Martin v. County of Butler

94 Pa. Super. 152, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 157
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 16, 1928
DocketAppeal 1531
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 94 Pa. Super. 152 (Martin v. County of Butler) 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
Martin v. County of Butler, 94 Pa. Super. 152, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 157 (Pa. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

By this appeal we are called upon to determine whether it was the legislative intent that those provisions of the Act of June 29, 1923, P. L. 944, which authorize the salary boards of counties of the sixth class to fix and determine annually the number and the salaries of the clerks and deputies of certain county officers (with the effect that such salaries become a charge upon the treasury of the county) apply to the person who held the office of county treasurer in the County of Butler during the year 1926. The “provisions of existing law,” referred to in, and *154 modified by, the first section of the Act of 1923, and by whicb the compensation of county treasurers was theretofore determined, are found in section 41 of the Act of April 15, 1834, P. L. 537, 544, which reads: “Each county treasurer shall receive in full compensation for his services on behalf of the county, a certain amount per cent on all moneys received and paid by him, which rate shall be settled from time to time by the county commissioners, with the approbation of the county auditors.”

The basic facts are not in dispute. Butler County is a county of the -sixth class under the Act of July 10, 1919, P. L. 887, dividing counties into eight classes for purposes of legislation and regulation of their affairs. George B. Smith was elected its treasurer and hi's term of office began January 1, 1926. Assuming that all the provisions of the Act of 1923 applied to his office, the salary board, composed of the county commissioners and the county treasurer, allowed him one deputy at a salary of $600 per annum. He appointed his wife, Iva B. Smith, as his deputy. She performed the duties of the office and was paid her salary out of the county treasury by Charles C. Martin, R. George Morgan and William I. McKee, county commissioners, plaintiffs below and appellants herein. When the county auditors filed their report for the year 1926 they surcharged, appellants with the amount of this salary. Upon their appeal to the Common Plea's an issue was framed in which they were made plaintiffs and the County of Butler defendant for the purpose of determining whether the salary of the deputy was a legal charge upon the funds of the county. The issue was tried by the court without a jury under the provisions of the Act of April 22, 1874, P. L. 109, and resulted in a judgment in favor of the county; hence this appeal.

The Act of 1923 is, according to it's title, an act “relating to salaries, compensations, bonds, offices, and *155 supplies of certain county officers, tlieir deputies and clerks, in counties of the sixth class.” The first section reads in part ‘ ‘ That in counties of the sixth class, the compensation of the county treasurer shall be fixed under the provisions of existing law [the above quoted section 41 of Act of 1834], but the treasurer shall not, in any case, receive more than four thousand dollars ($4,000) in any one year. The annual salary of the clerk of courts of quarter sessions shall be two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500),” and then follow provision's prescribing salaries for the clerks of oyer and terminer and the orphans court, the prothonotary, recorder of deeds and register of wills. By section 3 it is provided that “each of said officers shall appoint and may dismiss the deputie's and clerks of his office, ’ ’ and by section 4 that “all the officers whose salaries are fixed by this act, and their several deputies and clerks authorized by the salary board, 'shall be paid for their services by fixed and specific salaries, which shall be a charge upon the treasury of the county.” The applicable provision of section 5 reads: “The salary board in all countie's 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 bu'siness in the office of the county officers whose salaries are fixed by this act.”

Briefly stated the question involved is whether, under these provisions, the salary of a deputy of the county treasurer, whose appointment has been authorized and whose salary has been fixed and determined by the salary board, is a charge upon the county treasury. The learned trial judge held that it is not. As Ave understand his opinion, it is 'suggested that deputies and clerks are provided at the expense of the county only for county officers whose salaries are “fixed” by the first section of the act, and as this *156 section, under Ms construction, does not technically “fix” a salary for, but merely limits the compensation of, the treasurer there is no warrant for employing a deputy for him at the county expense. It is further argued that in referring to the remuneration of the county officers mentioned in the act that of the county treasurer is designated as “compensation” and that of the other officers as “salary”; and that these words are not used .Synonymously in the act. Another ground is suggested in this paragraph from the opinion of the trial judge: “It is essential that this salary board be a disinterested body and the placing of the county treasurer upon the salary board is an unmistakable index of the legislative intent not to fix his salary by the act.” In his brief counsel for the county contends that “It would be against all reason, as well as against public policy, to constitute the county treasurer a member of the tribunal which is invested with the power to determine the number of clerks and deputies he may appoint and the salaries such clerks and deputies shall receive from the county. iSuch a construction of the act must be avoided so long as the language of the act will bear any other construction.” A majority of the members of this court do not agree with the conclusions reached by the court below. Viewing the Act of 1923 as a whole and in its relation to the general system of legislation prescribed for the government of counties, it is obvious that its primary purpose is to extend to counties of the sixth class, having a population between fifty and one hundred thousand inhabitants, the public policy declared by section 5 of Article XIV of the Constitution, and by the Act of March 31, 1876, P. L. 13, passed to carry it into effect and now amended and supplied by various acts, namely, that in certain counties all county officers Should be paid by salaries instead of by the collection of fees for official services. It has been repeatedly held under this legislation that the fees re *157 ceived by a county treasurer, except those collected by him solely as agent for the state and not as a county officer, must be paid into the county treasury. This feature is carried into the Act of 1923 by the sixth section, which provides for the payment into the county treasury by the officers named in the act of all fees received by them “except such fees as may be received by them when acting as agents of the Commonwealth.”

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Related

Buttorff v. Cumberland County
167 A. 588 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1933)
Shoener v. Schuylkill County
18 Pa. D. & C. 379 (Schuylkill County Court of Common Pleas, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 Pa. Super. 152, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-county-of-butler-pasuperct-1928.