187 A. 78 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1936
Argued March 4, 1936.
When this case was here a year ago (
The preliminary facts involved were stated in the opening of the former opinion as follows: "Thirty-six citizens and taxpayers of Susquehanna County appealed to the court of common pleas of that county from the *197 report of the county auditors for the fiscal year 1931, filed February 9, 1932. The appeal was taken from the refusal of the auditors to surcharge the county commissioners with certain payments ordered to be made by them and which had been excepted to, because, it was alleged, they were without legal warrant or authority. By agreement of counsel the appeal was heard by the court without a jury. The court filed its adjudication, surcharging the county commissioners in the sum of $2,026.70 for payments on warrants improperly and illegally ordered by them, but refusing to surcharge them for certain other payments which the appellant taxpayers contended were likewise without legal warrant or authority. Exceptions filed by the taxpayers to the adjudication were dismissed. Ten of the appellant taxpayers have appealed to this court."
The county commissioners did not appeal from the surcharge of $2,026.70 imposed on them by the court below, and the propriety and validity of that surcharge was not questioned by them. When the case was first appealed there was, consequently, a judgment entered against the commissioners for $2,026.70, which was final and conclusive, because the time within which an appeal might have been taken had expired. The only question that came before us was whether additional surcharges should have been imposed. We sustained the appellant taxpayers in some of their contentions and ordered additional surcharges to be imposed on the county commissioners, (1) for traveling expenses, etc. illegally charged and received by them in going from their respective homes to the county seat and returning; (2) for the difference between ten cents a mile circular charged by them for the use of their automobiles on county business and the actual amounts laid out and expended; (3) for expense bills collected by them which were not properly itemized; (4) for expense bills of the county inspector of weights and measures *198
which were paid without proper itemization. The judgment entered was in the following form: "The assignments of error are sustained to the extent indicated in this opinion; and the record is remitted to the court below with directions to consider the evidence, — reopening the case if necessary — and make the necessary further findings and determinations in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion; and to enter such judgment as the law and the evidence, in the light of this opinion, require." It would seem that the duty of the court below was clearly marked out in the opinion and judgment of this court, and that it should have proceeded to carry out that judgment (SeeLockhart's Est.,
Between the argument of the prior appeal in this court, (March 6, 1935) and the filing of our opinion (July 18, 1935), the Supreme Court, on June 29, 1935, handed down an opinion in MonroeCounty Auditor's Report,
It will be noted that in both these cases the motion to quash or set aside the appeal was made and sustained in the lower court at the very inception of the court proceeding, and the Supreme Court affirmed the order so made. The cases did not proceed to a hearing on the merits in the court below.
On the return of the record to the court below following our decision of the case, counsel for the county commissioners presented a petition to the lower court setting forth that although forty-one taxpayers had appealed from the report of county auditors only seventeen of them had signed the recognizance filed May 4, 1932; and only twenty-five of them had signed the new or amended recognizance filed December 23, 1932, and that seventeen of the appellant taxpayers had not signed or entered into the recognizance, and prayed the court to grant a rule to show cause why the appeal should not be dismissed. To the rule so granted the appellant taxpayers filed an answer setting forth that the appeal had been taken and filed on April 19, 1932 and on May 4, 1932 bond and recognizance in the sum of $1000 was approved by the court and filed; that on June 6, 1932 and July 11, 1932 general appearances were entered for the county commissioners by their present counsel; that by agreement of counsel on both sides the case was heard by Judge SWOYER, specially presiding, without a jury; that the hearings began August 17, 1932 and were continued until May 16, 1933; that on December 7, 1932, while the hearings were in progress, the county commissioners, by their counsel, first moved to quash the proceedings on the ground that the bond and recognizance were defective; that an answer was filed and on December 14, 1932 the rule was discharged; that on December 23, 1932 another recognizance was filed and *200 approved by the court; that on the same day the county commissioners obtained a rule to strike off said recognizance and dismiss the appeal which was discharged by the court on December 29, 1932. [It may be noted that no appeal was taken from the several orders of court discharging the rules to strike off the recognizances and dismiss the appeal]; that the issue was so proceeded with that on November 24, 1933 the court entered a decree nisi directing judgment to be entered against the commissioners jointly and severally to the use of the County of Susquehanna in the sum of $2,208.27 and on July 12, 1934 entered judgment against the said county commissioners jointly and severally, in the sum of $2,026.70, from which no appeal was taken. The answer further referred to the appeal to and proceedings in this court and the judgment before recited, offered an itemized statement of further surcharges to be made pursuant thereto, totalling $2,365.75, and averred that the court below was without authority to reconsider its action discharging said rules and now dismiss and set aside the appeal and proceedings consequent thereto.
The court below after consideration of the petition and answer, on October 21, 1935 made the rule absolute and dismissed the action (or appeal) of the taxpayers, at their costs. The appellant taxpayers appealed to this court.
