Heller v. Bercaw
This text of 62 Pa. Super. 385 (Heller v. Bercaw) 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.
Opinion
Opinion by
In the course of the enlargement of the court house [387]*387of Northampton County it was found necessary to relay a part of the floor in the second story of the old building and the architect reported this condition to the county commissioners. The plaintiff submitted a bid to replace the old floor with a new one corresponding with the floor of the new addition for $98.80. At a later time the architect recommended a renewal of a part of the floor in the third story of the old building and the plaintiff submitted a bid to do that work for $75.00. These bids were examined and approved by the architect who considered the prices to be reasonable. At a meeting on February 7, 1914, the commissioners awarded the contract to put the new floor in the second story to the plaintiff for $93 and at the same meeting the plaintiff’s bid to construct the new floor in the third story for $75 was accepted. The work was done by the contractor and accepted by the commissioners. When the plaintiff’s bill was presented to the county controller he refused to certify the same to the county commissioners and thereupon after demand for payment of the claim an action was brought before a justice of the peace and judgment obtained for the amount due. An appeal was taken from that judgment to the Court of Common Pleas and a trial had at which the controller was present, and took some part. The commissioners made no defense to the claim but the controller, who is a member of the bar, raised the objection that the fact that the two contracts were let the same day was a suspicious circumstance, but he disavowed any imputation of fraud. The ground of his objection seems to have been that there should have been but one contract and as that would have amounted to more than $100 it could only be awarded to the lowest and best bidder after due notice to be published by the controller when directed by the commissioners as provided by the 10th Section of the Act of June 27, 1895, P. L. 403. There being no offer of evidence, however, to defeat the plaintiff’s claim the court directed the jury to find a verdict for the plaintiff [388]*388and the verdict was accordingly rendered for the plaintiff October 22, 1914. The jury fee was paid May 21, 1915, and a judgment entered on the verdict. The same day a suggestion was filed for a peremptory mandamus on the controller to audit and approve the claim of the plaintiff as recovered in the action referred to and to countersign the warrant drawn on the county treasurer by the county commissioners. On the same day Mr. Young, the controller, presented a petition to the court, as county controller and a taxpayer, for leave to intervene in the plaintiff’s case and make a defense on behalf of the county. The latter application was refused in an opinion filed June 7, 1915, and the same day an order was entered awarding a peremptory mandamus on the controller as prayed for. To the order of court refusing permission to intervene and to the judgment in the mandamus case the appellant excepted and took the pending appeal. There are two assignments of error: the first, to the refusal of the court to permit the appellant to intervene in the action brought by the appellant; the second is based on the decree of the court in the mandamus proceeding. We have, then, two proceedings with separate definitive decrees and one appeal. The plaintiff’s action against the county was terminated by the entry of judgment. The county commissioners declined to appeal from that judgment. The court refused to permit the appellant to intervene. The only error alleged as to that case is the order denying this petition of the appellant. The application for a mandamus is a statutory proceeding directed against the appellant as a public officer and is of a different nature from that which led to the plaintiff’s judgment. The decree made in that case is a judgment at law from which an appeal lies. The proceeding was begun by the petition and terminated in the decree awarding the writ. There should have been separate appeals: Cauley v. Pittsburgh, Etc., Ry. Co., 95 Pa. 398; Stout v. Quinn, 9 Pa. Superior Ct. 179; Pottsville Bank v. Cake, 12 Pa. Su[389]*389perior Ct. 61; McCosh v. Myers, 25 Pa. Superior Ct. 61. There was no offer to elect to proceed with the appeal as applied to one of the cases and as the record stands the appeal should be quashed.
The same result would be reached on a consideration of the merits of the assignments. We need not determine the question whether the appellant, as controller, is within the terms of the Act of 1877, which provides for intervention by a taxpayer. Whether taxpayer or controller he was present at the trial of the plaintiff’s cause and expressly disclaimed any allegation of fraud or unfairness on the part of the plaintiff or the county commissioners. There was no suggestion that the work done was not properly done and at a fair and just price. As a participant at the trial the appellant had notice of all that was involved in the case presented by the plaintiff, and an opportunity to introduce any defense of fact or law which might have been presented. Where there is an allegation of fraud or mistake of law by the court in the original judgment and the party has already been heard or had an opportunity to be heard in that proceeding he is not entitled to a retrial of the facts and law already disposed of. In the case before us the court decided the question raised by the controller as a matter of law. Seven months after the verdict he came in with a petition asking leave to .intervene without a suggestion that any different state of facts existed from that developed at the trial nor is it pretended that there is any other feature of the case to which objection could be taken than the question of law on the undisputed evidence which was before the court and decided at the trial. Under such circumstances the refusal of the petition was not erroneous.
In the mandamus proceeding all of the relevant facts were presented in the suggestion and were merely a restatement of those developed at the trial on the plaintiff’s account. There was a final judgment in that action unappealed from and unassailable unless there was [390]*390some technical merit in the question raised by the controller at the trial, but the trial judge disposed of this properly, as we think, during the progress of the trial. There was, therefore, no pending competent proceeding impeaching the validity of the judgment nor anything to sustain the appellant’s refusal to pass the account. The case was within the terms of the Act of June 8, 1893, which permits the issuing of a peremptory mandamus forthwith when the right to require a performance of the act is clear and it is apparent that no valid excuse can be given for not performing it.
The appeal is quashed.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
62 Pa. Super. 385, 1916 Pa. Super. LEXIS 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heller-v-bercaw-pasuperct-1916.