Lehigh County v. Kleckner
Lehigh County v. Kleckner
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The only errors which we deem proper to notice, are, 1. Whether a county is liable on a quantum meruit for the expenses incurred in the erection of a county bridge; 2. Whether courts of another county have jurisdiction to try the cause. The 35th section of the Act of the 13th of June 1836, “ An Act relative to roads, highways and bridges,” provides for the manner of authorizing the building of a county bridge. And, by the 36th section, whenever a bridge shall be authorized and recorded as a county bridge, it is made the duty of the commissioners to procure an estimate of the cost, to provide in the county levies the money necessary to defray the same, and to proceed to have such bridge erected, by contract or otherwise, as shall seem to them expedient.
The first step, therefore, is to obtain proper authority to build the bridge; 2. To have an estimate made of the expense, to provide the ways and means for its payment; and lastly, the commissioners are directed to proceed to its erection in the manner directed in the Act. By the last clause, they are empowered to erect the bridge by contract; that is, by persons specially employed at a certain fixed price, or rate; or they may, if they like, build the same under their own immediate inspection and superintendence. The whole spirit and tenor of the Act looks only to these two modes of construction, and this for reasons, the wisdom of which this case illustrates in a striking manner. In no event, and under no pretext, as we conceive, are the commissioners at liberty to exceed the estimated expense of the works; for there is nothing to countenance the idea that the commissioners have authority either directly or indirectly to bind the county to pay the price or value ■ which a jury may affix to it. If this were permitted, there would be little use of the directions in the first clauses of the section. Why have an estimate, or why provide for payment of the ascertained value, if the commissioners are at liberty to disregard it entirely 1 This view of the Act is strengthened by the subsequent sections, which provide for the inspection of the bridge by men appointed by the Court of Quarter Sessions for that purpose, who are also required to deduct from the sum stipulated in the contract, when the work is not approved by the viewers. And the same may be said of the 43d section, which provides for the inspection of the bridge when erected by and under the superintendence of the commissioners. It is remarkable that ample authority to decrease the price is given, but none to increase it, for the reason, already given, that it was on no account permitted to exceed the estimated value. What would become of these salutary checks which the law has wisely imposed on the commissioners and the undertakers, if the contractor were at liberty to go into
Next, as to the jurisdiction. It is a strong argument against the decision of the Court of Common Pleas, that this is the first time, at common law, a right has been asserted to sue a public municipal corporation, except in the county where it is located. Although the action may be transitory, yet the forum where suit is brought against the corporation is local. At a very early period after the adoption of the constitution, it was ruled by the courts of the United States that a State was subject to suit by a citizen of another State; and yet it never entered into the mind of any person that the State of Maine, for example, was amenable to the courts of the United States in the State of Georgia. And this may serve to show the distinction between a suit brought against or in favour of a corporation. The latter must be brought against the person wherever he resides or may be found, whereas there is no
But what may be considered conclusive of this point is, that there is no mode of serving process pointed out by the Act, nor can a party reap the fruit of his judgment by execution. The serviee of process against corporations, and against counties and townships, is regulated by the Act of the 13th of June 1836, § 41 and 42, and the Act of the 15th of Apr’il 1834; and in neither Act is authority given to serve process, in any county except where they are located, unless as in the 42d section, where it is provided that in actions for damages, occasioned by a trespass or injury done by a corporation, where the officers of the corporation, or any of them, shall not reside in the county in which the trespass or injury shall be committed, process may be served in any county or place where they may he found. This provision would be totally unnecessary if the doctrine that a corporation is sueable in any county of the State be correct. It shows the legislative sense of the law in making provision for a case depending on peculiar circumstances. The manner of issuing executions against corporations is pointed out in the 72d and following sections of the Act of the I6th of June 1836, in which there is no indication of any authority for the courts of one county to issue an execution against a corporation located in a different county. And this indeed is true of all corporations whatever; much less would the court of Northampton have power to enforce a judgment rendered against another county — counties, townships, or other public corporate bodies, being expressly excepted from the operation of the Act. It would evince but little wisdom in the Legislature to give an action, without giving the courts power to cause process to be.
Judgment reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Lehigh County against Kleckner
- Cited By
- 22 cases
- Status
- Published