Zerbe Township School District v. Thomas

44 A.2d 566, 353 Pa. 162, 1945 Pa. LEXIS 277
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 30, 1945
DocketAppeals, 220-228
StatusPublished
Cited by85 cases

This text of 44 A.2d 566 (Zerbe Township School District v. Thomas) 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
Zerbe Township School District v. Thomas, 44 A.2d 566, 353 Pa. 162, 1945 Pa. LEXIS 277 (Pa. 1945).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Hobace Steen,

This is an appeal under the Act of March 5, 1925, P. L. 23, from a decree of the Court of Common Pleas of Northumberland County refusing to dismiss a bill in equity for alleged want of jurisdiction.

The bill was brought by the School District of Zerbe Township and the Township of Zerbe against the County, the County Commissioners, the County Solicitor, the County Mining Engineer, a former County Commissioner, and a number of corporations and other individuals. It alleged that nearly half a million dollars of delinquent taxes are due — the larger portion to plaintiffs — upon certain coal lands described in the bill, that these lands were, purchased by the County at County Treasurer’s sales in 1943 and 1945, that coal is being mined therefrom by defendant coal companies, that timber is being cut and removed by some of the defendants, that the County Solicitor, the County Mining Engineer and the former County Commissioner have secret interests in these coal companies and are obtaining profits and royalties from their operations, that none of the income is being paid to the County Commissioners or any of the taxing districts, and that this situation has been called to the attention of the County Commissioners but they have refused to take action to protect the public interests. Accordingly the bill prayed for an injunction to restrain the alleged waste, for the appointment of a receiver, and for an accounting. The court, upon affidavits, issued a preliminary injunction against the defendants (other than the County and the County Commissioners) and appointed a temporary receiver to take possession of the mines and to manage and conduct them. Defendants took a rule to show cause why the bill should not be dismissed for want of jurisdiction. The Court, after hearing argument, discharged the rule, accompanying its decision by a comprehensive and well-reasoned opinion.

*165 Appellants misconceive the scope and purpose of the Act of 1925. Even if a plaintiff have no standing to bring his action, even if his statement of claim or bill in equity be demurrable, even if he fail to establish the allegations in his complaint, even if the court ultimately conclude that the relief he seeks should not be granted in whole or in part, not any or all of these circumstances would enter into, much less determine, the question whether the court has jurisdiction of the litigation.

“Whether or not a plaintiff has averred sufficient facts in his statement of claim to entitle him to recover, is not a matter open for consideration under the statute. His failure so to do would not raise a question of jurisdiction of the cause of action, as those words are used in the statute, since they relate solely to the competency of the particular court to determine controversies of the general class to which the case then presented for its consideration belongs.”: Skelton v. Lower Merion Township, 298 Pa. 471, 473, 148 A. 846. 1

“A court may have jurisdiction over the subject-matter of litigation even though the statement of claim or the bill of complaint be obviously demurrable as not setting forth a good cause of action. The test of jurisdiction is whether the court has power to enter upon the inquiry, not whether it may ultimately decide that it is unable to grant the relief sought in the particular case.”: *166 Main Cleaners & Dyers, Inc. v. Columbia Super Cleaners, Inc., 332 Pa. 71, 73, 74, 2 A. 2d 750, 751. 2

“It [the Act of 1925] was not intended to furnish a short cut to a determination of the issues of law or fact raised by the pleadings, however certain their ultimate determination may appear to be.”: Lackawanna County v. James, 296 Pa. 225, 227, 145 A. 817. 3

“The matters . . . raised as a preliminary question in the court below went to the right of the plaintiff to recover on his cause of action rather than to his right to have his cause of action heard and determined. With the former the Act of March 5, 1925, ... is not concerned.”: Squire v. Fridenberg, 126 Pa. Superior Ct. 508, 512, 191 A. 631, 632. 4

“The matters . . . going to the alleged incompetency of plaintiff to invoke the jurisdiction of the court below are not of a character to be raised preliminarily under the Act of 1925.”: Staryeu v. Midouhas, 299 Pa. 352, 354, 149 A. 600.

In the light of these pronouncements it is obvious that the questions which defendants are now attempting to raise are not within the range of an appeal under *167 the Act of 1925. The argument that plaintiffs do not have a “contingent interest” in these coal mines and therefore do not come within the Act of June 8, 1891, P. L. 208, so as to entitle them to an injunction to restrain waste, and the argument that they are not “purchasers” within the meaning of the Act of July 2,1937, P. L. 2790, so as to entitle them to a writ of estrepement, merely go to the question whether the court should grant them the relief they seek and have nothing to do with the question of the court’s jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the action. Likewise defendants’ protest against the appointment of a temporary receiver and the vesting in him of the extensive powers enumerated in the court’s decree is not a subject for present consideration. The same observation applies to the contention that plaintiffs, if they have any standing at all, must pursue their remedy on the law side of the court either under statutory provisions or in mandamus proceedings. The question with which we are now concerned is merely whether the Court of Common Pleas of Northumberland County has jurisdiction, not whether it can grant equitable as opposed to legal relief. There are not two courts in Northumberland County, one of law and one of chancery, but, as was said by Judge Lowrie in Adams v. Beech, 1 Phila. Rep. 99, 101, only “one court, having power to administer redress under the common law or chancery forms, according as the same are appropriate.” Section 4 of the Act of 1925 provides that “The right of appeal here conferred is not intended to cover questions of jurisdiction which go to the form of the action alone as between law and equity, such as provided for in the Act of June seven, one thousand nine hundred and seven, (Pamphlet Laws, four hundred and forty).” The procedural principle underlying this provision had been asserted even before the passage of the act. “Whether a case may be brought in the chancery form is only a question of form [of action] and not of jurisdiction ... It *168 must be taken advantage of by demurrer and not by objection to the jurisdiction of the court.” Pennsylvania R. R. Co. v. Bogert, 209 Pa. 589, 602, 59 A. 100, 105. 5

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Bluebook (online)
44 A.2d 566, 353 Pa. 162, 1945 Pa. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zerbe-township-school-district-v-thomas-pa-1945.