In re Financial Statement of School District

Opinion by

Linn, J.,

This appeal brings up the other branch of the inquiry into the conduct of the school directors of Mauch Chunk Township, referred to in the opinion this day filed to No. 34, October Term, 1920, ante p. 428. After the audit of the financial account of the school district as required by section 2625 of the School Code of 1911, P. L. 429, appellant, a taxpayer, duly appealed pursuant to section 2626. At the trial it was stipulated that the objections to the account and the effort to surcharge the directors should be limited to three specified items. Relief was granted as to one of these and refused as to the other two; the refusal resulted in this appeal.

The account is for the fiscal year ended on the first Monday of July, 1917. The items in question are (1) *437the compensation of $200 paid to Samuel Emanuel, secretary, and (2) compensation of $886.47 paid to Edward R. Eonemus, treasurer of the board. It was also agreed that the testimony taken in the equity suit (supra) “shall be considered as testimony taken in this case together with the interrogatories filed and answers thereto and all pleadings therein.” In his opinion disposing of this case, the learned judge said: “The requests for findings of fact filed in No. 2, October Term, 1917, in equity, were substantially the same as those presented in this appeal, and in the findings and conclusions of the chancellor filed in the equity proceedings and made a part of this opinion, may be found a full recital of the relevant facts as well as our conclusions as to the illegality and gross impropriety of selecting the compensated officers in rotation without regard to either fitness or efficiency for the very end and purpose that the emoluments should be equally shared by all the members of the board, and that these long continued illegal practices prejudicial to public interest and against public policy should be enjoined.” But he concluded: “While we have no disposition to palliate or excuse the vicious custom, we do not feel that the circumstances warrant us in depriving the secretary and treasurer of compensation and in surcharging the directors with the amount of the two orders in question, particularly in view of the conclusion that the continuance of the custom should be enjoined.”

We must differ from the court below. The circumstances warrant and the law requires the surcharge. This appellant taxpayer, acting for itself and for other taxpayers, brought to the attention of the court in the manner specified by law “the illegality and gross impropriety” and the “vicious custom” before the accounts for the fiscal year under investigation became final. Pursuant to section 2625 the auditors must “carefully audit and adjust the financial accounts of the school district for the preceding school year.” Section 2626 provides *438for an appeal from the auditors’ report and that “such appeal shall be disposed of by the court in like manner as appeals from county auditors’ reports are disposed of.” Section 2627 provides for the collection of sums charged against any person by the auditors if not appealed from. County auditors have power and it is their duty to surcharge officers with sums paid by their direction before the county had become fixed for the payment; they must “take notice of illegal disbursements of the public funds and to charge the officer who is guilty of misappropriation. It is the only protection the people have against the illegal acts of those who have charge of their pecuniary interests......” Com’rs v. County of Lycoming, 46 Pa. 496; see also Wayne Co. v. Waller, 90 Pa. 99, 103. As the expenditure complained of was made in violation of the statute and pursuant to a practice differing little if at all from that condemned some years ago by this court in Schmeck v. School District, 60 Pa. Superior Ct. 183, the payments cannot be sustained. They were made in disregard of specific statutory direction specifying how such obligations may be created and satisfied. Section 403 of the School Code, P. L. 330, provides, “The affirmative vote of a majority of all the members of the board......duly recorded, showing how each member voted, shall be required in order to take action on......fixing salaries or compensation of officers......” These directors made no such record. Their action is shown in the following quotation from the opinion of the learned court below: “At a meeting held July 10, 1917, in pursuance of an adjournment from the regular meeting held July 3d, all the members of the board being present, the minutes show as follows:

“ ‘The fol. bills were read and approved:
“‘E. R. Ronemus services as treas., 886.47
“ ‘S. A. Emanuel services as sec., 200.00’
*439“These orders were drawn in payment of services rendered by the treasurer and secretary for the school year ending July 3, 1917, and are the only evidence of any action by the board in relation to the compensation of these officers.”

If a school teacher after having rendered satisfactory services for months cannot recover compensation therefor because the school board that employed her has not made the record required by section 403, though she may know nothing about the records of the board, the officers of a school board, who have neglected their own duty to make such records should be in no better position; it has been repeatedly held that in such circumstances a school teacher may not recover: see Waltman v. School District, 64 Pa. Superior Ct. 458, and cases there cited. The learned court below apparently concedes that if the secretary and treasurer had not been paid and sought to recover, they should fail because they made no record required by section 403. But he concluded that since the payments were actually made “for a proper purpose” they should not be disturbed “in the absence of any suggestion of design, or purpose to be served by the failure” to comply with the statutory requirement. But that is not the test; the board must comply with the statute. The decision in Clark v. Lower Providence School District, 53 Pa. Superior Ct., p. 5, does not help the directors. Section 403 of the School Code was not applicable to the expenditure in question in that case; that section makes material additions to the Act of April 11, 1862, P. L. 471, a fact in itself showing legislative purpose not to be disregarded.

We must therefore sustain the 23d and 24th assignments of error. Inasmuch as the decree of the court below sitting in equity to No. 2, October Term, 1917, (in this court No. 34, October Term, 1920, this day affirmed) ordered the payment into the treasury of the school district of $783.40, of which an examination of the findings of facts shows that $440.24 was a part of the compensa*440tion paid to Edward R. Ronemus as treasurer on July 12, 1917, and therefore a part of item No. 4 now in dispute, the record is remanded with instructions to the court below by appropriate order to sustain the objection to the item No. 3 of the financial report, being the “salary of the secretary of the board, $200” and to sustain the objection to item No. 4 of said report “being fees of treasurer $886.47” and to surcharge the directors with said amounts, but reducing the item of $886.47 by such part or all of the amount of $440.24 which shall have been paid pursuant to the decree entered in the court below at No. 2, October term, 1917.

The costs of this appeal shall be paid by the school directors who are appellees.