6 Pa. 136 | Pa. | 1847
These are actions against the sureties of prothonotaries, upon their official bonds, brought by the Commonwealth to recover the several sums received bythe’principals, while in office, by virtue of the act of 6th April, 1830, entitled “ An act for the levy and collection of taxes upon proceedings in courts and in the offices of register and recorder, and for other purposes.”
The first of these bonds, it is conceded, was taken in pursuance
In both cases the defendants pleaded shortly, “ act of limitations,” and the only question presented in the court below was, whether the proviso of the fourth section of the act of 28th March, 1803, requiring sheriffs and coroners to give bonds for the faithful execution of their respective offices, and prescribing the form of action to be brought thereon, extends to and embraces sureties in bonds given by officers to the Commonwealth; and to any individual who may be aggrieved by the misconduct of any sheriff or coroner, who may bring actions against them and their sureties upon their bonds and recognisances, for the recovery of damages, “Provided that such suit or suits against such sureties, their heirs, executors, or administrators, shall not be sustained by any court of this Commonwealth, unless the same shall be instituted within five years after the date of such obligation or recognisance.” To secure payment into the public treasury of the tax collected under the act of 1830, by the officers named therein, they are required to give bond, with sureties, to the Commonwealth, in one-third of the amount fixed by law for sheriffs’ bonds in the respective counties, by the act of 28th of March, 1803, “to be received and admitted in evidence, according to the provisions of said law, the condition of which obligation shall be that the said officer so bound shall and will, truly pay over’all the taxes demanded and received under this act, to the state treasurer, and in all other particulars shall conform to the provisions of this act, and the effect, rights, and remedies of said bond shall be governed by the provisions of the said act of the 2Sth of March, 1803.” It is by force of this last clause the defendants here claim to be protected — more than five years having run between the date of the respective bonds and the institution of these suits.
It would be more than vain again to go over the ground so ably occupied by the Chief Justice in The Commonwealth v. Baldwin, 1 Watts, 54, or to re-examine the cases reviewed by him, which have settled on grounds of public policy, that no statute of limitations will bind the Commonwealth, unless explicitly or impliedly named therein. The principle deducible from all the cases, English and American, is, that the. legislature shall not' be taken to have postponed the public right to that of an individual, unless, such an intent be manifested by express words or irresistible implication, and this principle is peculiarly applicable to a plea of the statute
The judgment of the court below, rendered in the case of the Commonwealth v. Johnson and Donnell, which sustained the defence pro forma, must therefore be reversed. This decision, renders it unnecessary to consider the question raised here, in the second ease, whether the bond executed by Samuel Snyder and his sureties was given under the act of 1798, or the act of 1830. Either way the judgment rendered below, in this ease, is correct; but as the writ of error was sued out by the Commonwealth in violation of the agreement of the parties, it must be quashed, otherwise the defendants might be unjustly subjected to the costs of the proceeding in this court.
Judgment in Commonwealth v. Johnson and Donnell reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.' Writ of error sued out in Commonwealth v. Smith and Bell, quashed, with costs.