We will assume for the purposes of this case that both of the recognizances filed in the court below were defective within the ruling of the Supreme Court in Mayo's Appeal and Monroe CountyAuditor's Report, but it does not follow that the effect of those decisions is to invalidate a judgment duly entered in the court below and not appealed from, or a judgment of this court from which no appeal has been allowed, entered after a full and complete hearing on the merits. See In re Auditor's Report,
As before pointed out, in each of those cases, at the *201 very inception of the proceedings in the court of common pleas and before there was any hearing on the merits, the county officers, whose official conduct was complained of, excepted to the recognizance filed and moved to quash the appeal, because appellants had not complied with the requirements of the statute in respect to the recognizance. In the present case counsel entered a general appearance for the county commissioners, agreed that the case might be heard by a judge without a jury, proceeded to a hearing on the merits and carried on the hearings in the case for nearly four months before they raised any objection to the recognizance already filed and approved, and moved to quash the appeal. In each of those cases the court below quashed or set aside the appeal following the motion to do so, and this action was affirmed in the Supreme Court. In the present case the court discharged the rule to quash and no appeal from such action was taken by the commissioners, but on the contrary they continued in the trial on the merits, resulting in a judgment against them in the court below, which became final because not appealed from, and a judgment in this court directing further surcharges against them. The question of the insufficiency of the recognizance or recognizances was not raised in this court, the argument of the commissioners' counsel being confined to the contention that they were not, on the merits legally liable to further surcharges.
While the entering of a proper recognizance, as provided by statute, is a "basic procedural requirement"1 in an appeal to the court of common pleas from a county auditor's report, it does not go to the cause of action or subject matter, and being procedural in character a defect in the recognizance — as distinguished from the total want or absence of a recognizance — may be waived by a general appearance and a hearing or trial on the *202
merits. It is along the line of defects in service of process, to bring a party into court, which are always waived by the appearance of the party (Dewart v. Purdy,
The principle that objection to the jurisdiction may be taken at any stage of the proceedings applies only to cases where the court did not have jurisdiction of the subject matter (Rankin'sApp.,
For example, the municipal court has no jurisdiction in divorce. The judicial power in that class of cases has not been given it. If, notwithstanding this lack of jurisdiction over the cause of action, the municipal *204
court should issue a libel in divorce, no matter what a respondent might do in defense thereto, any decree of the court would be a nullity. cf. Caruso v. Gallo,
The "basic procedural requirement" imposed by statute in appeals from county auditors is very similar to that which our statute relating to actions of replevin requires as a prerequisite to the issuance of the writ. The plaintiff in that action must file a bond with approved security in double the value of the goods sought to be replevied. If this is not done, the writ will be quashed: Huron Leather Co. v. Sklar,
A similar construction has been placed by our appellate courts on other statutes directing the filing of a bond as a procedural requirement before the court acquires jurisdiction. The Act of March 17, 1869, P.L. 8, which authorizes attachments against fraudulent debtors, as amended by the Act of May 24, 1887, P.L. 197, requires as a condition precedent to the issuance of the writ that the plaintiff shall file a prescribed affidavit and execute and file with the prothonotary a bond with approved security, to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for the use of the parties interested, in double the amount claimed, conditioned to pay the defendant all legal costs, fees and damages which he may sustain by reason of such attachment, if the plaintiff fail to prosecute the attachment with effect or it be quashed, dissolved or ended. We held in Locey v. Sterling Motor Truck Co.,
In Wright v. Millikin,
In Nagle v. Nagle,
"An absolute want of jurisdiction over the subject matter may be taken advantage of at any stage of the proceedings; but where the court has jurisdiction of the subject matter, an objection based on lack of jurisdiction of the person or irregularity incommencement of the proceeding, or some other exceptional matter, must be raised in limine or it will be waived": (italics supplied) 15 C.J. 847, sec. 166. The distinction thus referred to is preserved in the construction and interpretation of the Act of March 5, 1925, P.L. 23, which has changed the practice respecting appeals on jurisdictional questions and provides that whenever in any proceeding at law or in equity the question of jurisdiction over the defendant or the cause of action for which suit is brought is raised in the court of first instance, it shall be preliminarily determined and the decision may be appealed to the Supreme or Superior Court as in cases of final judgments, and a failure to appeal within fifteen days will be deemed a waiver of all objections to jurisdiction over the defendant personally. But a want of jurisdiction of the cause of action may be taken advantage of after final judgment: Grant v. Carpenter's Dist.Council,
We think the same construction applies to a question of jurisdiction based on a procedural matter; — that it was the duty of the present appellees if they claimed that the recognizance filed pursuant to the statute was defective, to raise the question at the outset of the proceedings and before any hearing on the merits; and again, following their unsuccessful attempt to quash *208
the proceeding after four months of defense on the merits, it was their duty to appeal on the question of jurisdiction to the appellate court: Tourison's Est.,
The second, third and fourth assignments of error are sustained. The order appealed from is reversed. The judgment of $2026.70 against the defendants is reinstated, and the record is remitted to the court below with directions that it proceed to carry into effect the judgment of this court entered July 18, 1935. Costs to be paid by appellees.