Tosh v. Schlottman

2 Pa. D. & C. 256, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 251
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Schuylkill County
DecidedApril 17, 1922
DocketNo. 49
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Pa. D. & C. 256 (Tosh v. Schlottman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Schuylkill County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tosh v. Schlottman, 2 Pa. D. & C. 256, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 251 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Koch, J.,

The question in this case is, what is the lawful salary of the petitioner as one of the directors of the poor district composed of the County of Schuylkill?

By a special Act of Assembly approved April 4, 1831, P. L. 422, a poor district coextensive with this county was created and put in charge of directors, the 3rd section of the act providing: “That the said directors shall forever hereafter, in law and in fact, be one body politic and corporate in law, to all intents and purposes whatsoever relative to the poor of the County of Schuylkill, and shall have perpetual succession, and may sue and be sued, plead and be impleaded, by the name, style and title of ‘The Directors of the Poor and of the House of Employment for the County of Schuylkill,’ ” etc. A vacancy having been created by the death of John M. Coombe, one of the directors of the poor, Thomas Tosh was duly appointed and qualified for the office on Aug. 22, 1921, and since that date has received a salary at the rate of $1200 per annum, but he claims that he is entitled to $2500 per annum, as fixed by the local or special Act of May 10, 1917, P. L. 179, payable semi-monthly out of the county treasury on warrants of the directors of the poor, and that it is the duty of the county controller to countersign said warrants. The controller refuses to do so, and this ease is based upon his refusal to sign a warrant for $208.33, drawn by the directors of the poor on Dec. 30, 1921, for the payment of the petitioner’s salary for the month of December, 1921. The [257]*257county controller claims that the warrant for $208.33 was illegally drawn for an amount in excess of the salary legally due the petitioner for the month of December, 1921. The county controller contends that directors of the poor in this county are now county officers by virtue of the Act of March 30, 1921, P. L. 62, and that the Special Act of May 10, 1917, P. L. 179, is of no avail. That directors of the poor in this county were not county officers prior to March 30, 1921, is undoubted, because the 1st section of the 14th article of the Constitution names all the county officers, and directors of the poor are not among them. But the same section provides for the establishment of other county officers. The Act of 1921, just referred to, is entitled “An act declaring the directors of the poor in poor districts coextensive with the county to be county officers.” Its preamble clearly shows that the act is meant to include all “poor districts coextensive with counties whose affairs have been administered by directors of the poor elected by the qualified voters of the county under special acts of assembly as quasi-municipal corporations, whose property and maintenance have been provided for out of the public treasury of the county, and maintained at the public expense.” This act declares all the directors of the poor of such poor districts “to be county officers and subject, in the discharge of their duties and obligations as directors of the poor, to all the general laws relating to county officers.” And “all acts of assembly, general, local or special, relating to the office of directors of the poor, inconsistent” with the said act are thereby repealed. Therefore, notwithstanding the fact that “the directors of the poor and of the house of employment for the County of Schuylkill” are a separate entity, as a quasi-municipal corporation, the said directors of the poor are now county officers in this county by virtue of said Act of 1921, although they exercise duties only as officers of the poor district which is coextensive with Schuylkill County. This situation may be contrasted with county commissioners, who act as directors of the poor under the provisions of the Act of June 4,1879, P. L. 78. In the latter case the Supreme Court said in Melvin v. Summerville, 210 Pa. 41, 43: “It is true that the county commissioners and the county treasurer are ex officio made the officers through whom the district acts, but they are none the less district officers and not county officers while so acting.” Whilst the Act of 1879 is intended to make every county in the State a poor district, it has no application to this county, because the 21st section of the act provides that it “shall not be construed to repeal any local act or acts in which poorhouses or houses for relief of the destitute have been erected or are now managed.” And the Act of June 4, 1879, P. L. 78, has been clearly declared to be constitutional: Rose v. Beaver County, 204 Pa. 372.

The case before us questions the constitutionality of the various poor laws enacted for the poor district in this county since 1874, on the ground that they are local in character and effect, and, therefore, must be void. We will give that question consideration further on. First, let the writer say he does not believe that the Constitution forbids the enactment of local laws for the benefit of the poor anywhere in this State, as the Constitution nowhere in specific terms forbids local legislation for poor districts. From the time that Pennysl-vania was a colony to the present it has always been solicitous for the poor, “For ye have the poor always with you.” At an assembly held at Chester in December, 1682, provision was made for persons falling “into decay and poverty:” Chapter 32 Duke of Yorke’s Book of Laws, 115. In such case, complaint was made to the justices of the peace in the same county, who, finding the complaint to be true, made provision for the poor in such a way as they [258]*258saw convenient until the county court, and then care was taken for their comfortable subsistence. But the act was abrogated by William and Mary, King and Queen, in 1693, after the control of the government of the province had been taken from William Penn: Ibid., 539. But the poor were not neglected after such abrogation, and an act was passed on Nov. 27, 1700, making it the duty of the justices of the peace and overseers of the poor to take due care to relieve such poor: Chapter 23, Volume 2 Statutes at Large of Pennsylvania, 20. On Jan. 12, 1705, the General Assembly passed another act for the better relief of the poor in this province, which provided that the justices of the peace, or any three or more of them, should meet in the respective counties and nominate one, two or more substantial inhabitants of the respective townships to be overseers of the poor of said townships for the ensuing year, and where the townships were small and the inhabitants few, two or more townships, as the justices should hold fit, could be joined together within their county. The overseers were given authority to levy and collect taxes in their respective townships to be employed for the relief of the poor: Chapter 154, Volume 2 Statutes at Large of Pennsylvania, 251. And ever since the passage of that act we have had poor districts and overseers of the poor, or directors of the poor, throughout the Commonwealth. By the 2nd section of an act entitled “An act for amending the laws relating to the poor,” passed Aug.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Pa. D. & C. 256, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tosh-v-schlottman-pactcomplschuyl-1922.