Benewah County v. Mitchell

61 P.2d 284, 57 Idaho 1, 1936 Ida. LEXIS 92
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1936
DocketNo. 6340.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 61 P.2d 284 (Benewah County v. Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benewah County v. Mitchell, 61 P.2d 284, 57 Idaho 1, 1936 Ida. LEXIS 92 (Idaho 1936).

Opinions

AILSHIE, J.

Appellant had been engaged in the undertaking business in Benewah county for many years and at the regular election in 1932 was elected coroner of the *3 county and served in that office from January 7, 1933, to January 14, 1935. Between April 6, 1933, and August 16, 1933, he presented claims amounting to the sum of $302.80 for expenses incurred in the burial of seven deceased persons who had been county charges. The claims were all made “for burial of--”; then followed the names of decedents, the dates the services were rendered and the amount charged in each case. These claims were allowed by the board of commissioners and subsequently paid.

On April 11, 1935, this action was instituted by the county commissioners to recover the amount so paid the appellant, together with interest thereon from September 11, 1933. Appellant’s demurrer to the complaint was overruled and he thereupon answered, setting up two separate defenses. Demurrer to these separate defenses was sustained, and thereafter a motion was made on behalf of the county for judgment on the pleadings; the motion was sustained and judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff. This appeal is from the judgment.

The appellant was the duly qualified and acting coroner of the county during the period covered by the claims in controversy. His individual and private business was that of an undertaker and as such he buried the deceased indigent county charges. It is admitted that this was not a part of his official duty and he alleges in his separate answer “that the said services were rendered in the performance of the regular business of said defendant and were in no way connected with any of the services or duties incident to the office of coroner.” So there is no issue presented here as to the service rendered being any part of his official duties or falling within the provision of sec. 30-2302, I. C. A., with reference to the “burial of unclaimed bodies” by the coroner.

It seems clear to us that the question here presented is covered by sec. 30-1104, I. C. A., which provides as follows :

“No county officer must, except for Ms own services, present any claim, account or demand for allowance against the county, or in any way advocate the relief asked on the claim or demand made by another.
*4 “Any citizen and taxpayer of the county in which he resides may appear before the board and oppose the allowance of any claim or demand made against the county.”

The coroner is a county officer and by the provisions of the foregoing section was forbidden to present a claim against the county for any service other than his official service. This section of the statute not only lays a prohibition against a county officer presenting a claim for any other than “his own services” but has the effect of declaring a public policy with reference to the conduct of such officers. The spirit of this section is reinforced by sec. 57-202, I. C. A., which reads as follows:

“State, county, district, precinct and city officers must not be purchasers at any sale nor vendors at any purchase made by them in their official capacity.”

This court had occasion to consider a similar state of facts in the case of McUoberts v. Boar, 2'8 Ida. 163, 152 Pac. 1046, where a county treasurer entered into a contract with the board of commissioners of his county, whereby he agreed to perform the necessary services in “bringing the land indexes of the county up to present ownership,” for which services the commissioners agreed to pay him the sum of $75 per month. In discussing and passing upon this contract the court said:

“The first impression one might receive from this last section is that no county officer must present any claim against the county except for his own services, or advocate the claim of another. However, upon further consideration, a more reasonable interpretation of that statute would be that no county officer may present to the county any claim for services rendered outside of his official duties; and, therefore, he would be precluded from presenting a claim for any extra work done under a contract, or for extra service rendered in the performance of his official duties. He is not obliged to perform any act or acts not prescribed by law, but if he chooses so to do, for such extra services he cannot claim additional compensation and thereby indirectly accomplish what the law prohibís him from doing directly, viz., to increase his emoluments during his term of office.....
*5 “Even though respondent in the ease at bar did not enter into the contract in question in his official capacity, but as a private citizen, such contract is nevertheless void; and the compensation paid thereunder is recoverable to the county.
“The acceptance by a public officer of private employment which conflicts with his public duties is sufficient to make such a contract void as against public policy. An official’s duty is to give to the public service the full benefit of a disinterested judgment and the utmost fidelity. Any agreement or understanding by which his judgment or duty conflicts with his private interest is corrupting in its tendency.....The fact that the acceptance of such employment was without fraud and prejudice to the interest of the taxpayers is immaterial. Even in the absence of statutory provisions, such a contract is void; as a public official cannot make a contract to regulate his official conduct by considerations of private benefit to himself. (See 6 Ruling Case Law, pp. 739, 740.)”

It is urged here that the foregoing quotations from McRoberts v. Hoar were mere dicta and not necessary or essential to the decision of that case. We are unable to agree with counsel that the ruling there announced was mere dictum. It is true that the same final judgment' would have been reached in the ease without the discussion above quoted, but the decision would have been incomplete and misleading had the court affirmed the judgment which had held the transaction legal without passing on its legality. In other words, the judgment was not affirmed on the ground that the contract was valid but rather because the acts performed under the contract were not embraced within the terms of the statute authorizing removal from office.

The McRoberts-Hoar case was instituted for the purpose of removing the county treasurer from office for violation of sec. 7459, Rev. Codes (I. C. A., see. 19-4215). The trial court found that the claims presented arid allowed were proper charges against the county and that the contract with the county for doing the index work on the books was a valid and legal contract. This court held that the facts *6 found did not bring the ease within the ouster statute (see. 19 — 4215, I. C. A.) and that the judgment should be affirmed on that ground and then said:

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Bluebook (online)
61 P.2d 284, 57 Idaho 1, 1936 Ida. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benewah-county-v-mitchell-idaho-1936.