171 A. 888 | Pa. | 1934
Argued March 21, 1934. At the general election held November 7, 1933, Daniel Burns was returned elected to the office of mayor of the City of New Kensington. A number of voters of the city filed a petition to contest his election, whereupon the court below set a date for hearing, and ordered that a bond conditioned for the payment of costs be filed by the petitioners within ten days, as required by the Act of May 19, 1874, P. L. 208, as amended by the Act of April 28, 1899, P. L. 118. When the case came on for hearing, respondent moved to dismiss the petition and discharge the rule granted thereon, for the reason that the purported bond which had been filed was not under seal. After argument, the court granted the motion, and this appeal followed.
The sole point now in issue is whether the instrument filed by appellants was properly executed, and the only objection raised to it is that it is not under seal. If this be true, and if the omission is sufficient to destroy its validity as a bond, the decree of the court below must *25 be affirmed, for it is not controverted that a proper bond must be filed in order to give the court jurisdiction to hear and determine the questions raised in the petition, and that the statutory period in which the bond might be amended had expired before the motion to dismiss was made.
Appellants' first contention is that the instrument filed as a bond is, in fact, sealed. Relying upon Hacker's App.,
On this state of facts, the case of Moritz's Contested Election,
Specifically, appellants argue that the legislature has recognized the employment of seals to be an obsolete common-law usage, and has changed the law of the Commonwealth by eliminating the necessity of seals on conveyances *27
and certain other documents. Therefore, they say, the court should now "take the necessary steps to abolish the absurd distinction between attaching and not attaching a seal to an instrument," and decree that a seal is no longer necessary to a bond. While this argument that the seal is today an anachronism is not wholly devoid of force, we cannot agree that it is for us to make the change. Admittedly, the legislature has not done so; the three statutes to which appellants point do not pretend to remove the requirement that a bond be under seal. Thus, the Act of April 30, 1925, P. L. 404, and the Act of May 12, 1925, P. L. 582, relate solely to deeds or conveyances of land. The other statute referred to, the Uniform Written Obligations Act of May 13, 1927, P. L. 985, does not even mention seals, but merely eliminates the defense of absence of consideration where a claim is based upon a written promise and the writing contains an additional express statement that the signer intends to be legally bound. The legislature has not seen fit to dispense with the necessity of a seal affixed to a bond — and thus change the law which has existed ever since the founding of the Commonwealth — and it is not for us to disturb so well settled a rule. As Chief Justice TILGHMAN said over a hundred years ago in Taylor v. Glaser, supra, "Sealing and delivering is still the criterion of a specialty; and it is important that the distinction between specialties and writings not specialties should be preserved in the courts. . . . . . If it should be thought that, in the present state of society, it would be best to put all writings on the same footing, the legislature alone has power to accomplish it." We conclude, therefore, that until such time as the legislature, in its wisdom, shall declare otherwise, "A seal is of the essence of a bond, and no writing can have the qualities which attach to a bond without the seal of the parties executing it": Huron Leather Co. v. Sklar,
The order of the court below is affirmed at appellants' cost. *28