Board of Commissioners of Lucas Co. v. Millard

4 Ohio N.P. 53
CourtLucas County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedNovember 23, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio N.P. 53 (Board of Commissioners of Lucas Co. v. Millard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Commissioners of Lucas Co. v. Millard, 4 Ohio N.P. 53 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

PüGSLEY, J.

This is an action brought by the county commissioners to recover of the defendant the sum of $111.89, and was submitted to the court upon the petition and briefs.

It is alleged in the petition that this sum of $111.89 was paid to the •defendant as fees for certain services charged by him as probate judge during the year from August 31, 1894, to August 31, 1895, and it is alleged that such charges were illegal, and that the defendant, was not entitled to receive payment of the same. The fees charged were for services rendered by the defendant in cases wherein the costs were payable out of the county treasury, and were as follows: Entering cases on the court •calendar, 4 cents each; indexing the same, 8 cents; recording cost bills, •8 cents per 100 words; indexing the same, 8 cents each; entering cash received on cash book, 8 cents per 100 words; indexing the same, 8 cents for each entry. The only question submitted to the court is, whether these charges or any of them were authorized by law.

Section 546, Revised Statutes, as amended March 22, 1893, (Laws of 1893, p. 105), provides what fees the probate judge shall receive for services rendered by him. It is agreed that the fees that were paid to the defendant in this case, are not specifically mentioned in section 546, but the claim is that the probate judge is required by law to keep the three books mentioned, viz: a court calendar, record of cost bills and a cash book, and to make entries in these books, and that by implication from other statutory provisions he is entitled for such services to the fees charged.

First as to the court calendar. The petition explains what that is. It is a book in which a memorandum is made of each day’s business, including the filing of papers in the various matters pending before said court, in the order in which they are filed; and it is stated that the various dockets which by law the probate judge is required to keep are afterwards made up from the memoranda so made on the so-called court calendar.

The sections of the Revised Statutes which are relied upon to support the validity of this charge are the following: Sections 4957, 4964, 533, « 547 and section 1260, as amended March 22, 1893.

By section 4957, the clerk of the court of common pleas is required to keep at least five books. Among these books are the trial docket and printed duplicates of the trial docket, and an -index to the trial docket [54]*54and to tbe printed duplicates of the trial docket. By section 4964, the-provisions pressribing the duties o.f clerks of the court of common pleas-shall, so far as'they are applicable, apply to clerks of other courts of record. By section 538, the probate judge is authorized and empowered to perform the duties of clerk of his own court, and the probate court is a court of record. Section 547 provides that “for any other services not herein provided for, the same fee shall be allowed as for similar services in the court of common pleas;” that is, if the probate judge is required, by law to render any service, and fees therefor are not specifically fixed he shall be allowed for such services the same fees as are allowed for similar services in the court of common pleas. And by section 1260, as amended March 22,1893, the clerk of the court of common pleas is allowed four cents for entering each case on the bar and court calendar each term, and four cents for indexing each case each term.

After a careful'examination of these statutory provisions, and after a due consideration of the briefs of counsel, I am clearly of the opinion that there is no law requiring or .authorizing the probate judge to keep-the book which is called the court calendar. It bears no resemblance-whatever, either in form or contents, or purpose, to the trial docket, or court calendar — or court docket, as it is called here — of the court of common pleas. The latter — the trial docket, or court calendar — is a book containing a list of the titles of all pending actions, together with an index, and upon that book the judge makes the entries, showing the verdicts, or judgments, or orders, that are rendered or made in the various actions. The statutory name for that book is tbe “trial docket.” It iscalled the “court calendar” only in section 1260, which prescribes the fees of the clerk; but they both mean the same thing.. No such book or docket is required to be kept by the probate judge. Section 528, Revised Statutes, prescribes the books whioh the probate judge must keep. They are twelve m number, but do not include a trial docket or court calendar; and as the statute prescribes what books tbe probate judge shall keep, section 4957, wbiph provides what books the clerk of the court of common pleas-shall keep, is not applicable to the probate judge. But if that section did apply, the court calendar of the probate judge in this case is wholly unlike the court calendar of the court of common pleas. According to-the allegations of the petition, it is a book in which memoranda are made each day of that day’s business. For example, if a paper is filed, instead of at once making the entry of the filing in the proper place on the proper docket, an entry of the filing is first made on this memorandum book; and the same is true as to any order made or action taken during the day, so that at the close of each day the memorandum book will show-all the papers filed and all the proceedings taken during the day. After-wards, from the memorandum book, the piroper entries are made in the various dockets and books required by law to be kept. Calling this memorandum book a court calendar does not make it such; it would be more-appropriately named, I think, a daily blotter, or a daily memorandum book. No such book is kept by the clerk of the court of common pleas; and any services rendered by the probate judge in keeping such a book are not similar to any services rendered by the clerk of the court of' common pleas for which a fee is allowed. Without doubt it is a very useful book, and; I should say, from the character of it as described, a. book of great convenience to the court and to the clerks, and especially to those cf the public who desire to know what business has been transacted during the day, without being compelled to examine all the various books and dockets upon which the entries are required to be made. But as there is no law authorizing or requiring such a book to be kept, compensation for keeping it cannot be allowed.

[55]*55Next, as to the charges for recording and indexing cost bills. Section -545, Revised Statutes, provides that each probate judge shall, in every case, examination or proceeding, make out, file, and record an itemized account of all fees by him received or charged therein. Recording the cost bills in all cases is therefore a duty imposed by law upon the probate judge. The book in which such cost bills are tc be copied or recorded is “a book required by the judge in the discharge of his official duties, ” and therefore a book which must be furnished by the county commissioners, as provided in section 523, Revised Statutes. But compensation for copying or recording cost bills in such book cannot be allowed or •charged, unless there is some statutory provision for it.

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4 Ohio N.P. 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-commissioners-of-lucas-co-v-millard-ohctcompllucas-1896.