Court Opinion

ID: 3860082
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 08:48:05.212731+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:41:17.966700
License: Public Domain

Argued April 12, 1927.
This appeal grows out of the audit of the accounts of the school board of Sykesville Borough for the fiscal year ending July 1, 1924. The auditors surcharged the directors with two items, $363 paid to G. E. Rupert, and $1,000 paid to Raine 
Long, on contracts for labor and materials for completing and fitting out an additional school room without advertising for bids as required by section 617 of the School Code (1911, P.L. 350). The directors had also failed to take and record the action required by section 403 (1911, P.L. 330).
From the surcharge, the directors appealed to the common pleas (act May 21, 1913, P.L. 288). There the appeal was dismissed on the ground that the expenditures were illegally made, but the court held that in the circumstances disclosed, the directors should be subrogated to the right to assert the claims of the contractors with whom the school board had dealt, and that this subrogated liability would extinguish, and, therefore in this proceeding, could be set off against, the surcharge; an order (appearing in the reporter's statement) was made to give effect to this view. From that order, taxpayers who had intervened below, have appealed.
Section 403 provides in part as follows: "The affirmative vote of a majority of all the members of the board of school directors in every school district in this Commonwealth, duly recorded, showing how each member voted, shall be required in order to take action on the following subjects...... Entering into contracts of any kind, including the purchase of fuel or any supplies, where the amount involved exceeds one hundred dollars." Section 617 provides: "Every contract in excess of three hundred dollars ($300), made by any *Page 340 
school district in this Commonwealth, for the introduction of heating, ventilating, or lighting systems, or the construction, reconstruction, or repair of any school building, or work upon any school property, shall be awarded to the lowest and best bidder, after due public notice has been given, upon proper terms asking for competitive bids."
In the opinion filed below, the learned court states: The contracts for these improvements were absolutely void, and the payments authorized by the directors thereunder were without the vestige of legal sanction; therefore the auditors' findings must be sustained and appeal dismissed." With that conclusion the case was at an end; the school directors had not sustained the burden of establishing before the auditors, the credits claimed by them as required by the act of May 13, 1915, P.L. 311. Instead of ending the proceeding, the court below stated that the hardship on the directors was so great "and the injustice of dismissing this appeal without condition is so apparent under the undisputed facts and circumstance of this case, that the court feels justified in endeavoring to find and apply some relief from the consequences of a surcharge so flagrantly inequitable though seemingly legal in every aspect."
To afford this relief the doctrine of subrogation was deemed applicable, and on that theory, the order appealed from was made. Subrogation is not applicable for several reasons. It is sufficient for present purposes to say that it cannot be applied where there is no right to which one can be subrogated, and here there is none. The learned court below went on the theory that the contractors, if unpaid for the work and materials, could recover, not by suit on the void contract, but by suit for a quantum meruit. The decisions are otherwise. Disregard of section 403 in respects in which it was disregarded by these school directors, was *Page 341 
held to prevent recovery on the implied contract to pay for services rendered as a teacher; Waltman v. Albany Twp. School District, 64 Pa. Super. 458, and cases there cited; at p. 469 this court said: "Regular official action, evidenced by official minutes, is what the statute requires to ground such an action as the present, and because it is a statutory requisition, all equities and implied liabilities are excluded: Cascade School District v. Lewis School District, 43 Pa. 318; Addis v. Pittsburgh, 85 Pa. 379; Ayers v. New Castle, 10 Pa. Super. 559. " The reason for so holding is that the school board had no power to make an agreement to pay on the rule of a quantum meruit. Violation of section 617 gives the same result: Hanover Twp. School District's Audit, 265 Pa. 157, 164, in which the Supreme Court said: "While our conclusion imposes a heavy burden upon appellants, the court is without power to relieve them from the effect of their own carelessness or error, whichever it may be." See, too, Jackson v. Conneautville Borough School District, 280 Pa. 601, 605; Kreusler v. McKees Rocks School, 256 Pa. 281, 285, 291; In re: School District of Mauch Chunk Twp., 75 Pa. Super. 434, 439; Summit Hill School Directors 258 Pa. 575, 579.
Any other conclusion would result in a substantial modification of the school code. Section 516 empowers the school board "to use and pay out, in the manner herein provided, any funds of the district ...... subject to the provisions of this act. The use or payment of any public school funds of any school district in the Commonwealth, in any manner or for any purpose not provided in this act, shall be illegal." Section 517 provides that any "director voting for, or any officer approving, a school order for the payment of school funds for any other purpose, or drawn in any other manner, than that provided in this act, shall ...... be individually liable to the district for the amount thereof." *Page 342 
These provisions must be read with sections 403 and 617 in dealing with the conduct of the directors. It follows therefore that the learned court was wrong in assuming that the contractors C.E. Rupert and Raine  Long could have recovered against the school district on a quantum meruit. The order complained of subrogated the directors "to the rights of the said [contractors] to whom said orders were drawn, honored, and paid, by said district, with the same force and effect as if the claims of said [contractors] had been by them assigned to the said directors who are made liable for said cost by said surcharge, the said directors being legally converted by said surcharge into holders of said claims for value." But as there had never been any right in the contractors to recover from the school district for the value of the labor and material furnished pursuant to the void contracts, there was no right which the directors could enforce through them. The order derives no support from Craig v. Lininger, 61 Pa. Super. 339, relied on by appellees. In that case it appeared that defendant had been overpaid by the county for services as District Attorney, and, the commissioners, having been surcharged by the auditors, were held to be subrogated to the right of the county to get back from the overpaid officer the amount of the overpayment on the ground that he held money which in equity and good conscience should be repaid by him to the county, but which, on his refusal to repay, the commissioners were required to pay and had paid on his behalf. There was a right in the county to collect from the District Attorney. At bar there was no right in the contractors; to the right of the county, the commissioners succeeded; at bar the contractors had no right of suit which the directors could take over "...... because it is a statutory requisition, all equities and implied liabilities are excluded;" Waltman v. School District, supra. *Page 343 
To sustain the order, would produce the result which the statute was designed to prevent; without competitive bidding the contractors remain paid and the school district would not receive the amount of the surcharge required by the statute. Its prohibitions operated on both contractors and directors; their arrangement for work and materials was against its provisions and against the public policy of the Commonwealth; the contractors and the directors are in pari delicto and the law will not aid them: Kreusler v. McKees Rocks School District, 256 Pa. 281, 292, 294; Kuhn v. Buhl, 251 Pa. 348,367, 370; N.Y.  P. Co. v. Coal Co., 286 Pa. 72; Hanover Twp. School District Audit, supra; In re: Removal of Coal Township School Directors ___ Pa. ___ (June 25, 1927).
The assignments of error are sustained, paragraphs four, five, six and seven are stricken from the order made below, and paragraphs one, two and three are ordered to stand as the judgment of the court; costs to be paid by the school directors.