23 A.2d 440 | Pa. | 1941
The question is whether relator, William J. Crow, a commissioned officer in the Officers' Reserve Corps of *447 the United States, now called into active service as a major in the army, can continue to hold the office of mayor of the City of Uniontown.
Crow became mayor on the first Monday of January, 1940, his salary being $200 a month. On May 27, 1941, the President proclaimed a national emergency, and all members of the Officers' Reserve Corps were ordered to active duty. Crow, who had been a commissioned officer in the Reserve Corps since 1925, was appointed a major in the United States Army, his compensation, with perquisites, being approximately $430 per month. On June 4, 1941, he reported for duty at Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Aberdeen, Maryland, where he is still stationed, or at least was stationed at the time this case was argued. On July 8, 1941, the Court of Common Pleas of Fayette County appointed respondent, George B. Smith, as mayor in place of Crow. The latter thereupon filed a suggestion for a writ of quo warranto and, the writ having been granted, respondent moved to quash it. From an order of the court quashing the writ relator appeals.
As far as the question of practice is concerned, respondent's use of a motion to quash was proper, because the statutory duty of a respondent to plead or demur "has not displaced the motion to quash as a method of calling attention to a fatal defect of substance in the suggestion": Commonwealth ex rel. Margiotti v.Union Traction Co.,
If the problem before us were one merely of public policy, much, no doubt, could be said on both sides. On the one hand it might be urged that if public office had to be surrendered upon accepting a commission in the army it would unjustly penalize those who are patriotically giving their services to the Republic in this critical hour. On the other hand there must be borne in mind the fact that practically all who are leaving their civilian occupations for military service — whether professional or business men, artisans or unskilled laborers — are *448 thereby surrendering the profits, salaries and wages pertaining to their ordinary vocations, and the question would naturally arise why those holding public office should be exempt from making the same sacrifice that falls to the lot of others who join the armed forces. Furthermore, paramount as is the importance of the military service, the administration of municipal government must go on during the emergency, and a city cannot be properly managed by an executive who, having been commissioned in the army, will presumably, under existing legislation, serve therein for the uncertain duration of the war, and, during all the years of his term of office as mayor, may be stationed in a remote part of the country or even of the world.
These arguments, pro and con, are not for consideration by a court. The question before us is purely a legal one, and arises by virtue of Article XII, section 2, of our Constitution, which provides that: "No . . . person holding or exercising any office or appointment of trust or profit under the United States shall at the same time hold or exercise any office in this State to which a salary, fees or perquisites shall be attached." This constitutional provision is self-executing:DeTurk v. Commonwealth,
Article XII, section 2, of the Constitution contains the additional clause that, "The General Assembly may by law declare what offices are incompatible." Such laws have been passed from time to time,2 but the power thus given to the legislature does not restrict the operation of the first part of the section nor permit of a legislative nullification of the inhibition which it contains: De Turk v. Commonwealth,
The order of the court quashing the writ of quo warranto is affirmed; costs to be paid by appellant.