Joos v. Commonwealth
Joos v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
By an Act of Assembly approved May 3,1915, P. L. 241, the plaintiff was authorized to bring this action against the Commonwealth to recover whatever might be legally due him as owner and publisher of a German newspaper in which there Avas published, by direction of the mercantile appraiser, the mercantile list of the County of Allegheny for the year 1885. Louis T. Brown Avas the county’s appraiser for that year, and on May 9,1885, approved plaintiff’s bill' for $4,152. After its approval he presented it to the auditor general, who declined to pay it, and he thereupon instituted a proceeding in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County to compel A. E. Mc-Candless, county treasurer, to pay him. A full report of that proceeding is found in Commonwealth v. McCandless, 129 Pa. 492, and, for the purpose of an intelligent understanding of the case now before us, we extract the following facts from it: To the alternative mandamus the county treasurer filed an answer, in which he averred that the paper OAvned and published by the plaintiff was a Sunday neAvspaper, and the publication of the mercantile appraiser’s list therein was not, therefore, legal. An issue was directed to determine Avhether the paper was or was not a Sunday publication. The verdict of the jury was that it was a Saturday newspaper. The court then considered the various acts of assembly relating to the publication of mercantile appraisers’ lists, and, in an elaborate opinion by the late learned Judge- Ewing, it was held that, under the statutes, the mercantile appraiser had no power to' authorize the publication of the mercantile list of dealers within the Cities of Pittsburgh and Allegheny, and for this, if for no other reason, the Commonwealth was not bound to pay the claim of the re
It is first to be observed that the question of the right of the plaintiff to recover for the publication of the list of dealers within the Cities of Pittsburgh and Allegheny must be regarded as res adjudicata, for it was distinctly passed upon by the court below adversely to him, and its action was affirmed by this court. The right given by the Act of 191,5 to bring this suit merely permits it to be brought with the right pf the Commonwealth to have its ■ liability determined by settled rules of law applicable to all litigation. The plaintiff’s claim of $4,152 is made up in this action of two items, (a) $1,628, for advertising the names of dealers within the cities of Pittsburgh and Allegheny; (b) $2,524, for advertising the names of dealers in Allegheny County outside of said cities, and the only question is whether he can recover for the second item. Whether he can do so depends upon statutory provisions. The Act of April 16, 1845, P. L. 532, authorized the Courts of Common Pleas of Allegheny and Philadelphia Counties to appoint an “appraiser of mercantile taxes” to ascertain and assess all dealers in accordance with the various acts of assembly then in force relating to tax upon vendors of merchandise. By the sixth section of the act the appraiser was directed to furnish each person and firm so assessed a written or printed notice of his classifications, giving at the same time to each dealer notice of the place and time at which appeals might be heard from his classifications. No authority is given in this act to the appraiser to make any publication in the newspapers. By Section 12 of the Act of April 22, 1846, P. L. 486, the fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth-sections of the Act of 1845 were extended to all the counties of the Commonwealth, with the provisos that the appraiser for each county should be appointed by its commissioners, and that the written or printed notice required by the sixth section of the Act of 1845, to be furnished by the ap
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.