200 A. 859 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1938
Argued May 2, 1938. This was an action of assumpsit brought by the Commonwealth, at the relation of the Attorney General, against a milk dealer and the surety on his bond, furnished under the provisions of the `Milk Control Board Law' of January 2, 1934, P.L. (Special Sess. 1933-4) 174, to recover the penalty of the bond, for distribution among milk producers, to whom the dealer had made payments for milk sold and delivered to him at prices less than those fixed by the Milk Control Board, to the extent that the total of said under-payments exceeded the penalty of the bond. *169
The court below, after various proceedings not necessary to be mentioned, on November 8, 1937 entered judgment against the defendants for want of sufficient affidavits of defense for $1,913.84 — $1,600, with interest from August 1, 1934 to that date, $313.84. Separate appeals were filed by the defendants.
The statements of questions involved present five matters for consideration, which we will discuss in the following order.
(1) The provision of the Milk Control Board Law of January 2, 1934 requiring dealers applying for licenses to execute and file with the application a bond approved by the board — (section 12) — is constitutional. Chief Justice KEPHART in Milk Control Boardv. Eisenberg Farm Products,
(2) The bond was not affected by the fact that before final judgment could be obtained in the action upon it, both the Act of January 2, 1934, supra, and the Act of April 30, 1935, P.L. 96, which amended and reenacted it, expired by limitation contained in section 26, and were repealed by the Act of April 28, 1937, P.L. 417.
The Act of January 2, 1934 took effect on its approval by the Governor and was to continue in effect until April 30, 1935. By Act of April 30, 1935, P.L. 96, the Milk Control Board Law of 1934 was amended and reenacted, and continued in effect until April 30, 1937. The Acts of 1934 and 1935, which were temporary, emergency measures were superseded and repealed by the permanent Milk Control Law of April 28, 1937, P.L. 417, which contained corresponding provisions for the licensing of milk dealers and their furnishing of bonds "conditioned for the payment by the milk dealer of all amounts due, including amounts due under this *171 act and the orders of the Commission, for milk sold by such producers to the milk dealer during the license year." The repealing clause, however, (sec. 1301) is not absolute but is qualified by the following provision: "except in so far as necessary to sustain or maintain the validity, prosecution or enforcement of any act done, bond posted, offense committed, liability, penalty or judgment incurred, or rule, regulation or order issued thereunder, and saved or continued by this act." Section 1203 of this act reads as follows: "Effect upon Proceedings, Duties and Rights under Other Act of Assembly. — All rules, regulations, orders, suits, hearings, investigations, prosecutions and all other proceedings or actions of any kind whatsoever of the Milk Control Board of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, as created or continued under acts of assembly prior to the effective date of this act and repealed hereby, in existence or pending prior to or upon the effective date of this act, and all penalties, obligations, appeals or violations of milk dealers and others under said rules, regulations, orders and prior acts of assembly incurred, pending or accrued prior to or upon the effective date of this act, shall be saved and continued in every manner and for all purposes after the effective date of this act, and shall be continued under the provisions hereof. All employes, papers and possessions of such predecessor board shall become the employes, papers and possessions of and subject to the commission created by this act.
"The repeal by this act of any other act shall not impair, repeal, or affect any act done, bond posted, offense committed, liability, penalty or judgment incurred, or rule, regulation or order issued prior to the time this act takes effect, but the same may be enforced, prosecuted or inflicted under the provisions of this act to the same extent as if such other act had not been repealed or had not expired. *172
"All licenses, permits, certificates, rules, regulations and orders issued or made under any act repealed by this act, and in full force and effect upon the effective date of this act, shall remain in full force and effect for the term issued or until revoked, suspended or superseded under the provisions of this act or rules, regulations or orders of the commission made hereunder."
The court below, relying upon the decisions of the Supreme Court and of this court in Com. v. Mortgage Trust Co.,
We have no doubt as to the legislative intent in the Act of 1937 to save and continue in force all prosecutions, suits, actions and other proceedings begun under the enforcement provisions of the Acts of 1934 and 1935 and pending when the Act of 1937 went into effect. The language could not be clearer. And we are satisfied that the language of the saving clause is broad enough to include the bond in suit and the action brought to enforce the liability under it, if recourse to a saving clause is necessary to continue it in force. But we are of opinion that even without such a saving clause the bond sued on in this action would not be invalidated *173 by the limitation provisions of the Act of 1934 and its amendment of 1935 nor by the repealing clause of the Act of 1937. The Act of 1934 is not a penal statute — though it contains penalties for its violation —, nor is the bond in suit a fine or penalty imposed by way of punishment. The primary object of the bond is to protect milk producers who sell milk to licensed dealers and to assure them that they will be paid for the product so sold and delivered in accordance with the schedule of prices fixed by the Milk Control Board. It is not punitive in character, but remedial and protective, and the repeal of the act will not operate so as to take away the protection furnished by the bond, in reliance on which the milk was sold and delivered while the statute was in force.
Chief Justice KEPHART in Milk Control Board v. Eisenberg FarmProducts, supra, very aptly referred to the acts of assembly which require contractors on public works, etc. to give bonds to secure sub-contractors, mechanics, laborers and material men for labor and materials furnished the contractors on the work — citing the opinion of Mr. Justice SIMPSON in Com. v. GreatAmerican Indemnity Co.,
In Commonwealth v. Robb,
In Bates v. Koch,
See also Madden v. United States,
(3) The operation of the bond would not have been affected by the promulgation of a later order changing the prices to be paid producers by dealers, made during the effective period of the bond: United States v. Curtiss-Wright Corp.,
(4) The Act of January 2, 1934 did not require that orders of the Milk Control Board should be approved by the Governor. The Act of April 30, 1935, amending and reenacting it, did. But it had no effect on previous orders issued under the Act of 1934. The amendment became effective as of the date of its final enactment, but did not require orders issued before its enactment to be approved by the Governor. "Where a statute is amended and reenacted the portions of the amended sections which are simply repeated from the old law are not considered as repealed and reenacted but as law continuously from their first enactment by the old act and not born of the reenactment; while the new or changed portions are law for the first time from the reenactment": Harvey v. City of Hazleton,
(5) The averment in the affidavit of defense that the order of the Milk Control Board fixing the prices to be paid by milk dealers to producers was invalid because it failed to "take into consideration all conditions affecting the milk industry, including the amount necessary to yield a reasonable return to the producer and to the milk dealer," is without substantial merit.
In Rohrer v. Milk Control Board,
In Myers v. Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp.,
The purpose of the hearing by the Board was to afford dealers a full opportunity to present the facts and figures within their control in order that prices fair and just to both producer and dealer would be arrived at. If the defendant failed to avail himself of this opportunity he has no one but himself to blame and cannot now inject the results flowing from his own inaction as a defense to the suit on this bond.
Chief Justice KEPHART in Colteryahn Sanitary Dairy v. MilkControl Commission,
It follows that the Dauphin County court would have even less power, in this action on the bond, to fix and determine the fair and just price to be paid producers by dealers than that court had in the direct proceedings authorized by the Act of 1937, which were under review in the cases just referred to.
The assignment of error in each appeal is overruled and the judgment is affirmed. *178