81 Pa. Super. 482 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1923
Argued April 10, 1923. Appellants were the road supervisors of Franklin Township, Armstrong County. They were indicted and tried upon the charge of unlawfully neglecting and refusing to keep fit for public travel a certain public township road and allowing the same to become unsafe and dangerous for ordinary travel to the common nuisance of the citizens of the township. Toy and Zillefrow were acquitted and Ritchey was convicted. Judgment against the latter was arrested on the ground that the offense is no longer indictable in the court of quarter sessions, because, under section 240 of the Act of 1917, P.L. 840, known as "The General Township Act," exclusive jurisdiction of the offense was lodged in justices of the peace. Appellants paid out of the road funds of the township to their attorneys for professional services rendered in defending them on the trial of the indictment the sum of $150. The township auditors allowed the board of supervisors a credit for the counsel fees thus paid. An appeal was taken from the report of the township auditors to the common pleas, which sustained the appeal, disallowed the credit of $150 and surcharged the appellants with that amount. From that order comes this appeal. The correctness of the order is the only question involved.
The offense with which appellants were charged was official misconduct or neglect and refusal to perform their legal duties. While counsel have referred us to no Pennsylvania case directly in point and we have discovered none, the rule, as stated by the text writers and generally recognized in other jurisdictions, is that the power of a municipality or its appropriate officers to employ an attorney is limited to those matters in which the municipality has some official duty or which may probably be said to affect its interests. An attempted employment of an attorney in a matter in connection with which the municipality has no official duty, or which does not fall within the duties of the board or official making the contract of employment, does not render the municipality *485
liable to the attorney for his compensation: Dillon on Municipal Corporations, Vol. 2, paragraph 824, at page 1246. It is a fundamental principle that public funds shall not be used for private purposes. The offense for which appellants were indicted was a personal one: Com. v. John Meany,
The assignment of error is overruled, and the judgment is affirmed. *486