236 Pa. 560 | Pa. | 1912
Opinion by
This was a case stated involving the fees of a court stenographer for services rendered under and by virtue of the Act of May 1, 1907, P. L. 135. It was agreed, inter alia, that “The plaintiff served as stenographer before masters appointed in divorce cases and before a referee on application for a charter, as directed by the judges of the Court of Common Pleas, No. 5, of Philadelphia County, as set forth in exhibit A (the exhibit being attached and stating the details of the charges in a number of specified cases), and furnished accurate typewritten copies of his notes of testimony to the said masters and referee, which copies were duly filed of record. In all the said suits.....there was an absence of agreement between the parties or. their counsel as to the compensation that should be paid the official stenographer, and he has not received any compensation therefor. The court thereupon approved the plaintiff’s bill for services in the said.....
The title of the act in question is broad and indicates an intention to deal with the appointment, employment and compensation of stenographers in all proceedings in the several courts; it reads: “Relating to the appointment of stenographers .... to report proceedings in the several courts of common pleas .... of this Commonwealth, as well as before commissioners, masters and special masters in chancery, referees, examiners, auditors, and other officers; prescribing their powers and duties; ----prescribing their compensation and allowances for expenses, when the same shall be paid by the county, .... and when by the parties to such proceedings.” Section 6 provides the per diem compensation or salary to be paid court stenographers for, inter alia, “taking notes by the direction of any judge or judges of any of the courts aforesaid,” and Section 8 that, “Every official stenographer shall be paid in addition to the compensation provided in Section 6 of this act, fifteen cents for each one hundred words of every copy of the stenographic notes of trials and of other matters in connection with the business of the court, that are furnished to the court or filed of record, ----; payment for such copies to be made by the county in which the case is pending, or for which the work is performed, upon the order of the presiding judge.” The services rendered by the plaintiff in this case are comprehended within the words “other matters in connection with the business of the court, that are furnished to the court or filed of record”; they were performed at the direction of the court and the copies were for the use of its officers; in each instance they
The assignments were overruled and the judgment is affirmed.