Opinion by
This proceeding in quo warranto attacks the eligibility of Robert M. Schroll to act as a school director in Earl Township, Lancaster County.
On November 6, 1956 Schroll was appointed to the office of school director of Earl Township to fill an unexpired term which runs until the 1st Monday of December, 1961; he then assumed the duties of that office. On December 4, 1958 the Commonwealth, upon the relation of the District Attorney of Lancaster Cоunty, 1 instituted quo warranto proceedings to test Sclir oil’s title to office alleging that, at the time of his appointment, Schroll had not been a resident of Earl Township School District for one (1) year as required by the Publiс School Code. 2 An Answer, including new matter, was filed by Schroll wherein he admitted that he had not been a resident of the school district for one (1) year prior to his appointment but averred that the quo warranto prоceeding was barred by laches. After a Reply by the Commonwealth which admitted that Schroll had been a resident of the district since March 17, 1956 — seven months and nineteen days prior to his appointment — the Commonweаlth moved for judgment on the pleadings. The Court of Common Pleas of Lancaster County entered judgment on the pleadings in *356 favor of Schroll. From this judgment the present appeal was taken.
The relevant portion оf the Public School Code, supra, provides: “Any citizen of this Commonwealth, having a good moral character, being twenty-one (21) years of age or upwards, and having been a resident of the district for at least one (1) year prior to the date of his election or appointment, shall be eligible to the office of school director therein . . . .” (Emphasis supplied). It is evident that, at the time of his appointment and at the time he took the oath and assumed the duties of his office, Schroll did not meet the eligibility requirements of the Code. 3 Furthermore the pleadings *357 do not disclose any claim that Schroll’s disqualification was removed, after the commencement оf his term, on March 17, 1957, the date when Schroll completed one year of residence within the district. The sole basis of Schroll’s defense and the ground upon which the court below entered judgment was that the Commonwealth, not having filed quo warranto proceedings until two years and twenty-eight days after Schroll’s appointment, was guilty of laches which barred the proceedings.
We have recently stated in
Grote Trust,
The landmark case in Pennsylvania on the subject of whether laches may be imputed to the Commonwealth is
Commonwealth v. Bala and Bryn Mawr Turnpike Company,
Was the application of the doctrine of laches appropriate in the present situation? Assuming, arguendo, that the length of time — аpproximately two years — was *359 unreasonable wherein was Sehroll prejudiced by the inaction of the Commonwealth? The matter was presented to the court below entirely on the pleadings an examinаtion of which fails to reveal the manner in which Sehroll had been prejudiced. The court below found that Sehroll was prejudiced by the Commonwealth’s delay in the following manner: “In the more than two years since his appointment, the defendant has contributed of his time, talents and energy on behalf of the school district, without remuneration. While the defendant has made no sizable outlay of cash in the way of capital investment and has incurred no financial obligation based on his holding office, still there must have been some expense connected with his service as school director which only he must have paid. Two years spent in a labor of love, without any compensation, with little if any thanks, and with only the satisfaction of a difficult job conscientiously done, and then to be ousted from office through no fault or shortcoming of his own, seems hardly a just reward. The defendant must have a certain amount of pride and interest in his office to incur the expense of defending against this proceeding. It may not mean a financial loss to the defendant to lose his officе but to some people there are other values, perhaps even higher, than money. In our opinion, to oust the defendant from office after he has been permitted to serve for over two yeаrs would be eminently unfair, unkind and unjust, and a serious injury to the defendant in his standing in the community, in his pride of accomplishment in service to the public and in the loss to the public of the experience he has gained through more thаn two years’ service on the school board .... We can see no harm to anyone in the defendant continuing in office but we can see great disadvantage and serious injury to this man if he were to be ousted.”
*360 In the present posture of this litigation the position taken by the court below cannot be sustained. It may well be that the Commonwealth has been guilty of laches and that Schroll has been prejudiced by the delay in the institution of this proceeding but there is nothing of record at this stage of the proceedings to sustain a finding of prejudice. The plain, explicit terms of the statute outlining the eligibility of a person to be a school directоr should not be lightly set aside. There is nothing of record to show wherein nor to what extent Schroll has contributed of his “time, talents and energy” to the district, whether Schroll has had any “expense” connected with his services as school director, etc. Prejudice such as would justify the application of the doctrine of laches against the Commonwealth in this type of situation should be a matter of proof, not conjecture оr surmise. To hold otherwise would permit eligibility for the office of school director to depend on the length of the incumbent’s service rather than on the terms of the statute.
Judgment reversed with the direction that the record be remanded to the court below for the production of proof, if any, of the manner in which Schroll has been so prejudiced by the Commonwealth’s delay in the institution of this proceeding as to justify the apрlication of the doctrine of laches against the Commonwealth.
Notes
The record does not disclose whether the District Attorney acted upon his own initiative or upon the suggestion of some private citizen оr citizens.
Art. III, §322 of the Act of March 10, 1949, P. L. 30, as amended, 24 PS §3-322.
In
Com. ew rel. Kelley, District Attorney v. Keiser,
