168 A. 518 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1933
Argued March 7, 1933. This is a suit in assumpsit to recover a balance of salary claimed from a third-class school district by its medical inspector, who had been dismissed from service before the conclusion of the term for which he had been appointed. The plaintiff, who was a duly licensed physician for more than two years prior to his appointment, was appointed medical inspector at a salary of $150 per month, at a meeting of the board of directors of the defendant school district held August 31, 1929, for a period of ten months commencing September 23, 1929. The plaintiff performed the duties of his appointment until December 15, 1929, when, pursuant to a resolution of the board of school directors, adopted December 11, 1929, without notice or cause, he was dismissed from service. Plaintiff performed the duties and services as medical inspector for the *297 months of September, October and November, 1929 and held himself in readiness to perform the duties of his appointment during the remaining period of his contract and now claims for the salary for the remaining seven months, a total of $1,050.
By agreement of counsel, the suit was tried before Honorable W. ALFRED VALENTINE, without a jury. At the conclusion of plaintiff's testimony defendant rested, moving for judgment upon the ground that under the law plaintiff was an appointed officer, removable at the pleasure of the appointing power.
By opinion filed the trial Judge entered judgment for the plaintiff and against the defendant in the sum of $1,050, to which exceptions were filed and were later dismissed by the court en banc and judgment finally entered for plaintiff for the full amount, from which judgment this appeal is taken.
We have concluded that the law applicable to the facts in the present case can not be better or more tersely stated than in the following excerpt from the opinion of the court below, to which we have added some supplemental comments.
"This case involves the single, but not simple, question of law whether the plaintiff was an appointed public officer, removable at pleasure, under Article 6, Section 4, of the State Constitution, or whether he was merely an employee or petty officer under contract with the defendant school district.
"The appointment of medical inspectors by school districts is provided for by Section 1501 of the School Code as follows: `Every school district of the first, second or third class in this Commonwealth shall annually provide medical inspection of all the pupils of its public schools by proper medical inspectors to be appointed by the board of school directors of the school district in sufficient number to conduct the required inspection in conformity with the standard requirements *298 prescribed by the Commissioner of Health for the medical inspection of schools in such district. Such medical inspection shall be made in the presence of the parent or guardian of the pupil, when so requested by parent or guardian.'
"Section 1505 of the Code makes it the duty of such inspectors to at least once each year inspect and carefully test and examine all pupils in the public schools of their districts, giving special attention to defective sight, hearing, teeth, or other disabilities and defects specified by the Commissioner of Health; and to make such additional inspections and examinations as shall be provided for by the Commissioner of Health, the principal, or the district superintendent of schools.
"A written report is required to be made to the teacher, principal or district superintendent as directed by the board of school directors concerning all pupils found in need of medical or surgical attention.
"Section 1506 of the Code makes it the duty of the medical inspector at least once each year, to make a careful examination of all privies, waterclosets, urinals, cellars, the water supply and drinking vessels and utensils, and such additional examinations of the sanitary conditions of the school buildings as are deemed necessary, or as the regulations of the State Department of Health, or the rules of the board of school directors or of the local board of health require.
"In Foyle v. Commonwealth,
"The question whether the holder of a public position is to be regarded as a public officer `must be determined by a consideration of the nature of the service to be performed by the incumbent and of the duties imposed upon him, and whenever it appears that those duties are of a grave and important character, involving in the proper performance of them some of the functions of government, the officer *300
charged with them is clearly to be regarded as a public one. . . . . . It is no doubt true that there are many persons engaged in the public service in subordinate positions exercising functions of such an inferior character that they could not be properly considered public officers within the meaning of the Constitution; this much is indicated in Com. v. Black,
"We do not think it can be said that a medical inspector has delegated to him any of the functions of government, but regard him as falling within the category of policeman, fireman, watchman, and kindred officials or employes. He takes no oath of office, files no bond and is subject to the orders of the school principal, the superintendent of schools and the Commissioner of Health. He is not within the same class as the secretary of the board — Howell v. Keeler, 5 Pa. D. C. 90 — and unlike the secretary exercises no functions of the government. *301
"To constitute a public office, it is essential that certain independent public duties, a part of the sovereignty of the State, should be appointed to it by law, to be exercised by the incumbent in virtue of his election or appointment to the office thus created and defined, and not as a mere employe subject to the direction and control of someone else: State v. Jennings, 49 N.E. (Ohio) 404; Richie v. Philadelphia,
In the very able argument of appellant's counsel much emphasis has been placed upon the case of Foyle v. Commonwealth,
Counsel for appellant also emphasizes the case of Scibilia v. Phila.,
This precise question has not been decided by any opinion in our courts. In 46 C.J. 926, are listed decisions from most of the states of the Union and the finding of the forms of public employment where the incumbent was held to be a public officer and where *303
the incumbent was held not to be a public officer. Of the many decisions therein listed, the only two having any bearing on the form of employment in this case are Conolly v. Craft, 205 App. Div. N.Y. 583, where a city health officer was held not a public officer, and Middleton v. Miller Co.,
Judgment affirmed.