In re Surcharge of County Commissioners

12 Pa. D. & C. 471
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lackawanna County
DecidedJuly 1, 1928
DocketNo. 458
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 12 Pa. D. & C. 471 (In re Surcharge of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lackawanna County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Surcharge of County Commissioners, 12 Pa. D. & C. 471 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1928).

Opinion

Maxey, J. —

The opinion filed in the above-entitled case, purporting to be filed “By the Court” and signed “Newcomb, P. J.,” does not represent the opinion of the Court of Common Pleas of this county, and the judgment entered for $1894.19 against Morgan Thomas et ah, as a surcharge, upon the direction of said judge in said opinion, without the concurrence of at least one of the other judges of the Court of Common Pleas of this County, is a nullity. It is merely a one-judge order. This case was never argued before the court in banc and was not discussed by the court in banc. In fact, this case was never discussed by Newcomb, P. J., with, or mentioned by him to, the writer of this opinion, although we have at all times been available for conference.

In his opinion attempting to dispose of this case, Judge Newcomb wrote as follows: “For obvious reasons it is no welcome duty to have to sit in judgment in such case. But it is here and the right of the parties to have it disposed of cannot be denied.”

If the duty to dispose of this case was as “unwelcome” as the quoted words would indicate, Judge Newcomb could easily have divested himself of part of this burden by giving his colleagues an opportunity to share it with him. However, he did not do this. We may with propriety add to the latter’s statement above quoted, so that it will read as follows: “The right of the parties to have this case disposed of by the entire court in banc cannot be denied.”

In the very recent Scranton registration case, Nolan v. Farr, No. 15, November Term, 1928, in Equity; No. 111, January Term, 929, Supreme Court; in an opinion reversing an order made by Newcomb, P. J., in the name of the court, without consulting his colleagues, the Supreme Court said, quoting a statute: “ ‘Any person . . . may appeal to the Court of Common Pleas,’ ... in which event the matter should be heard as the act specifies by the ‘Court of Common Pleas’ sitting in banc, and not by any one judge thereof, if other judges are available for the purpose.”

The appeal of this case is from the report of the county controller to the “Court of Common Pleas:” Act of June 12, 1878,. P. L. 208. This appeal must, as the Supreme Court said, “be heard as the act specifies by the ‘Court of Common Pleas’ sitting in banc, and not by any one judge thereof, if other judges are available for the purpose.”

The Supreme Court, in Summers v. Kramer, 271 Pa. 189, in which it held that in a district in which there were two judges of the Court of Common Pleas, the judgment of one of the judges of the court entered without the concurrence of the other judge was no judgment at all, said, in an opinion by Justice Simpson, page 195: “There is no judgment to affirm. It requires the [472]*472action of a majority of the court to authorize the entry of a judgment; no one judge can enter it against the protest of his only colleague, who has an equal right to pass on all matters pending in the court: Madlem’s' Appeal, 103 Pa. 584; Butts v. Armor, 164 Pa. 73; Myers v. Consumers’ Coal Co., 212 Pa. 193. . . . ‘What is ordered and adjudged by the court, not merely what is entered, constitutes the judgment:’ Butts v. Armor, supra. ... As Bach (judge) had equal power and authority in the court, neither had a legal right to exclude the other from participation in its business.”

In Myers v. Consumers’ Coal Co., 212 Pa. 193, the Supreme Court, in an opinion by Mestrezat, J., said, page 200: “Luzerne County is a separate judicial district and elects four judges learned in the law who sit in and compose the Court of Common Pleas of that county. While there are four law judges of the Common Pleas of that county, there is but one court, and the concurrence of a majority of the judges is a prerequisite to the entering of a valid decree. . . . The court in banc should have heard the argument on the exceptions and, after consideration, should have disposed of the exceptions and entered a decree. There would then have been a decree of the court from which only an appeal lies.”

Butts v. Armor, 164 Pa. 73, Dean, J., page 83, said:

“A court is a ‘tribunal established for the public administration of justice and composed of one or more judges, who sit for that purpose at fixed times and places, attended by proper officers:’ Burrill’s Law Dictionary; Mason v. Woerner, 18 Mo. 570. . . .
“The court which took cognizance of this cause at the trial was composed of the three judges, . . . and they sat at the time and place appointed by law for that purpose. Then, after adjournment, they commenced to act, not as a court in consultation over a grave question involving both fact and law, but as individuals. Without consultation with the associates, the president judge . . . filed in vacation this opinion as the judgment of the court.
“The two associates thereupon, at no court of which the president judge was a member, and without consultation with him, overruled this judgment and filed one to the contrary. . . .
“After hearing a cause, opinions of the individual members of a court, no matter how diverse, may be expressed to and urged upon each other as reasons in vindication of a proposed judgment, and the opinion of one may be adopted as that of the court and judgment be entered accordingly. But if, after hearing, the members of the court, without consultation, deliberation or decision, separate and each one commences to file of record his individual opinion and conclusion, however valuable these may be as law literature, they are not judgments of a court. ‘What is ordered and adjudged by the court, not merely what is entered, constitutes the judgment:’ Freeman on Judgments, § 38.
“There never was, so far as this record shows, a Common Pleas Court held by the president in the absence of his associates at which his judgment, as the act of the court, was made up or entered; there never was a Common Pleas Court held by the two associates in the absence of the president for the adjudication of questions arising out of this trial. . . .
“Not one of these judgments was entered by the Court of Common Pleas; they were- only the individual opinions of the members of that court, and all of them, as judgments, must for that reason be set aside.”

In the recent case of Sterrett v. MacLean et al., 293 Pa. 557, reported ip the Advance Reports of Nov. 9, 1928, the Supreme Court, in an opinion by Justice Frazer, said, page 563:

[473]*473“We have consistently reprehended the allowance of proceedings in court before only one judge when the particular judicial district had two or more judges and where the vital interest of litigants or the conservation of public rights renders it imperative that a case be heard,- considered and decided by aid of the experience and knowledge as well as the personal attention of more judges than one. . . .
“Since but one judge heard and determined the ease, we consider that the court so constituted, to use the words of the Chief Justice in Com. v. Hall, 291 Pa. 341, 355, ‘was not constituted as required by law and, therefore, lacked legal capacity — or, in that sense, jurisdiction — to adjudge the particular case before it.’ On consideration and determination of any case in matters of review or appeal, the final obligation rests upon the court

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Bluebook (online)
12 Pa. D. & C. 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-surcharge-of-county-commissioners-pactcompllackaw-1928.