Schwarz v. City of Phila.

4 A.2d 573, 134 Pa. Super. 544, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 161
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 3, 1939
DocketAppeal, 270; Appeal, 253; Appeal, 271; Appeal, 139; Appeals, 16 and 17
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 4 A.2d 573 (Schwarz v. City of Phila.) 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
Schwarz v. City of Phila., 4 A.2d 573, 134 Pa. Super. 544, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 161 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

These six appeals grow out of two ordinances of the City of Philadelphia, (December 31, 1931 and January 16, 1933), adopting a financial program for the City for the years 1932 and 1933, respectively, which were considered by us in Taylor v. Phila., 126 Pa. Superior Ct. 196, 190 A. 663, (affirmed in 328 Pa. 383, 196 A. 64), and Patton v. Phila., 126 Pa. Superior Ct. 212, 190 A. 670. They reduced the wages or salaries of “all ...... employees of the city, county or other department, paid by appropriation from this financial program,” and receiving more than $1200 per annum, in the amount of ten per centum, for the year 1932, and “of employees of the city, county and other departments or agencies paid by appropriation from this financial program” in the amount of twenty-three per centum (subject to an exemption of $600), for the year 1933.

The material provisions of the ordinances and the forms of the payrolls used by the city, showing the 'monthly rate,’ the per centum deducted, and the 'amount payable’ are set forth in detail in the opinion in Taylor v. Phila., supra, and need not be recited here at length.

We held in the cases cited above that neither ap *551 pointed 1 nor elected 2 public officers, whose salaries were fixed by Act of the General Assembly, but made payable by the City of Philadelphia, were employees of the City or County of Philadelphia affected by said ordinances; and that their salary or compensation could not be diminished by city council.

We held, however, that there was no public policy of the Commonwealth which prevents a public officer, whose salary is payable by the city, from voluntarily donating to the city, in times of public distress, such part of his salary or emoluments of office as he sees fit to give up for the relief of the city, provided it is clearly and unequivocally established to be his voluntary act, and is to continue only so long as he wishes. We said, inter alia, “Ho contract relative to the execution or continuance of such a gift or donation can be enforced. It must be wholly voluntary and remain so. It does not arise by waiver or estoppel......The mere receipt of part of what he was legally entitled to, without more, was not enough to establish his voluntary acceptance of the part for the whole, especially so where, as here, it was not received as in full payment (differing from DeBoest v. Gambell, 35 Ore. 368, 58 P. 72, 75 and 353, cited by appellant) but, on the contrary, the appellee disavowed and dissented from the right of the city to make the reduction. The appdllee was not bound to express his dissent and disavowal to the city, in order to mahe the latter’s action ineffective. The shoe was on the other foot. The city, in order to escape paying the plaintiff his full salary, was required to show some clear and unequivocal act by him evidencing his voluntary donation of the unpaid part of it to the city.” Accordingly, we held that the mere signing by the public officer of the payroll prepared for his department, from which had been deducted ten per centum or twenty- *552 three per centum of his salary, pursuant to the ordinance, did not amount to any proof of a voluntary donation by him to the city of the unpaid part of his salary, nor prevent his subsequent recovery of the amount withheld by action at law.

Counsel for the city contend that our definite ruling in that case should be disregarded because in distinguishing it from the case of Taskey v. Pittsburgh, 123 Pa. Superior Ct. 573, 575, 187 A. 292, (Rhodes, J.) we said: “Nor is it at all similar to Taskey v. Pittsburgh, 123 Pa. Superior Ct. 573, 187 A. 292, where a city, which had power to suspend patrolmen, without pay, for periods not exceeding thirty days, in order to avoid the necessity of dismissing a number of patrolmen because of shortage of funds, ordered all of them to be placed on furlough, without pay, for certain days in certain months, and a patrolman who chose to work on the furlough days, although he was not obliged to do so, understanding fully that he would receive no compensation for such work, and who signed the payroll receipts for the days for which he was furloughed, and although not paid for those days, acknowledged receipt of his wages in full, and signed a statement that he was contributing such services to the city during the existing emergency, was not allowed, two years after he was placed on the retired list, to recover compensation for the furloughed days.”

They point out that the paper books in the Taskey case show that the payroll receipt signed by Taskey read :

“$101.61 Received from H. W. Minnemeyer, Jr., City Paymaster, due to me from the City of Pittsburgh, for services rendered during period ending October 15, 1931. (signed) M. J. Taskey.”

They argue that this requires us to hold that the payroll receipts under consideration in the Philadelphia cases were receipts in full, although we held exactly *553 the contrary in the Taylor and Patton cases. The circumstances in the Taskey case as set forth in Judge Rhodes’ opinion and briefly referred to by us in the Taylor case show that Taskey had been paid in full for all the wages he was entitled to receive. If the language used with reference to the receipt, in that case was too broad, we now correct it. We adhere to our ruling in the Taylor and Patton cases that the payroll receipts signed in those cases did not amount to receipts in full; that the mere fact that a public officer, whose salary is fixed by statute and is not subject to be decreased or diminished by the city, signs a form endorsed on a city payroll authorizing and empowering the designated paymaster to collect from the City Controller the amount stated opposite his name as ‘Amount payable’ — which amount was arrived at by deducting 10%, or 23%, from the salary legally payable to him — without more, amounts to no proof of a voluntary donation by him to the city of the amount deducted. Nor is such voluntary donation established by the additional fact that in some cases, on payment to him by the designated paymaster, he may have signed a payroll receipt for the files of the department, acknowledging the receipt from the paymaster of the money set opposite his name, “in the column, TOTAL AMOUNT PAYABLE, the same being for services during the period stated upon this payroll.” That is not a receipt in full of all salary due, nor does it amount to a clear and unequivocal act evidencing the .officer’s voluntary donation of the unpaid part of his salary to the city. It is entirely consistent with an intention to stand upon his legal rights and enforce payment of the salary legally payable to him.

In the Patton case we referred to certain acts done by the magistrates, which might’ be construed by a jury, or a judge sitting without a jury, as showing an intent by individual magistrates to make a voluntary donation of part of their salaries to the city, but the general *554

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Bluebook (online)
4 A.2d 573, 134 Pa. Super. 544, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwarz-v-city-of-phila-pasuperct-1939.