Scranton City School Directors

6 Pa. D. & C. 105, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 355
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lackawanna County
DecidedNovember 25, 1924
DocketNo. 806
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Pa. D. & C. 105 (Scranton City School Directors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lackawanna County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scranton City School Directors, 6 Pa. D. & C. 105, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 355 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

Maxey, J.,

This is a proceeding to remove the school directors of the City of Scranton, a school district of the second class. Our entire power to do the thing asked of us is created and limited hy section 217 of the School Code of May 18, 1911, P. L. 309, which provides that if a board of school directors in any district shall fail to organize or refuse or neglect to perform any duty imposed upon it by the provisions of the School Code, and after a petition has been duly presented to the court by ten resident taxpayers, specifying the neglect of duty, and after due hearing upon the charges, that then, if “the court shall be of the opinion that any duty imposed on said board [106]*106of school directors, which is by the provisions of this act made mandatory upon them to perform, has not been done or has been neglected by them, the court shall have the power to remove said board or such of its number as in its opinion is proper, and appoint for the unexpired terms other qualified persons in their stead.”

Preliminary discussion.

Nothing is clearer than the fact that the court cannot remove school directors for every act of negligence or carelessness of which they may be guilty, but only for neglect of those duties which by the Code are made mandatory, that is, for neglect of those duties the Code expressly commands them to perform. There can be no such thing as an implied mandatory duty. A duty commanded must be a duty expressed.

The School Code clearly creates and defines the duties of not only the school board itself, but also of the president, the secretary, the treasurer, the tax collector, the district superintendent and, until June 29, 1923, two auditors. It also provides for the appointment of a solicitor. The duties commanded by law of the board of directors and of the various officers, only one of whom, that is, the president, is even a member of the board, are as distinct as the duties commanded by law of the President of the United States, the members of the President’s cabinet, the United States Treasurer and the Collector of Internal Revenue. It is as illogical and as illegal to attempt to remove the school directors for some neglect of duty on the part of the treasurer or collector of taxes as it would be to impeach and attempt to remove the President of the United States from office should the United States Treasurer embezzle public funds, or should the Collector of Internal Revenue receive to his personal profit interest earned on taxes collected. The mere fact that the school board appointed a treasurer and in a general way had supervision over him does not in itself make the board chargeable in a proceeding of this kind with the delinquencies of the treasurer, any more than' the fact that the President of the United States appoints the United States Treasurer and in a general way has supervision over his work makes the President answerable to the United States Senate, sitting as a court of impeachment, for any shortcomings of the United States Treasurer. The President of the United States can be removed from office only for breach of some duty commanded of him by the Constitution and the laws; and, likewise, the board of school directors of the City of Scranton can be removed by this court only for neglect of a legal duty which, by the provisions of the School Code, is “made mandatory upon them to perform.”

No man can be brought before the bar of justice to answer for a crime unless the crime charged is clearly set forth in an indictment. If the indictment sets forth some offending act which is not by law characterized as a crime, the alleged offender need not even plead to the indictment, but may demur to it; that is, he may declare, in effect: “I plead neither guilty nor not guilty, but I abide in the law, for the law does not make the act charged against me a crime.” The Scranton school directors, while not brought before the bar of justice to answer for a crime, are, nevertheless, brought before the court to answer charges of neglect of duty; and if the duty or duties whose neglect is charged are mandatory duties under the Code, and if the charges are sustained, they may suffer removal from office, which also carries with it five years of ineligibility for the same office. So the proceedings before us are penal in character and effect, and the rights of the respondents must be as carefully conserved as are the rights of a defendant in a criminal court.

[107]*107 The alleged breaches of duty.

What are the breaches of duty alleged against the respondents? Are the duties whose breach is charged duties such as the School Code commands the directors to perform; that is, are they mandatory duties? If they are not, we have no power to remove these directors. If they are mandatory duties, have these breaches been sufficiently proved; and, if proved, are they of such a grave character as would justify the court in exercising its power to remove the directors? The law does not command the court to remove directors for breach of even mandatory duties. It merely gives the court “the power” to do so — a power to be exercised in the court’s own discretion.

First alleged breach of duty.

The petition to remove the directors sets forth:

“First. That the directors neglected to require the tax collector of the district to make a written report to the secretary of the board of school directors at the end of each month of all taxes collected by him during the said month, furnishing the names of the taxables from whom the same have been collected, in direct violation of section 553 of the School Code.”

We turn to the Code and we find neither in section 553 nor elsewhere a single word commanding the school directors to require the tax collector to make such a report. The collector is commanded to do so, but the board is not commanded to make him do so, or, upon his failure to do so, to dismiss him. There are thousands of public officials, such as heads of bureaus in Washington, ambassadors and consuls and army and navy officers, whose duty it is to submit to the President of the United States from time to time certain reports, and there are scores of officials whose duty it is to submit to the Governor of the Commonwealth from time to time certain reports; but no one would contend that the chief executive of nation or state could be removed from office because he did not see to it that all such reports were made at exactly the time they were expected by law to be made. If a chief executive of a state or nation fails to give adequate supervision to the work of his subordinates, he is answerable for such delinquency to the bar of public opinion, but not to a court of impeachment.

It is not necessary to discuss the respondents’ defence-in-fact to this charge. They could have demurred to this charge without answering it and the demurrer would have been sustained.

Second alleged breach of duty.

The charge is that the directors neglected to require the tax collector to pay the full amount of school taxes collected during the month to the treasurer of the district, in violation of section 553 of the Code. Again, we turn to the Code and we find neither in said section nor elsewhere a word commanding the directors to compel the collector to pay at the end of each month the full amount of taxes collected to the treasurer. True, the collector is commanded to do so, just as the Collector of Internal Revenue of the United States is commanded to turn over his collections to the United States Treasurer.

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Related

Jones v. Sharon Borough
85 A. 989 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1913)
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124 A. 347 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Pa. D. & C. 105, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scranton-city-school-directors-pactcompllackaw-1924.