Hood's Appeal

7 Pa. D. & C. 83, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 63
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Crawford County
DecidedMay 8, 1925
DocketNo. 55
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Pa. D. & C. 83 (Hood's Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Crawford County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hood's Appeal, 7 Pa. D. & C. 83, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 63 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

Prather, P. J.,

Crawford County is a county of the sixth class, and, therefore, subject to the provisions of the Act of June 29, 1923, P. L. 944, with reference to the salaries of officers enumerated therein and the number of appointees and their salaries.

The salary board took action to determine the number of clerks and deputies required for the proper discharge of the business of the office of Register of Wills and Recorder of Deeds for the County of Crawford, and fixed the number of such appointees and their salaries as follows: One deputy at a salary [84]*84of $150 per month; one clerk at a salary of $100 per month; two copyists at a salary of $70 per month each.

From this action Jeannette W. Hood, occupying both of said offices, has appealed, urging that the board erred in not allowing her an additional deputy at $150 per month. The 5th section of said act provides: “The salary board in all counties of the sixth class, which shall be composed of the county commissioners and the county treasurer, shall fix and determine annually the number and the salaries to be paid to the clerks and deputies required for the proper discharge of the business in the office of the county officers whose salaries are fixed by this act. Any such county officer, deputy or clerk dissatisfied with amount of salary allowed by the salary board may appeal from the action of such board to the Court of Common Pleas of the county, which court shall, after hearing, make an order fixing the salaries of such appointees.”

It is to be observed that the act provides, inter alia,, that “any officer . . . dissatisfied with amount of .salary allowed by the salary board may appeal ... to the Court of Common Pleas,” and that no appeal is specifically allowed such officer from the action of said board with reference to the number of clerks or deputies allowed.

It is urged that an appeal to the Court of Common Pleas by an officer from the action of the salary board fixing the “number” of clerks and deputies allowed will not lie, for the reason that the statute is silent upon this particular subject-matter.

The legal question involved is not free from difficulty. So far as we have been able to discover, it is entirely new and has not yet been passed upon by any of our courts. Our conclusion in this case does not require a decision based upon the legal proposition submitted.

It is but fair to Mrs. Hood to call attention to the fact that her request for an additional deputy is no innovation as to the number of clerks and deputies employed in said office. The records show that for the term of four years preceding her term the office was allowed the number of clerks and deputies she is asking. The Salary Board Act took effect at the beginning of Mrs. Hood’s term of office. Prior thereto, the Register and Recorder for Crawford County received a flat salary of $3000 per year, was allowed necessary help in the office, and after deducting his salary and the expense of running said office, the balance was equally divided between himself and the county.

For the last year of Mr. Boswell’s term, ending the first Monday of January, 1924, the county received as its share of the proceeds of said office $1741.27. Mr. Boswell is called as a witness in support of the salary board’s action, and testifies that one deputy in the office of Register and Recorder for Crawford County is sufficient. If this conclusion be correct, then Mr. Boswell, as Register and Recorder, was wasting the salary he annually allowed a second deputy during his term, to wit, in 1923, $1750, one-half of which, or $875, belonged to Crawford County.

Difficulty in determining by any one outside an office the clerical force required to properly discharge the duties of a particular office may account for the seeming indifference to its cost then and the seeming alertness as to its cost now.

The legislation changing the volume and character of services for the office of register of wills all took effect as early as Jan. 1,1918. It follows that the quality and quantity of service required in the office of Register and Recorder of Crawford County has not materially changed since Jan. 1, 1918, and that if two deputies were necessary during the four years preceding Mrs. Hood’s term, they are necessary now.

[85]*85If Mr. Boswell had succeeded himself, the plain inference is that he would now be insisting, as he did when in the same office, that two deputies (the number Mrs. Hood asks for) were actually necessary for the proper discharge of the duties of said office. It is plain that this testimony, by reason of its bias and inconsistency, cannot have much convincing weight.

Our inquiry, however, is: What are the needs and reasonable demands of this office as to a clerical force? There being no complaint as to the number of clerks and copyists, our particular inquiry is: Did the salary board make a reasonable allowance of clerical help, when properly distributed, to reasonably discharge the duties incident to said office?

It is of small significance in a day’s work whether a clerk is styled a “clerk” or a “deputy.” If the office has too many clerks, one of them can, at the pleasure of the officer, be appointed a deputy. Our real consideration, therefore, is whether the entire working force, considered as a whole, allowed to the Register of Wills and Recorder of Deeds, is adequate, regardless of whether they be styled deputies, clerk or copyists.

According to the opinion of appellant, and of Mr. Flower, a deputy of rare and valuable experience in this particular office, the services of another individual in addition to the number allowed by the salary board, in the character of a deputy, is required in said office.

According to the opinion of Henry Veith, a deputy of two years’ experience in this office, and of A. M. Douthett, Register of Wills and Recorder of Deeds for the County of Butler, one deputy, or the number allowed by the salary board, is sufficient, with the other office force, to properly discharge the duties of said office.

Giving full credit to the good faith and candor of these witnesses, which side of the controversy prevails?

Ordinarily, an issue of fact is to be determined by the evidence submitted. But when such an issue relates to the solution of a question so complex in its requirements as the one involved in this appeal, and the evidence leaves the mind of the court in doubt as to how that issue should be determined, the court is justified in summoning to its aid available extrinsic facts, the existence and correctness of which are beyond dispute, and all of which may be verified by consulting the proper records.

We have secured such data from the register of wills and recorder of deeds in five counties of the sixth class, which we summarize and compare with Crawford County as to population, the number of deputies and clerks and their monthly salaries, together with the total salaries and the monthly per capita cost in the respective counties based upon their population. From this comparison we have deduced the following figures as to the number of appointees, their monthly salaries and monthly per capita cost: Crawford County, population 60,667: One deputy at $150; three clerks at $240; total monthly salary, $390; per capita cost, six and two-fifths mills. Bradford County, population 53,166: One deputy at $100; two clerks at $130; total monthly salary, $230; per capita cost, four and one-third mills.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Pa. D. & C. 83, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoods-appeal-pactcomplcrawfo-1925.