Guyer v. Bedford County

49 Pa. Super. 60, 1912 Pa. Super. LEXIS 283
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 1, 1912
DocketAppeal, No. 297
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 49 Pa. Super. 60 (Guyer v. Bedford County) 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
Guyer v. Bedford County, 49 Pa. Super. 60, 1912 Pa. Super. LEXIS 283 (Pa. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion by

Morrison, J.,

The inception of this case was an appeal by plaintiff, ex-county treasurer, from the report of county auditors. The appeal and bond were filed March 20, 1909. Subsequently the court directed an issue and ordered that John S. Guyer be plaintiff and the county of Bedford, defendant, and the plaintiff having filed a statement of claim, the defendant pleaded and at a later date plaintiff filed an amended statement of claim and the defendant filed its replication. Subsequently a jury was called and sworn and by direction of the court returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $293.26. Defendant’s counsel moved [62]*62the court in arrest of judgment and for a new trial and for judgment non obstante veredicto. On August 17, 1910, the court made the'following decree: “The motion for judgment non obstante veredicto is overruled and refused and the motions and reasons for a new trial are refused and overruled.” To this decree we find the following exception: “Motion for new trial and in arrest of judgment overruled, per opinion and decree filed August, 1910. Exception to defendant and bill sealed. J. M. Woods, P. J., seal.” In the copy of the appearance docket entries we find: “And now, August 17, 1910, the motion for judgment non obstante veredicto is overruled and refused and the motion and reasons for a new trial are refused and overruled. J. M. Woods, P. J. . . . Exception to defendant and bill sealed.”

At the trial the defendant presented the following point: “That under all the evidence in this case there can be no recovery for the plaintiff and the verdict must be for the defendant.” The court refused this point and gave a binding instruction in favor of the plaintiff but the counsel who tried the case did not except to the answer to his point nor to the charge of the court. The exception furnished us, first above quoted, does not seem to have reference to the judgment non obstante veredicto, but it appears to be an exception to the decree refusing a new trial and overruling the motion in arrest of judgment. Unless the exception printed in the copy of the docket entries will authorise a review of the judgment non obstante veredicto, then we have nothing before us which will convict the court of reversible error. There is no assignment of error to the refusal of the court to grant a new trial, nor to the refusal to arrest the judgment. This leaves only the assignment of error to the refusal of the court to enter judgment non obstante veredicto. This record is so badly made up that our first impression was that the appeal must be quashed. But on a more careful examination we conclude from the docket entries, that the defendant’s counsel did except to the refusal to enter judg[63]*63ment non obstante veredicto and the court allowed said exception and sealed a bill thereto, and therefore, we proceed to consider the case on its merits as raised by the third assignment of error.

The plaintiff was the treasurer of Bedford county for the years 1903, 1904 and 1905. The auditors for said county met in regular sessions in January, 1904,1905 and 1906, to audit the accounts of the public officials for each year preceding the several audits. At the regular sessions of the county auditors in 1904 the plaintiff, then county treasurer, appeared before the board and presented his accounts for settlement. He submitted his books as treasurer and the board examined and passed on the same together with the vouchers filed with the commissioners, the corresponding drafts upon the treasurer for the preceding year and in short audited his accounts. He was before the auditors daily. It does not appear that he submitted anything to the board that was not by them audited, nor did he make any demands for compensation or fees that were not fully passed upon. On completion of the report of the auditors it was taken to the court of common pleas and there filed with the prothonotary who noted thereon the character of the paper, the date and fact of filing and signed his name as prothonotary and placed the report in a box kept for the filing of auditors’ reports, among the miscellaneous papers of the common pleas. There was no minute made on the common'pleas docket of the fact of filing. The same procedure occurred at the auditor’s settlement in January, 1905, for the year 1904, and in January, 1906, for the preceding year. The learned counsel for the appellee contends that the plaintiff is not bound by the several auditors’ reports because they were not taken into open court and filed by direction of the court. It is true that the act of 1834 requires that the auditors’ reports shall be filed among the records of the court of common pleas. In the present case they were filed by the prothonotary in his office where the records of the court of common pleas are kept and we are disposed [64]*64to assume that these reports were regularly and properly filed. In addition, the plaintiff appeared before the auditors and submitted his accounts for each of the three years, and he was bound to know that said auditors’ reports would be filed in the prothonotary’s office and if he desired to appeal that he must do so within the statutory period after the date of filing. We do not agree with the counsel’s contention that the reports were not properly filed in the court of common pleas of Bedford county.

No exceptions to either of these reports were filed and after they became absolute, the plaintiff, treasurer, settled with the county commissioners and paid over to his successor the amounts owing by him as fixed by these several reports. The. plaintiff never appealed nor attempted to appeal from these reports or any of them. When the county auditors met for the' discharge of their duties in January, 1909, the plaintiff as ex-treasurer of Bedford county, appeared before the board and presented an itemized statement of his claim for commissions of one per cent for state tax by him paid over to the state treasurer for the years 1903,1904 and 1905 when he was county treasurer. These claims aggregated $293.26. His claim was considered and the auditors reported that, at stated intervals, the plaintiff had presented to the county commissioners accounts of the fees which he claimed as treasurer. These accounts were approved in due course and the amounts were paid in full; that at the end of each year of his term as treasurer he appeared before the county auditors, and their reports for the years 1903, 1904 and 1905, show settlements with him, unappealed from, and that the settlements with the county commissioners and the adjudication of his accounts as treasurer by the county auditors are a bar to his right to recover and the auditors reported against his claim. This report was filed with the prothonotary February 5, 1909, and from the report the plaintiff appealed March 20, 1909, and the court framed an issue and disposed of the case as hereinbefore stated.

The narrow question for decision is, Could the plaintiff [65]*65appear annually before the county auditors and submit his accounts and when they were audited take no appeals and then come before another board of auditors several years after the expiration of his term of office and recover commissions or fees on state taxes which he had collected and paid over to the state treasurer, because, as he alleged, he had never received the same?

In our opinion, when plaintiff appeared annually before the county auditors and his accounts were settled by them, and he did not appeal, he was concluded by those settlements no matter whether he had actually presented all of his valid claims against the county or not.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 Pa. Super. 60, 1912 Pa. Super. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guyer-v-bedford-county-pasuperct-1912.