Potter County v. Page

53 Pa. Super. 268, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 165
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 21, 1913
DocketAppeal, No. 203
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 53 Pa. Super. 268 (Potter County v. Page) 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
Potter County v. Page, 53 Pa. Super. 268, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 165 (Pa. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

Head, J.,

The appellee, Page, was the duly elected qualified and [272]*272acting treasurer of the county of Potter. The official bond which he had given was in exact conformity with the provisions of sec. 33 of the Act of April 15, 1834, P. L. 537. We quote the section: "Each county treasurer shall give bond with sureties, &c., conditioned for the faithful performance of the duties of his office, for a just account of all moneys that may come into his hands on behalf of the county, for the delivery to his successor in office of all books, papers, documents and other things held in right of his office, and for the payment to him of any balance of money belonging to the county remaining in his .hands.” At the regular audit of his official account for the year 1910 he was surcharged by the report of the auditors with the sum. of $895.41 which had been received by him in the manner hereinafter stated. From this report he appealed to the court of common pleas. That court directed the framing of an issue for the trial of the questions raised by the appeal. Thereafter an agreement as to the material facts, in the nature of a case stated, was signed and filed and the matter submitted to the court without a jury. The learned judge below entered judgment for the defendant and from that judgment this appeal by the county was taken.

It appears from the facts agreed upon that during the year 1910 the appellee kept deposit accounts in three banks in the name of Henry E. Page, treasurer, or county treasurer, and that he deposited the funds paid to him as county treasurer in the said banks where they were credited to the said accounts. It further appears that he also kept personal accounts in the same banks in his own name in which he deposited his individual funds. During the year 1910 there was paid in and credited to the official treasurer’s accounts designated, the sum of $895.41 which is the subject of this controversy. This money the treasurer withdrew from the official account by checks, duly signed by him as treasurer or county treasurer to his own order, and these were redeposited by him in his individual account. The proceeds, thus mingled with his private [273]*273moneys, were thereafter used and controlled by him as his own. The only direct light as to the source whence this money came and the reason for its payment is to be found in the following quotation from the facts agreed upon: “It is admitted that in the regular course of business and according to the usual custom <»f the several banks and without special agreement with the said Henry E. Page, interest was credited to the accounts (i. e., the official accounts) for the year 1910 in the following aggregate amounts, .... total $895.41.”

From the careful opinion filed by the learned judge below it appears that he regarded the conclusion reached by him as the necessary result of the application, to the facts on the record, of the principles declared in Com. v. Comly, 3 Pa. 372; Nason v. Poor Directors, 126 Pa. 445; Com. v. Baily, 129 Pa. 480, and Wilkes-Barre v. Rockafellow, 171 Pa. 177. We must at once agree that these cases have indubitably established the proposition that the liability of a public officer, appointed or elected, to collect, safeguard and disburse, in the manner., provided by law, public moneys, and who has given security of the character of that given in the cases cited and in the present case, is not merely that of a bailee or trustee. Hence it was held in those cases that neither the officer nor his sureties could successfully defend the claim of the state or other municipality for the performance of the obligations imposed on him or them by the law and the covenants of his bond, by setting up that the money committed to his custody had been lost without any fault or negligence on his part. We cannot regard that principle as of controlling force in the disposition of the present case. It does not appear in this case that any money has been lost. This is not an action on the bond against the principal and his sureties. But even if it were, the real controlling question here, as we view it, is outside of the principle referred to.

Whilst it is true that the officer in such cases becomes the debtor of the state or municipality rather than its. [274]*274bailee or trustee; and while he is therefore given the individual control of the moneys received by him, we are not prepared to go the length of saying that, immediately upon the receipt by the officer, by virtue of his office, of any sum or sums of money, such moneys become in every respect his private personal property, subject to all of the incidents that attach to private property in the possession of its owner. If such theory were correct, it would follow that the funds in the hands of a county treasurer, for instance, deposited in the bank in his official account, would be subject to attachment and execution for his private debts. In case of his death while in office, the fund would necessarily go to his administrator rather than to his successor and be subject to all of the laws regulating the administration and distribution of the estates of individuals in the orphans’ court. No such far reaching doctrine, as we view it, logically or necessarily follows from the cases cited. In Com. v. Comly, 3 Pa. 372, it was held that a collector of tolls, appointed by the canal commissioners, who had given his bond to account for and pay over all the moneys received for tolls, could not be excused from his obligation so to do by reason of the fact that the moneys, while in his custody, had been stolen from the secret apartment of a desk where he was accustomed to keep them. In Com. v. Baily, 129 Pa. 480, the court again determined the single proposition that the defendant, who had been state treasurer and given a bond with a similar obligation, could not be excused from the liability to account because one of the depositories, selected by him with all reasonable diligence and care, had become insolvent and unable to return the deposit.

In Wilkes-Barre v. Rockafellow, 171 Pa. 177, the record presented more than the single question disposed of in the preceding cases. In that case Rockafellow was the city treasurer. He had agreed not only that he would safeguard and disburse, according to law, all moneys received by him, by virtue of his office, but that he would also pay interest at an agreed upon rate on the daily balances of [275]*275that fund in his hands. He was at that time widely engaged in the banking business and subsequently became insolvent. He had never paid the interest which he had agreed to pay although that duty was not cast upon him by any law, and his obligation so to do was unknown to his sureties. It was held by the Supreme Court that his sureties could not be held liable for that unexecuted undertaking because the money had never reached the public treasury and was not within the scope of the obligation of the bond. But it was further held that, as to the money borrowed by him from the sinking fund commissioners, on which he had paid interest for eight years, “The interest having been paid by him as borrower to himself as city treasurer, was as to himself and his sureties in the treasury. For this he was hable to account. His failure to pay it over to his successor was a breach of his official duty and for such breach of official duty his sureties were liable on their bond. They were hable not because it was interest due from him to the city, but because it was interest received by him as city treasurer from a borrower from the sinking fund commissioners.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 Pa. Super. 268, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potter-county-v-page-pasuperct-1913.