Board of Commissioners v. Bromley

8 N.E. 923, 108 Ind. 158, 1886 Ind. LEXIS 203
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1886
DocketNo. 13,000
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 8 N.E. 923 (Board of Commissioners v. Bromley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Commissioners v. Bromley, 8 N.E. 923, 108 Ind. 158, 1886 Ind. LEXIS 203 (Ind. 1886).

Opinion

Niblacsk, J.

The proceeding which led to* this appeal was commenced by the filing of a claim by William Bromley against Montgomery county, before the board of commissioners of that county, for services as overseer of the poor,, while formerly acting as trustee of Union township of the county in question.

The commissioners rejected the claim, and Bromley appealed to the circuit court,, where the cause was tried without a jury.

At the request of one of the parties, the circuit court made a special finding of the facts,, which may be synoptically stated as follows:

That Bromley was the duly elected, qualified and acting [159]*159trustee of said township of Union from the 17th day .of April, 1882, to and including the 17th day of April, 1884; that during all that interval of time, Sundays excepted, Bromley, as such trustee, kept his office open for the transaction of the township business, performing some duty as trustee of said township upon every working day during his official term; that for his services, as such township trustee, Bromley charged, and was allowed and paid, the sum of two' dollars-per day for each and every day of his term of office, Sundays-only*excepted, out of the township funds of his township; that a room, called an office, for the transaction of the township business, was provided at the expense of the township; that the duties devolving upon Bromley during his term were so extended and continuous as to require him to be in and keep his office open every working day for the transaction of official business; that during his official term Bromley performed the duties of overseer of the poor of his township, in which the city of Crawfordsville was situate, and which contained a population of about ten thousand persons, of which a large number were -poor people, requiring almost daily attention of some kind; that during every day on which he, Bromley, performed any duty as overseer of the poor, he also performed some service as township trustee for which he had been paid out of the township fund as above stated; that during his term of office, he was, for three hundred days, engaged in the performance of his duties as overseer of the poor of his township, for which he had received no compensation ; that his, Bromley’s, claim for services as overseer of his township was made out, duly certified and filed with the auditor of Montgomery county, on the 9th day of May, 1884.

Upon the facts thus specially found, the circuit court came to the conclusion that Bromley ought to recover a compensation for his services as overseer of the poor at the rate of two dollars per day for three hundred days, and that he was [160]*160consequently entitled to have judgment against Montgomery county for $600.

Over exceptions reserved, judgment was rendered accordingly.

Error is assigned only upon the conclusions of law at which the circuit court thus arrived, the argument in support of the • assignment of error being that a township trustee can not receive two full, separate and distinct compensations for the same day’s services, that is to say, that a township trustee can not receive from the township fund two dollars "for a day’s services rendered in the transaction of ordinary township business, and then demand and receive an additional compensation out of the county treasury for services performed on the same day as overseer of the poor.

The first section of “An act for the relief of the poor,” approved June 9th, 1852, provided that “the township trustees of the several civil townships of this State shall be the overseers of the poor” within their respective townships, and shall perform all the duties with reference to the poor of their respective townships that may be prescribed by law. 1 G. & H. 493. That section is still in force, subject only to the intervening legislation reducing the number of township trustees to one in each township. R. S. 1881, section 6066. The second section of the same act further provided that “ Every township trustee shall, in discharging the duties prescribed in this act, be designated an ‘ovei’seer of the poor,’ ” and that section is still in force. R. S. 1881, section 6067. The twentieth section of the act in question (R. S. 1881, section 6085), still further provided that the overseer of the poor in each township should be entitled to receive one dollar per day for each day necessarily employed in the discharge of his duties as sxxch overseer of the poor, to be allowed by the board of commissioners of his couxxty. The same per diem compensation was then allowed to a township trustee while engaged in the performance of his other dirties, to be paid out of the township fund. 1 R. S. 1852, 290.

[161]*161It was, in effect, decided in the case of Board, etc., v. Fischer, 86 Ind. 139, that all laws theretofore relating to the •compensation of township trustees, whether acting as overseers of the poor or otherwise, had been superseded and repealed by the acts of March 8th, 1873, and of March 12th, 1875, respectively, and that under each of those acts a township trustee was only entitled to receive the per diem compensation therein respectively allowed without reference to the particular services which he might have performed, payable in all cases only out of the township fund; and to that construction of the acts in question we still adhere. The various statutory provisions prescribing the duties, as well as the compensation, of township trustees, have been enacted upon the evident theory that all the time of each trustee would not be occupied in the discharge of the duties of .his office. That is well illustrated by the provisions of section 6008, R. S. 1881, which requires a township trustee to designate certain days in each week, or month, in which he will attend to the business of his township, and to cause notice to be given of the days so designated. It is equally evident that when the present township system was entered upon, it was with the expectation that the time which a township trustee should devote to the business of overseeing the poor should be kept and charged for separately from the time occupied in the discharge of other official duties.

This inference is fully justified by the provision of the act of June 9th, 1852, which made services as overseers of the poor a charge upon the county funds of the several counties, when all other services required of a township trustee were to be paid for out of the proper township fund. The policy of paying for services as overseer of the poor out of a separate fund seems, as shown by the case of Board, etc., v. Fischer, supra, to have been abandoned for a series of years, but it has been returned to by the act of March 31st, 1879.

The 32d section of that act is in these words : The per [162]*162diem of township trustees shall be as follows: For each actual' day’s service they shall be allowed, to be paid out of the township fund, two dollars: Provided, That for all services as overseer of the poor, said township trustee shall be paid out of any funds in the county treasury not otherwise appropriated, on the order of the board of county commissioners.” That section is still in force. See R. S. 1881, section 6009.

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.E. 923, 108 Ind. 158, 1886 Ind. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-commissioners-v-bromley-ind-1886.