Jenkins Township School Directors' Removal Case

25 A.2d 158, 344 Pa. 267, 1942 Pa. LEXIS 371
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 13, 1942
DocketAppeals, 91, 92, and 93
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 25 A.2d 158 (Jenkins Township School Directors' Removal Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenkins Township School Directors' Removal Case, 25 A.2d 158, 344 Pa. 267, 1942 Pa. LEXIS 371 (Pa. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

This is an appeal by three men from the order of the court below removing them from the office of school director of Jenkins Township, Luzerne County. One removed director did not appeal. The proceedings below were initiated on October 10, 1940, by taxpayers, proceeding under Section 217 of the School Code. The first petition filed listed thirteen alleged violations of the School Code. On January 16, 1941, ten additional reasons were filed for the removal of the respondents. When the first petition was filed, a petition was also presented asking the Court to impound the records of the school district. This was granted, but on the night of October 8th, the office where these records were kept was broken into and the records stolen. On December 1, 1941, the appellants were removed from office by the Court. In its judgment of ouster the Court said: “We find that the three respondents were parties to the deliberate destruction of the school records, viz., minute book, ledger, ‘The Uniform Accounting System’ and cancelled checks, and conclude, as a matter of law, that such conduct warrants their removal.”

The court also found that the respondents as school directors violated section 2 of the Act of May 16, 1939, P. L. 139, which provides that “for the payment of the *269 principal and interest of the bonds created under the provisions of this act and any taxes covenanted to be paid thereon, the governing bodies of the municipalities or quasi municipalities issuing the same shall annually . . . levy and collect ... a tax sufficient to pay the interest and principal of said indebtedness. . . .” It also provides that “such tax” when “paid into the treasury” shall be kept ... in a fund to be called Emergency Sinking Fund and shall be applied to the redemption of said bonds . . . and to no other purpose whatsoever.

The court found that the respondents failed to keep the “Sinking Fund” tax “separate and distinct from all the other funds of the district” and that their failure was a breach of a mandatory duty and justified their removal > from office.

No other grounds for removal were found in this order of December 1,1941. The order was excepted to by these three appellants and an appeal was taken and this court on December 16,1941, granted a supersedeas. Ten days later, counsel for the original petitioners asked the court to supplement the decision of December 1, 1941, with particular references to the allegation contained in paragraph 6, subsection 11 of the original petition, which reads as follows: “That the budget for 1939-1940 appropriated the sum of $26,574.00 to be paid from the General Fund to the Sinking Fund as the actual amount needed to pay bonds and coupons becoming due in that school year. That the sum of $18,300.00 only was paid and default was made, inter alia, in the payment of coupons due June 15,1940, in the sum of $1,650.00.” The court on the same day filed an opinion by Judge Valentine, in which he said, inter alia: “At the time of the passage of the Act of July 2nd, 1937, P. L. 2860, School Code, Section 518, the School District had various bond issues outstanding. It appears that a sinking fund was, in fact, established by the District. . . . There is no doubt that the requirement of Section 519 of the Code *270 was not complied with, in that during the fiscal year above referred to, 1939 to 1940, the sum of $20,094.00, appropriated to the sinking fund, was not deposited therein. The deposits made to said fund during said period amounted to the total sum of $12,000.00. . . . The respondents were not obliged to establish a sinking fund, in that they issued no bonds subsequently to the passage of the Act of 1937, supra. However, they did establish such fund, and, under the circumstances, we are of the opinion that they were under the obligation of depositing All the funds appropriated to such sinking fund ... in a special account’ as required by Section 519 of the Code. We believe this to be an additional reason for the entry of the judgment of ouster.”

Section 519 of the School Code, (Act of May 18,1911, P. L. 309, Article V, section 519, p. 336, [24 P. S. sec. 502, p. 139]) provides as follows: “The sinking-fund in any school district establishing the same shall be under the supervision of a sinking-fund committee, composed of the president, treasurer, and one additional member of the board of school directors to be designated by it. All the funds appropriated to such sinking-fund shall be deposited in such designated depository as offers the best rate of interest, security, and safety; which funds shall be kept in a special account, and shall be used only to liquidate the school indebtedness existing at the time of the approval of this act, and interest thereon, and are to be paid out by the district on school orders which shall first be approved by a majority of the members of the sinking-fund committee.”

As to the school records, counsel for the appellees concedes in their paper book that “in view of the decision in Davis’ Appeal, 314 Pa. 357 . . . the appellants . . . probably could not be removed from office without first being convicted of their participation in their destruction.” The Act of June 24, 1939, P. L. 872, section 323, [18 P. S. 4323, p. 179] provides that “Any public officer or other person who fraudulently makes a false entry in, *271 or erases, alters, secretes, carries away, or destroys any public record, or any part thereof, is guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction, shall be sentenced to pay a fine not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000), or undergo imprisonment by separate or solitary confinement at labor not exceeding two (2) years, or both.” It is obvious that if a person is charged with the crime defined in the act just quoted, he is entitled to a jury trial. We said in Davis’ Appeal, supra, . . One accused of crime shall not be punished in any way therefor unless he shall have been first convicted thereof by a jury of his peers.” If there is persuasive evidence that these directors or any of them fraudulently secreted, destroyed or carried away a public record of the school district, he or they should be prosecuted in the manner provided by law. 1

Nor can the removal of these directors be justified by their alleged violation of section 2 of the Act of May 16, 1939, P. L. 139. This was an act “to meet the emergency occasioned by the extraordinary decrease in tax collections due to business depression and widespread unemployment” and it made it “lawful for any county, city, borough, township of the first and second class, and school districts to issue and sell, at not less than par, bonds bearing interest at a rate not exceeding six per cent per annum, payable in not more than ten years from the date of said bonds, in an amount not exceeding eighty *272 per cent of the amount of uncollected taxes due on real estate at the date of the enactment of the ordinance or the adoption of the resolution authorizing such action, less a sum sufficient to pay the interest and taxes covenanted to be paid thereon.” The act further provides that “for the purpose of creating a sinking fund for the payment of the principal and interest of the bonds created under the provisions of the act . . . the governing bodies . . .

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hetherington v. Rogers
6 A.3d 6 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2010)
In re Duryea Borough School Directors
88 Pa. D. & C. 496 (Luzerne County Court of Common Pleas, 1954)
Kurtz v. Steinhart
60 Pa. D. & C. 345 (Northumberland County Court of Common Pleas, 1947)
Lancaster Trust Company Case
43 A.2d 84 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1945)
In re German Township School Directors
46 Pa. D. & C. 562 (Fayette County Court, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 A.2d 158, 344 Pa. 267, 1942 Pa. LEXIS 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-township-school-directors-removal-case-pa-1942.