Patton, Exrx. v. Philadelphia

190 A. 670, 126 Pa. Super. 212, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 396
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 10, 1936
DocketAppeal, 427
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 190 A. 670 (Patton, Exrx. v. Philadelphia) 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
Patton, Exrx. v. Philadelphia, 190 A. 670, 126 Pa. Super. 212, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 396 (Pa. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

This case is similar in some respects to the case of Taylor v. City of Philadelphia, 126 Pa. Superior Ct. 196. The plaintiff’s right to a judgment is not as clear as in that case, but the underlying principles are the same and, in our opinion, require that the judgment be reversed and the case returned to the lower court for further findings in the light of those principles.

Robert J. Patton was, in November 1927, duly elected a magistrate in and for the City and County of Philadelphia and qualified as such. His term began the first Monday in January, 1928. The Constitution of 1873, as amended in November 1909, provides (Art. V, section 12) that “in Philadelphia there shall be established, for each thirty thousand inhabitants, one court, not of record, of police and civil causes, with jurisdiction not exceeding one hundred dollars; such courts shall be held by magistrates whose term of office, shall *215 be six years, and they shall be elected on general ticket at the municipal election, by the qualified voters at large;......they shall be compensated only by fixed salaries to be paid by said county; and shall exercise such jurisdiction, civil and criminal, except as herein provided, as is now exercised by aldermen, subject to such changes, not involving an increase of civil jurisdiction or conferring political duties, as may be made by law......” And by section 13, it is provided, “All fees, fines and penalties in said courts shall be paid into the county treasury”.

By the Act of May 10, 1927, P. L. 866, section 35 (42 PS 1075) the salary of a magistrate is fixed at $5000 per annum, and by section 27 (42 PS 1067) it is provided that “it shall be the duty of the City of Philadelphia ......to pay all salaries” of the magistrates. While this is a departure from the constitutional provision that the magistrates’ salaries are to be paid by the County of Philadelphia, it has not been deemed to be invalid, for the City and County of Philadelphia are coterminous and in relation to its revenues, finances and taxation all the powers and liabilities of the County of Philadelphia were transferred to the consolidated city: Graham v. Philadelphia, 288 Pa. 152, 157, 135 A. 908; Philadelphia v. Com., 52 Pa. 451. Hence where a magistrate de jure sued the City of Philadelphia for his salary under section 8 of the Act of February 5, 1875,—which fixed the salary at $3,000 per annum to be paid quarterly by the City—he was held entitled to recover, despite the above-recited direction in the Constitution that such salaries were to be paid by the County: Rink v. City of Philadelphia, 15 W.N.C. 345, affirmed in City of Philadelphia v. Rink, 17 W.N.C. 136. The point was not raised in the present case in the court below or in this court and, in the light of the foregoing case, we shall not apply it without the authority of the Supreme Court.

*216 A magistrate is not, strictly speaking, a city officer. In Com. ex rel. Graham v. Cameron, 259 Pa. 209, 102 A. 879, it was held that a justice of the peace was a county officer. See also Lyons v. Means, 1 Pa. Superior Ct. 608, 611. They are, in any event, public officers (Freiler v. Schuylkill County, 46 Pa. Superior Ot. 58) whose salaries are fixed by Act of Assembly and not subject to be lessened or diminished by any act or ordinance of city council. They are, in no sense, employes of the city.

On December 31, 1931 city council enacted an ordinance for the adoption of a financial program for the city for the year 1932, section 9 of which appropriated to the Department of City Commissioners the sum of $5,235,180, of which sum Item A-25 included an appropriation of $6,000 for a chief magistrate and $5,000 for each of 27 magistrates; and a similar ordinance was enacted on January 16, 1933 for the adoption of a financial program for the city for 1933.

Section 31 of these ordinances 1 provided for a reduction in the wages or salary of all per diem or other employes of the city, county or other departments paid out of the appropriations in said ordinance, of ten per centum in 1932 and twenty-three per centum in 1933, and the city controller was directed not to countersign any warrant in excess of the amounts provided by said section.

We have already stated that magistrates are not city employes but are public officers, whose salaries are fixed by the General Assembly and are not subject to reduction by act or ordinance of city council. The ordinances, if intended to apply to magistrates, were without legal effect on their salaries.

Nevertheless the city officials in preparing the monthly payroll sheets, used as the vouchers for the *217 salaries of the magistrates, deducted ten per centum from the salaries of each magistrate in 1932 and twenty-three per centum in 1933. The method used in making up these payrolls and securing the warrants, and the forms of the payrolls are set out somewhat fully in the Taylor case and need not be repeated here. They are practically the same in this case, except that the appropriation item concerned was A-25, and the magistrates appointed a different person their agent to receive the warrant and distribute the money among them. In this case, however, no formal notice of dissent or disavowal was typewritten on the face of the payroll and signed by the magistrates, as had been done by the registration commissioners in the Taylor case. Just as in that case, however, the payroll signed by the magistrates did not purport to be in full of their salary, but only authorized their agent to collect from the city controller the sums set forth on the payroll. Patton died on November 16, 1933. His executrix brought this action to recover the sum of the amounts thus deducted from his salary, plus his salary for December, 1932, no part of which had been paid, and for which the city admitted its liability. The case was heard by Judge Glass, without a jury, who found for the plaintiff in the amount of 1440.26 representing the unpaid salary for the month of December, 1932, with interest, the amount admitted to be due by the city, but refused to find for the plaintiff for any of the monthly deductions from her husband’s salary. The plaintiff appealed from the judgment entered on this finding.

The ground upon which the trial judge based his finding was that the magistrate by signing a monthly payroll which authorized the agent to collect a reduced amount from the city controller, had waived his right to demand the unpaid portion of his salary fixed by Act of Assembly.

We have discussed this question at some length in *218 the Taylor case and, without repeating what we said there, we are of opinion that the mere acceptance by a public officer of less than the salary fixed by statute as belonging to his office does not constitute a waiver of his right or estop him from recovering the balance unpaid. The weight of authority in this and other jurisdictions is opposed to the view taken by the court below.

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Bluebook (online)
190 A. 670, 126 Pa. Super. 212, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patton-exrx-v-philadelphia-pasuperct-1936.