment of the liability of a collector of county taxes, to the county, or *401 that the treasurer’s books furnished the only conclusive evidence of that liability.

Appellant in combating the ruling that the county commissioners have the power to act as auditors so far as the accounts of collectors of county taxes are concerned, says: “It would be strange if the accounts of all tax collectors and all borough, county, township and school officials are audited, the audits filed in the proper court and the right of appeal given to the persons affected, with the exception of tax collectors, in so far as county taxes are concerned.

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199 A. 204 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1938)

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171 A. 572, 314 Pa. 396, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-to-use-v-kauffman-pa-1934.