Board of Commissioners v. Van Slyck

52 Kan. 622
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 52 Kan. 622 (Board of Commissioners v. Van Slyck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas 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. Van Slyck, 52 Kan. 622 (kan 1894).

Opinion

[625]*625The opinion of the court was delivered by

JohnstoN, J.:

This was an action by the board of county commissioners of Graham county, in which they seek to recover upon the official bond executed by B. Van Slyck, as county clerk, and Jerome Shoup and William Wells, as sureties thereon. In the petition, it is alleged that Van Slyck was duly elected county clerk in November, 1885, and that he duly qualified and entered upon the duties of the office on January 11, 1886. It is then averred that he has received various amounts as fees for official services of which he failed and neglected to keep an account or present a statement of the same to the board of county commissioners, as the law requires, and that these fees have never at any time been deducted from the salary allowed the county clerk, nor from any quarterly installment of his salary, as the statute requires. It is alleged that, on four different occasions, he received different sums of money as statutory fees for services in and about the sale and transfer of school lands, namely: $37.75, on April 2,1887; $63.70, on July 2,1887; $25.50, on January 3, 1888; and $27.90, on October 1, 1888. It is then alleged that, at various times from January 11, 1886, to January 9, 1888, he collected as transfer fees for entering various conveyances of lands and town lots the aggregate sum of $91.80. These several amounts are set forth in separate counts of the petition, and it is averred that, on December 19, 1892, the county attorney made a demand in writing for the return and payment of the same, which was refused, and in each count there is a demand that the court in rendering judgment shall add 100 per cent, as a penalty to the amount of recovery, and also a fee of $25 to the county attorney for the prosecution of the action. Defendants demurred to the petition of the plaintiff, and, among other grounds, alleged that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. This demurrer was sustained by the court, and, the plaintiff electing to stand upon its petition, it was [626]*626adjudged that the action be dismissed, and that the defendants recover their costs. Upon this ruling, two questions are i’aised for consideration: First, whether the county clerk is required to account for the fees collected, in order that the amount of the same may be deducted from each quarterly installment of salary; and, second, if he must, whether the action to recover these amounts is barred by the lapse of time.

Upon the first question, there is little room for discussion or interpretation. The county clerk is allowed a fixed salary, graduated according to the population of the county, and the statute prescribes that such salary is allowed as full compensation for all services by law required to be performed by him. Originally, the compensation of county clerks was derived from fees alone, which they were authorized to collect for their services, and they were permitted to retain all fees earned and collected; but, in 1875, the policy of the state was changed in this respect, as far as practicable, when it was enacted that the county clerk should be allowed a fixed salary, to be paid by the county. (Laws of 1875, ch. 96.) To carry out this policy and statutory provision, the county clerk was required to keep an account of the fees collected, in a book to be provided for that purpose, showing the amount charged, the amount received, from whom, for what purpose, and the date thereof. Another requirement was, that he should present to the board of county commissioners a quarterly statement, under oath, of the amount thus received by him during the preceding quarter, together with the amount of fees charged and which were due and unpaid, and that the same should be filed with the register of deeds. Another section fixes the salary of the county clerk in accordance with the population of the county, and provides that such salary should be paid “as full compensation,” and that the same should “be in full for all the services by law required to be performed in their respective offices whatsoever.” It was further provided, that the salaries should be paid in quarterly installments, upon the order of the county commissioners; but it was provided “that [627]*627the amount charged by each county clerk as fees herein provided for the preceding quarter shall be first deducted from said quarterly installment.” Penalties are provided for the failure to make the quarterly report as the law requires, and the statute prohibits an allowance of salary by the county board until the required report is made by the clerk. The policy of the state in this respect has remained unchanged since the enactment of the law of 1875, and while there have been amendments as to details, the substantial provisions of the statute as then enacted still remain in force. (Gen. Stat. of 1889, ¶¶ 3011 — 3019.) The language of the statute clearly and conclusively shows that the compensation of the clerk is not affected by the fees which he may collect. It was deemed best by the legislature to give these officers a fixed salary upon which they could rely, rather than to leave them to the fees derived from the varying and uncertain demands of the public for their services. The statute is prospective in its terms and operations, and therefore the fact that subsequent legislatures have changed the schedule of fees or provided other fees for added official duties cannot affect the compensation of these officers. It is the manifest policy of the legislature that all fees charged must be accounted for, and all received deducted from the 1- fees-safar*-quarterly allowance of salary which the law prescribes.

3' actum‘barrel The other objection to the petition is more serious, and, indeed, it is said that it was the only one considered by the district court, and upon which it rested its judgment. About, five years elapsed from the time the board of county commissioners made its last settlement with Van Slyck, when he surrendered his office, before the commencement of this action. The cause of action alleged, as we think, is one upon a liability created by statute, and should have been brought within three years after it accrued. (Civil Code, §18, subdiv. 2.) It is argued that the action being upon an official bond, the five-year statute provided in the fifth subdivision of § 18 of the civil code should. [628]*628be applied. This contention cannot be sustained. An action accrued against the defendant for the fees collected and unaccounted for at the quarterly settlement following the receipt of such fees. The 2' racues,nwhen. public records disclosed the performance of the official services by the clerk and what fees should have been charged and collected. The statutory limitation could not be extended by the failure to demand the payment of the fees collected, and in fact no demand is necessary for fees so illegally retained. The cause of action was barred on all the claims included in the petition in January, 1891, although an action on the bond for some purposes might have been brought within a later date. The statute providing for the five-year limitation is not that a cause of action on a bond shall not be barred until five years have elapsed, but it is that the action “can only be brought within five years after the cause of action shall have accrued.” An interpretation of this provision was before the court in Ryus v. Gruble, 31 Kas.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Kan. 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-commissioners-v-van-slyck-kan-1894.