Board of Chosen Freeholders v. Clarke

47 A. 478, 65 N.J.L. 271, 1900 N.J. LEXIS 179
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 19, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 47 A. 478 (Board of Chosen Freeholders v. Clarke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Chosen Freeholders v. Clarke, 47 A. 478, 65 N.J.L. 271, 1900 N.J. LEXIS 179 (N.J. 1900).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Fort, J.

James C. Clarke, the plaintiff in error in this-case, was elected to the office of register of deeds and mortgages of the county of Hudson at the general election held in that county in the year 1899, and assumed the duties of said office on the 9th day of April, 1900.

In 1898 the legislature of this state passed an act entitled ' “An act respecting the fees of surrogates, county clerks and county registers of deeds and mortgages in counties of the first class and providing salaries for said officers.” This [273]*273statute was approved by the governor April 2d, 1898. Pamph. L., p. 226.

It was provided by the fifth section of the act that all acts and parts of acts inconsistent therewith should be repealed and that the act should take effect, as to the officers to which it applied, at the expiration of the office of the present surrogates, county clerks and registers of deeds and mortgages, respectively.

The plaintiff in error was not in office at the time of the passage of the act, but assumed office upon the expiration of the term of his predecessor, who was in office at the time the act was passed, hence if, in other respects, the act is valid, it is applicable to the plaintiff in error. Prior to the passage of this act, in all the counties in this state, by general statute and by long-recognized practice, the fees attached to the offices of surrogate, county clerk and register of deeds, in the several counties of the state, went to, and were received by, the officers holding such offices individually for their own uses and purposes. The act of April 3d, 1898, had for its purpose the abolition of the fee system in counties of the first class, that is, counties containing a population exceeding one hundred and fifty thousand inhabitants; and it established a system by which the fees, from the time the act became operative in any county, should be paid into the county treasury and the officer be compensated by a fixed salary, stated in the act at $7,500, to be paid by the county collectors of the respective counties to which the act applies, in equal monthly payments, in full compensation for all services rendered by such officers, to be “in lieu of all fees and other compensation whatever heretofore provided or allowed by law,” and said act provides for the selection, by such officers, of the necessary deputies and assistants in their said offices, who shall be entitled to receive such compensation as shall be approved by the board of chosen freeholders of their respective counties, to be paid monthly by the proper disbursing officers of such counties, &c.; and it is enacted by the first section of the act that all fees payable by law for any acts done or services rendered in connection with any of said offices shall [274]*274continue to be payable and shall be received and collected by said surrogates, clerks and registers, respectively, for the sole use of their respective counties as public moneys belonging to said counties, and shall be accounted for by said surrogates, clerks and registers of deeds and paid over as by the statute it is provided.

P»y the second section of the act said surrogates, clerks and registers are required to keep account of all fees and moneys received by them for the use of the county, and the statute expressly declares that they “shall, on or before the 15th day of each month, make a full and itemized statement and return, verified by oath, to the county collectors of their respective counties of the fees, costs, allowances, percentages and all perquisites of whatever kind received by them, or by any assistant or other person in their office or employment, for any act done or service rendered in connection with said office, and all sums which may have been charged or taxed or which shall have accrued or become payable for any such service during the month preceding the making of said statement.” Such statements are required to be made under oath and filed in the office of the county collectors, to remain public records, and it is made the duty of the county auditor to audit such statements, and then the statue proceeds as follows: “And, on or before the 20th day of each month, the said surrogates and county clerks and the said registers of deeds and mortgages shall, respectively, pay over the amount of such fees and moneys to the county collectors of their respective counties, under penalty of $100 for each day’s neglect to filé such certificate or pay over such money, to be recovered in the name of the board of chosen freeholders of such county where said default shall occur, for the use of said county, in an action upon contract in the Supreme Court or in the Circuit Court of said county.”

The declaration in the case here under review is founded upon the clause last quoted, and is a suit, by the plaintiff in error against the defendant in error, to recover the sum of $100 as and for the penalty provided by law for the default of the plaintiff in error in failing to make a statement and [275]*275return ancl file the same with the collector of the county, duly verified by his oath, as required by law, of the fees, costs, &c., received by him in his said office, or by the assistants in said office, for any acts done or services rendered in connection with his said office for the month ending May 15th, 1900.

The declaration also contains the common counts. The general issue was pleaded. The suit was tried before the circuit judge of Hudson county, without a jury, by consent of the parties. A judgment was given in favor of the plaintiff for $100 and costs of suit. It is that judgment which is here for review.

The defence below and the argument here is placed upon a single ground, viz., that the act of April 2d, 1898, is unconstitutional in that it is contrary to article 4, section 7, paragraph 11, of the constitution of this state, as it is amended, in that it is a “private, local and special law, regulating the internal affairs of counties/5 and therefore wholly inoperative and void, and that the plaintiff in error cannot be required by virtue of said act of April 2d, 1898, to account to the collector for the fees so received by him, for the reason that if said act is void, because in conflict with said provision of the constitution, he, under the law applicable to his office, is entitled to have and receive said fees to his own use. Is the act local and special? Its title clearly limits its operative force to counties of the first class, and by the act for the classification of counties, counties of the first class are fixed as such counties only as have within their territorial limits, as shown by any federal or state census, a population exceeding one hundred and fifty thousand inhabitants. Pamph. L. 1883, p. 20; Gen. Stat., p. 420.

The fact that the classification in this statute is by the description of counties of the first class, will not’ make the act general, unless it would be general if the description were that the act was only applicable to counties in this state now or hereafter having a population exceeding one hundred and fifty thousand inhabitants, as shown by any federal or state census. Warner v. Hoagland, 22 Vroom 62; In re Sewer Assessments for Passaic, 25 Id. 156.

[276]*276If a classification would be illusory if it were based upon population definitely stated, it is equally illusory if based upon reference to the Classification act of cities or counties.

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Bluebook (online)
47 A. 478, 65 N.J.L. 271, 1900 N.J. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-chosen-freeholders-v-clarke-nj-1900.