Becker v. Phipps

89 Misc. 176, 153 N.Y.S. 486
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 89 Misc. 176 (Becker v. Phipps) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Becker v. Phipps, 89 Misc. 176, 153 N.Y.S. 486 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

Aspinall, J.

This is an application for a peremptory writ of mandamus made by the court crier of the county of Nassau, directed to the county comptroller [177]*177of Nassau county, commanding him to sign a warrant for the payment to the said court crier of a claim which had been duly audited, allowed and directed to be paid by the unanimous vote of the hoard of supervisors of the said county, which warrant was presented to the county comptroller for his signature. The claim made by the said court crier, the relator herein, is for traveling fees at the rate of five cents per mile, allowed to the court crier by subdivision 4, section 240, of the County Law, as amended by the Laws of 1-910, for each mile traveled by him in going to and returning from the place of attendance at courts of record within the county. The county judge of Nassau county, under and pursuant to the power vested in him by the provisions of the Judiciary Law, as hereinafter more fully set forth, did on December 27, 1910, appoint the relator herein to the position of court crier for the courts of record in the county of Nassau. This 'fact was communicated to the board of supervisors of said county by the said county judge, with the request that the salary of the said court crier should be fixed at the rate of $1,200 per annum in full for all services rendered. On December 27, 1910, the said board of supervisors unanimously adopted a resolution fixing the salary of the said court crier at the rate of $1,200 per annum, to be payable monthly in the same manner as other county employees are paid. That subsequently and under a similar resolution the compensation of the said court crier was fixed at the sum of $1,300 -per annum. It is conceded that the county judge, in his request to the board of supervisors, requested that the salary of the said court crier, the relator herein, be fixed at $1,200 per annum, in full for all services rendered,” which request was before the said board and was taken fully into consideration by them at the time of fixing the amount [178]*178of said salary. The claim of the relator herein is for $1,166.20, being for traveling fees from January 6, 1911, to and including the 28th day of November, 1914, for the days in which the courts of record were in session in Nassau county. A claim for this amount, duly verified, was thereafter presented to the county comptroller, claiming traveling fees at the rate of five cents per mile for going to and returning from the place of attendance • as such court crier on the days when the courts of record were in session. The county comptroller entertained said claim and thereupon affixed his certificate as such official disallowing the same, and the said claim and certificate were forwarded and presented to the board of supervisors for audit. The resolution upon the audit of said claim was duly passed and adopted unanimously by the said board of supervisors notwithstanding the objections of the county comptroller to the same; thereupon the aforesaid claim, together with a warrant directing the county treasurer of Nassau county to pay unto the said court crier, the relator herein, the sum of. $1,166.20, the amount of said claim as .audited and directed to be paid, and other papers unnecessary to enumerate, were delivered to the aforesaid county comptroller, when a request and demand was made upon him to sign the warrant aforesaid, but the county comptroller has refused, and.still refuses, to sign such warrant, for the reason as set .forth by him that the said claim was and is illegal, as, in his opinion, the court crier’s salary, as fixed by the board of supervisors as aforesaid, was in full for all services rendered by him. It is claimed by the said comptroller that the payment to the court crier of traveling fees at the rate of five cents per mile would be; in effect, additional compensation, to which he is not entitled, as he is not a per diem ■ employee. The contention of [179]*179the comptroller that the matter of mileage applies only when the court crier’s compensation is fixed at a per diem rate is, to my mind, untenable. It might have had some application prior to the 1910 amendment, but since the amendment went into effect eliminating the per diem compensation payable to criers, and vesting in the board of supervisors the power to fix the compensation of such employees, I am satisfied that that contention is without merit. The provisions of law applicable to this controversy are as follows: County charges: Section 240, subdivision 4, chapter 16, of the Laws of 1909, reads as follows: 11 The compensation of the criers of the courts of record within the county for attendance thereat, at three dollars per day and also traveling fees, at the rate of five cents per mile, for going to and returning from the place of attendance except in the county of Queens where the crier shall receive a yearly salary of twelve hundred dollars, payable monthly by the county.” And section 240, subdivision 4, chapter 34, of the Laws of 1910, provides as follows: ‘ ‘ The compensation of the criers of the courts of record within the county for attendance thereat, and also traveling fees, at the rate of five cents per mile, for going to and returning from the place of attendance.” And the Judiciary Law: Section 365 of the Laws of 1909, chapter 35, provides as follows: “ The crier appointed by the county judge of each county, except Kings • and Erie, to be crier for the courts of record held in his bounty is entitled to compensation fixed and to be paid as prescribed by law. * * * ” • And section 365 of the Laws of' 1910, chapter 34, and chapter 566 of the Laws of 1911 provide as follows: “ The crier appointed by the county judge of each county, except Kings and Erie, to be crier for the courts of record held in his county is entitled to a compensation to be fixed by the [180]*180board of supervisors and to be paid as prescribed by law. * * *” After a careful reading of these sections of the County and Judiciary Laws, applicable hereto, and the authorities, I am convinced that it was the intention of the legislature that the traveling fees were intended to be in addition to the compensation to be fixed by the board of supervisors, not as additional compensation, but to cover the expenses of traveling. It will be noted that the statute provides for compensation to be paid to court criers and also traveling fees. It is in the conjunctive and, I am satisfied/ means compensation and a - sum additional to cover traveling expenses. It is claimed by the county comptroller, which statement is verified by members of the board of supervisors in affidavits submitted by them, that it was understood by them, at the time of fixing the said court crier’s compensation, that said compensation was to be in full for all services rendered and that the said court crier was not to be paid any sum for traveling expenses. It is conceded that the request of the county judge, in notifying the board of supervisors of the appointment of the said Becker as court crier and that the said board fix his compensation at the rate of $1,200 per annum “ in full for all services rendered,” was before them. But even this statement, appearing in the request made by the county judge, to wit, in full for all services rendered,” could not deprive, the relator of his right to traveling fees as fixed by the statute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 Misc. 176, 153 N.Y.S. 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/becker-v-phipps-nysupct-1915.