Scranton School District v. Smith

178 A. 686, 318 Pa. 504, 1935 Pa. LEXIS 603
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 29, 1935
DocketAppeals, 189 and 203
StatusPublished

This text of 178 A. 686 (Scranton School District v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scranton School District v. Smith, 178 A. 686, 318 Pa. 504, 1935 Pa. LEXIS 603 (Pa. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Schaffer,

This is a bill in equity brought by the School District of the City of Scranton against Jacob Smith, praying that he be decreed to be the agent and trustee of plain *506 tiff in collecting delinquent school taxes for the years 1925 to 1929 inclusive, and that he be directed to file an account of the money he had received and to pay it to plaintiff. The court below entered a decree awarding to the school district the sum of $88,342.38, which it found to be the amount of plaintiff’s funds in defendant’s hands. The court also directed a further accounting by defendant. The chancellor refused to find that defendant was the agent or trustee of plaintiff. From this decree both parties have appealed. The two appeals will be disposed of in this opinion.

By resolutions duly passed by the school board, it authorized the bringing of suits in assumpsit before an alderman for the recovery of delinquent taxes for the years named. These resolutions were enacted under section 503 of the School Code of May 18, 1911, P. L. 309, 332, 24 P. S., section 384, which provides that school districts may maintain before an alderman an action of assumpsit for unpaid school taxes. In pursuance of these resolutions, Grace Pettigrew, who had been designated by the board as collector of delinquent taxes, delivered to the defendant, who was an alderman of the City of Scranton, lists of delinquents for each of the years, and he undertook to collect from the persons named on the lists. Some of the amounts he received he paid over to the school district. During the months of January and February, 1932, he delivered to the collector of delinquent taxes three checks aggregating $48,-189.41. Accompanying them was a list of the names of the taxpayers from whom he received the money, the amounts and dates when paid. When the checks were presented to the bank on which they were drawn, they were dishonored and returned “not sufficient funds.” Subsequently, the defendant called on certain members of the school board and admitted that he had used for his own purposes the money he had received, and asked for an extension of time to make the checks good. This request was refused, and shortly thereafter the defend1 *507 ant was arrested on charges of embezzlement and fraudulent conversion of the tax money he had received. To indictments therefor he entered pleas of nolle contendere, upon which sentence was entered. The criminal proceedings are now pending on appeal.

After the dishonoring of defendant’s checks and the discovering of his other shortages, this bill was filed to obtain an accounting as to the money which he had received and not turned over. The school district claims, in all, $131,931.16, and complains that the court below erred in not awarding it that sum. The chancellor, in his findings of fact, adopted the figures of plaintiff’s accountant, and in his fiftieth finding expressly found that “Jacob Smith, the defendant, did not deny that during the years 1925 to 1929 inclusive, he collected and failed to pay over to the plaintiff the net sum of one hundred thirty-one thousand nine hundred thirty-one dollars and sixteen cents, delinquent taxes.” However, at the end of his discussion the trial judge stated that “The defendant requested us to find as a fact that there are eighty-eight thousand, three hundred forty-two dollars and thirty-eight cents due from this defendant to the plaintiff and this we so find without prejudice, however, to the items in dispute, but which, as we view it, cannot under the state of the evidence in this case be at this time determined, but must be the subject of an accounting.” Accordingly the decree nisi, which was made absolute by the court in banc, was for this sum.

This was error. The parties both agree that the evidence as to defendant’s collections was fully presented; without recounting the maze of figures which it contains, our reading of the record confirms their position that there is no need for a further accounting. Inasmuch as the chancellor found on competent evidence that defendant had collected and failed to account for $131,931.16, we are at a loss to understand why his liability was not fixed at this figure. The decree must be modified to remove this inconsistency.

*508 We do not understand defendant to controvert in any way the fact that be collected the above sum in delinquent taxes. His contention, as set forth in bis answer to tbe bill, is that be is entitled to a set-off against tbe taxes collected to tbe extent of $93,394, tbis sum representing costs of $9.80 in each of 9,530 suits in assumpsit wbicb be alleges be bad maintained in plaintiff’s name against delinquent taxpayers, and in wbicb judgments bad been entered by default, wbicb judgments be bas been unable to collect. * He admits that be bas in bis bands taxes collected for plaintiff in tbe sum of $88,-342.38, and, as bis alleged set-off is greater in amount, be asks a decree in bis favor for tbe difference.

Our reading of tbe record bas brought us to tbe conclusion that defendant’s claim of set-off is an afterthought. As tbe chancellor found, for eighteen years defendant bad acted for plaintiff in tbe collection of delinquent taxes, and never until he was arrested did be make any claim for costs of suit. When be gave tbe checks wbicb were dishonored be did not claim tbe school distinct owed him anything, nor did be make such claim when be later asked tbe school board for time to make tbe checks good. Subsequently, and before tbe in *509 stant proceeding was begun, defendant filed, a petition for a declaratory judgment on the accounts between plaintiff and himself; in this he admitted owing plaintiff $29,285.21 and tendered that sum to it. Moreover, the names of approximately three thousand of the persons against whom he entered suit had been stricken from the delinquent list of the school district, and the evidence shows that this list and that furnished defendant were identical. It was further proved that these names were stricken from both lists before a copy was delivered to defendant. Many of the suits for which defendant claims costs were for more than $300; over these, as an alderman, he had no jurisdiction. The facts indicate that defendant’s claim of having maintained actions in assumpsit against delinquent taxpayers is fictitious, and we so conclude.

It is true that the list of delinquent taxpayers was delivered to defendant by the collector of delinquent taxes, with a copy of the resolution of the school board authorizing the collector to initiate actions in assumpsit before an alderman. But the evidence shows that even if such actions were begun, the entry of judgment by default was wholly without authority of law. To be entitled to judgment by default in such actions the plaintiff or its agent must file, before the issuance of the summons, an affidavit stating the amount believed to be due from defendant: Act of July 7, 1879, P. L. 194, 42 P. S., section 451. Miss Pettigrew, who represented plaintiff in its dealings with defendant, testified that she never appeared or was sworn in any such action for taxes. In addition, the Act of March 20,1810, P. L. 208, 42 P.

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Bluebook (online)
178 A. 686, 318 Pa. 504, 1935 Pa. LEXIS 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scranton-school-district-v-smith-pa-1935.