Marcy v. Springville Township

24 Pa. Super. 521, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 226
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 14, 1904
DocketAppeal, No. 20
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 24 Pa. Super. 521 (Marcy v. Springville Township) 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
Marcy v. Springville Township, 24 Pa. Super. 521, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 226 (Pa. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Opinion by

Morrison, J.,

This was á mandamus against the supervisors of Springville township commanding them to draw an order on the treasurer of their township to pay to the plaintiff damages which he had sustained by reason of dogs killing and injuring some of his sheep. The record shows that the township is the appellant. Counsel for appellee moves to quash the appeal, principally for the reason that Springville township is not a party aggrieved [523]*523and is not interested, and therefore not entitled to appeal. His contention is that the supervisors alone could appeal. This position is very technical. And in view of the manifest illegality of the judgment of the court awarding a mandamus we are not disposed to put this case out of court on so bare a technicality. It is difficult to see why the township is not interested. The mandamus directed the supervisors to draw an order for the payment of money on their township treasurer and if they did not appeal they would have been compelled to draw the order and in that case the township would suffer the loss of the amount of it. If this is really an appeal by the township it must have been by the action of the supervisors, and it would not be much of a stretch to consider the appeal amended so that it will show that it was taken by the supervisors. The motion to'quash is not sustained.

For a proper understanding of the questions raised it will be necessary to make a brief statement of the facts. S. T. Marcy, the plaintiff, was a resident of Lathrop township, Susquehanna county. He was not a resident nor a taxpayer of Springville township, said county. In November, 1900, he had four sheep killed or injured by dogs in Springville township. He kept these sheep on his farm in Lathrop township, but they were either driven or strayed into Springville township where they were found, some dead and others injured. On November 12,1900, he made complaint to a justice of the peace in Lathrop township, who appointed appraisers to ascertain the damage sustained by the petitioner. Three citizens of Lathrop township were appointed appraisers, who, on the same day certified to the supervisors of Springville township that Marcy had sustained damages by loss and injury to his sheep to the amount of |14.00. Marcy then took the position that the supervisors of Springville were bound to draw a warrant upon the treasurer of their township for this amount, which they refused to do. Marcy then presented his petition to the court of common pleas praying for a mandamus requiring the supervisors of Springville township to draw a warrant upon the treasurer of that township. The court granted a rule to show cause why a mandamus should not issue, and to this rule the supervisors of Springville made answer. In their answer the supervisors of Springville denied the right of the plaintiff to recover from [524]*524them or their township for several reasons: 1. The proceeding is under the Act of February 15,1872, P. L. 68, entitled, “An act for the protection of sheep in the county of Susquehanna.” And that it is intended and directed by t;he said act that when a party suffers damage by reason of the injury or destruction of his sheep, he is to receive compensation therefor from the township in which he resides, and from the fund to which he is a contributor. 2. That the plaintiff, S. T. Marcy, is a resident of the township of Lathrop, said county, pays taxes, including dog taxes, in said township of Lathrop, and pays no taxes whatever in the township of Springville. 3. That E. P. Brotzman, the justice of the peace before whom the proceedings in this case were instituted, is a resident of the said township of Lathrop, and the appraisers, Lyman Saunders, E. E. Sweet and F. M. Kinney are also residents of the township of Lathrop. 4. That the*appraisers received authority to act in the premises from the warrant signed by the justice of the peace, on November 10, 1900, in which they were directed as follows : “ You or any two of you, are to certify under your hands and seals to the supervisors of your township the amount of such damage, .... therefore, it follows that the appraisers did not have the power or authority to make any certificate of damages to the supervisors of Springville township, their authority being confined to certify to the supervisors of their township, which is the township of Lathrop.” 5. That the act of February 15, 1872, does not provide for notice to any supervisor of any township other than the supervisors of the township in which the party injured resides. And the supervisors of Springville township could not be legally notified, or made a party to any proceedings tinder this act, except such as are instituted in the township of Springville. 6. That at the time damages are claimed to have been sustained by him, said S. T. Marcy did not have any sheep in pasture, or being kept in any manner in Springville township. He did, however, have a flock of sheep running in a pasture located upon his own premises in Lathrop township, and, if any damage was inflicted to his sheep in Springville township, said sheep were driven therein from his premises in Lathrop township.

In our opinion this answer set up sufficient reasons, if true, to require the learned court to refuse the mandamus. It is [525]*525shown and conceded that the plaintiff was a resident of Lathrop township; that he applied to a justice of the peace of said township ; that the justice issued his precept to appraisers residing in said township, and they assessed the damages and certified the amount to the supervisors of Springville township. In our opinion the act of 1872, supra, conferred no power upon the justice and the appraisers of Lathrop township to compel the supervisors of Springville township to pay the damages suffered by this resident of Lathrop.

The learned judge in his opinion says : “ It is claimed that the directions of the 3d section of the act that the appraisers having first given notice of the time and place of said hearing to one or more of the supervisors of said township or to the proper authorities of any borough as the case may be, refers to the supervisors of the township of residence of the owner of the sheep killed, and not to supervisors of the township wherein the sheep were killed. This is the natural construction of the language of the entire section standing alone, but it is not consistent with the provisions of the first section that the fund arising from the dog tax in the township is to be held to remunerate the inhabitants of the county for loss by sheep being injured by dogs.”

In this construction we think the learned judge attaches too much importance to the first section of the act and this leads him to an erroneous conclusion. The portion of the first section material on this point is as follows : “ And it shall be the duty of the borough and township treasurers to keep separate accounts of the money arising from the tax on dogs; and the said money shall be and is thereby appropriated as a fund for remunerating the inhabitants of said county for any.loss they shall sustain, after the passage of this act, by sheep being destroyed or injured by dogs.”

But in order to ascertain how this money is to be paid out, and to whom, we must go to the 3d section of the act which is very plain, and we think controls this question.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Pa. Super. 521, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marcy-v-springville-township-pasuperct-1904.