Newton v. Luzerne County
Newton v. Luzerne County
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The plaintiff brought an action of assumpsit to recover an amount alleged to be due him for services in serving a subpoena, requiring the attendance of witnesses in the court of quarter sessions of Luzerne county. The parties agreed upon a case stated setting forth the facts under which the plaintiff alleged his right to recover, the court of common pleas entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and the county appeals.
The facts agreed upon are as follows: the plaintiff, at the request Dora-D. Sutton, the prosecutrix, served two subpoenas requiring' the attendance of witnesses in the court of quarter sessions of Luzerne county, on behalf of. the commonwealth in the case of Commonwealth v. B. Sutton; and the county of Luzerne was made liable for the costs of prosecution in said case. “ The contention of the plaintiff is that he should have been paid under the sheriff’s fee bill, approved July 11, 1901.” “ The 'contention of the defendant is that the county of Luzerne is not liable to plaintiff for compensation on account of said services.”
.. There is no suggestion in .the case stated that the -plaintiff ■performed the services at the request of-any officer authorized to bind the county by a contract; if he was entitled to recover of the- county at all it was because his fees were properly taxable as costs in the court of quarter sessions, and. as costs, in ■that court he ought to have recovered them, in case he had the right to do so. The practice of bringing an action in the common pleas, in such a case, is certainly not to be encouraged. We will, however, without conceding the correctness of the practice, consider the one question that arises under the facts as stated. The witnesses in question were subpoenaed by the plantiff at the request of the private prosecutrix, and not that of the district attorney of Luzerne county. The Act of
The judgment is reversed and judgment is now entered in favor of the county of Luzerne, with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.