Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1900

Commonwealth ex rel. McManus v. Ricketts

Commonwealth ex rel. McManus v. Ricketts
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania · Decided July 11, 1900 · Dean, Fell, Green, McCollum, Mitchell
196 Pa. 598; 46 A. 900; 1900 Pa. LEXIS 563

Commonwealth ex rel. McManus v. Ricketts

Opinion of the Court

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Mitchell,

In April, 1898, Wilkes-Barre was a city of the third class, but under a special charter granted in 1871. The charter provided for a tax receiver and in accordance with its provisions, the appellee was duly appointed for a term of three years. His appointment and title at that time are unquestioned. In September of the same year, by ordinance and other proper proceedings Wilkes-Barre surrendered its charter of 1871 and became a city of the third class under the general Acts of May 23, 1874, P. L. 230, and May 23, 1889, P. L. 277. It is claimed by appellant, city treasurer under the new government, that the appellee’s functions as tax receiver were thereby terminated, and this is the question for decision.

It is agreed in the case stated that the change was made under section 57 of the Act of 1874, P. L. 269, and it is to that we must turn for a solution. By its provisions the city after the date of the governor’s certificate shall be governed and controlled by the act, but all its property and estates shall remain vested in the city unchanged and as before the surrender; “ all of the elected officers therein shall hold their respective offices until the expiration of the term for which they were respectively elected, and shall have all of the rights and powers which belong by law to them respectively, under the laws in existence at the date of the surrender as aforesaid; no such acceptance shall be construed to be a repeal or surrender of any rights, powers, privileges and franchises heretofore conferred by law *601on such city, not inconsistent with the provisions of this act; the mayor and councils, school directors or controllers and other officers of such city shall continue to hold their respective offices until the Friday succeeding the third Tuesday of February next following the date of the expiration of their office as fixed by law before the surrender of the former charter.” The object of these provisions relating to the continuance of the officers until the expiration of their respective terms, is plainly to make the change in government with as little disturbance as possible of the current routine of the city business. Perhaps incidentally also they were intended to prevent a dominant majority in councils from vacating all the offices at will and starting a new scramble, by a flank movement of this kind bringing the city under a different law. It is true that the clause first quoted mentions only elected officers, but the last clause makes no such restriction. It includes the mayor and councils, school directors or controllers and “ other officers,” and provides that they shall hold their respective offices until after “ the date of the expiration of their office as fixed by law before the surrender of the former charter.” Looking at the clear general intent, to continue the current city business without a break, the only fair construction of the section is to include such offices of general and important function in the government of the city as that of tax receiver, though not elective. The duties of the tax receiver and the city treasurer are not wholly incompatible, as is-shown in the opinion of the learned judge below, and for the adjustment of their respective powers, at least temporarily, we may quote what was said on a similar question in Lloyd v. Smith, 176 Pa. 218: “In an exchange of offices there may naturally be some overlapping of terms and duties, and if in the legislative view the need for a controller was immediate, but the existing terms of the auditors prevented his present assumption of all the duties that would finally pertain to his office, it would not have been unwise, certainly not unconstitutional, to meet the case by a temporary expedient. The legislature has not done so expressly, but it has passed an act which can best be carried out by such a construction. In adopting it we are preserving the substance and plain intent of the act, wdthout doing violence to any of its terms.”

This view disposes of the contention so far as the present *602party defendant is concerned, and entitles him to judgment. The larger question whether the office of tax receiver is abolished after the expiration of the term of the present incumbent, or may continue under the charter of 1871, notwithstanding the election of a city treasurer under the later acts, is therefore not raised by the case stated, and must wait until it is brought before us by proper parties on a new record.

Judgment affirmed.

Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.