Jadwin v. Hurley

10 Pa. Super. 104, 1899 Pa. Super. LEXIS 247
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 23, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 10 Pa. Super. 104 (Jadwin v. Hurley) 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
Jadwin v. Hurley, 10 Pa. Super. 104, 1899 Pa. Super. LEXIS 247 (Pa. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Opinion by

Beeber, J.,

This suit was brought by plaintiff against the defendant to recover commissions earned as a real estate broker in the sale of defendant’s real estate. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff for the full amount of his claim subject to the point reserved: “ Whether the receipt or license from the city treasurer of Scranton, dated October 4,1894, is, in law, such a license as authorized the plaintiff to act as a real estate broker in said city and relieved him from the penalties of the acts of 1841 and 1849, and enables him to recover commissions as such.” It is conceded that if the plaintiff had no license as a real estate broker for the year in which the commission was earned he cannot recover: Johnson v. Hulings, 103 Pa. 498. The receipt which the plaintiff was allowed to offer in evidence under objection was as follows: “ City of Scranton, ss: Scranton, Pa., October 1,1894. Received of C. P. Jadwin for the use of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Ten Dollars, which entitles him a real estate agent dealer of the thirteenth class within the City of Scranton for one year from the first day of May, A. D. 1894. (Signed) R. G. Brooks, City Treasurer. ” This receipt was offered in evidence by the plaintiff as his license to act as a real [107]*107estate broker in the city of Scranton. The question to be decided is whether this receipt is a license to the plaintiff to act as a real estate broker.

The decision of this question involves an examination of the different acts of assembly regulating the appointment of mercantile appraisers and the issuing of licenses to real estate brokers. The initial act on this subject is the Act of May 27, 1841, P. L. 896, which applied only to stock brokers, exchange brokers and bill brokers. By its terms they were to pay annually into the treasury of the proper county for the use of the commonwealth the sums mentioned for the different kinds of brokers therein described, for which they were to receive a new commission authorizing them to conduct their business as stock, exchange or bill brokers. Section 5 of this act imposed a penalty of $500 for each and every offense upon any such brokers who should exercise the business without having such a commission. By the 5th section of the act of April 16, 1845, P. L. 532, it was enacted that for the purpose of securing the tax authorized to be assessed on wholesale dealers and retailers of merchandise, the courts of common pleas of the counties of Allegheny and Philadelphia, were authorized and empowered to appoint a person of suitable qualification in each county who should be styled the “appraiser of mercantile taxes, whose duty it shall be tó ascertain and assess the dealers as aforesaid, in accordance with the provisions of the several acts of assembly regulating the tax upon vendors of merchandise, and the said appraiser shall take an oath or affirmation to discharge his duties faithfully and impartially.” Section 6 of this act provides that the appraisers shall prepare a list of all dealers in the county, arranging them in their several classes, and shall furnish to each a written or printed notice of their several classifications, “giving notice to each at the same time of the place and time at which appeals may be made from said classifications:....” Section 7 provides that if any person is dissatisfied because he is not properly assessed, the appraiser is to administer an oath to him, “ and interrogate him as to the amount of his sales for the previous year, and if the appraiser shall be satisfied upon such investigation that such person or firm is not properly assessed, he shall increase or reduce the assessment, as the ease may be; and in all cases the persons or firms so assessed, if they are [108]*108dissatisfied with the decision of the appraiser, shall have the right of appeal to the judges of the court of common pleas of the proper county, who shall in such case finally determine the same.” Section 8 provides: “The appraisers so appointed shall furnish to the treasurer of the proper city or county, a certified list of the dealers aforesaid, with the classification as made out by them or determined by the judges of the court on appeal, as aforesaid; and the said treasurer shall within twenty days thereafter transmit to the auditor general a copy of such list, and shall receive and collect, together with the fees of the appraiser and his own fee, the sums to be paid by such dealers for their licenses in the manner directed by law.” So far as we have been able to discover this is the first act where the designation of the officer appears as the “ appraiser of mercantile taxes,” and where his duties are clearly defined. By the 12th section of the Act of April 22, 1846, P. L. 486, the provisions of the 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th sections of the act of 1845, the substance of which is just recited, were “ extended to the remaining counties within the commonwealth, Provided, however, that the commissioners of each county shall appoint the appraiser of mercantile taxes for such county.” By the 18th section of the Act of April 10, 1849, P. L. 570, the provisions of the act of 1841 were extended to real estate brokers and to merchandise brokers. Then came the Act of May 15, 1850, P. L. 772, the 7th section of which changed the payment of a fixed fee to a commission upon the amount of their annual business, which commission was fixed at three per cent. The 8th section of this act required the appraisers of mercantile taxes to “ ascertain and assess the several brokers aforesaid according to the amount of business done by them respectively in the same manner as is required of them with regard to vendors of merchandise; and the said several brokers shall be entitled to the same proceedings on an allegation that they are not properly taxed as are now provided by the 7th section of the said act of 1845.”

Thus stood the law in reference to this subject until the year 1867, when the Act of March 80, P. L. 630 was passed. This act made the select council of the city of Scranton commissioners for the purpose mentioned in the 6th section of the said act, and then in the 7th section provided, inter [109]*109aha, as follows: “ That the said commissioners shall appoint one suitable person as appraiser of mercantile taxes within said city, which taxes shall be paid to the treasurer of said city, who shall issue licenses therefor, under the same regulations as are prescribed in relation to the appraisers and treasurers of counties, and all appeals in relation to the same shall be determined in the mayor’s court for the city of Scranton.” In view of this provision requiring appeals of aggrieved parties to be determined in the mayor’s court for the city of Scranton, it is well to observe that that court was abolished by the constitution and schedule thereto, which went into effect on the 1st day of January, 1874, and by the Act of May 14, 1874, P. L. 189. Section 1 of article Y. of the constitution enumerates the courts in which the judicial power of the commonwealth shall be vested, and section 11 of the schedule provides: “ All courts of record and all existing courts, which are not specified in this constitution, shall continue in existence until the first day of December in the year one thousand eight hundred and seventy-five, without abridgment of their present jurisdiction, but no longer.” The Act of May 14, 1874, P. L. 139, sec. 1, abolished all courts not specified in the constitution: Com. v. Hartranft, 77 Pa. 154. Then came the Act of April 20, 1887, P. L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Pa. Super. 104, 1899 Pa. Super. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jadwin-v-hurley-pasuperct-1899.