Board of Supervisors v. Coons

94 S.E. 201, 121 Va. 783, 1917 Va. LEXIS 74
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedNovember 15, 1917
DocketNo. 1; No. 2
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 94 S.E. 201 (Board of Supervisors v. Coons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Supervisors v. Coons, 94 S.E. 201, 121 Va. 783, 1917 Va. LEXIS 74 (Va. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Sims, J.,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the following opinion of the court.

In our view of these causes the following decisive questions arise therein, which we will consider and pass upon in their order as stated below.

1. Has the board of supervisors of a county any discretion to refuse to act in fixing the compensation and other allowances of a county clerk allowed by law at something, within the limits prescribed by statute; or if it acts, [796]*796to impose a condition or conditions upon the payment of such compensation, on the ground that the clerk has not performed, or is not performing, his duties as such?

This question must be answered in the negative. Blair v. Marye, Auditor, 80 Va. 485. The principle applied in the case just cited is the same as that which is involved in the undertaking by a board of supervisors to withhold any action fixing the amount of, or (what is the same thing in effect) the undertaking by such board to place a condition or conditions upon the payment of the salary or compensation allowed by law to an officer whose office or position is not created by the board of supervisors but by law. Such an office or position is not the creature of the board of supervisors but of the law. By the law, therefore, and not by the board of supervisors, except as they may act in accordance with the law, must the salary or compensation of such office or position be fixed. For any failure of such an officer to discharge his duties which are prescribed by law, the remedy of mandamus will lie. To allow boards of supervisors to withhold any action aforesaid, or to place a condition or conditions upon the payment of the salary or compensation aforesaid, would be to allow such boards to nullify the election of.the officer to the extent of the emoluments of the office allowed by law thus denied him.

The discretion in the premises vested by law in the board of supervisors is not to refuse to act, or if they act, not to act arbitrarily, but according to law. They have a discretion, given by statute as aforesaid, as to the amount of the allowances. But that discretion was exercised by the order of August 31, 1917.

A board of supervisors undoubtedly has a discretion also as to fixing the time or times of payment of salaries and allowances of county officers, if exercised for good and suf[797]*797ficient cause — such as the condition of the county treasury in the lack of funds to pay same at a certain time or times in the year, because of some situation against which the board did not and could not reasonably have been expected to provide in the next preceding laying of the county levy, or the like cause, operating impersonally. For the reasons stated above, however, the board of supervisors of a county has no discretion to fix a different time of payment of the annual salary and other allowances provided for by law of a county clerk from the times of payment of salaries and allowances of other county officers allowed by law, on the ground that the clerk is not discharging or has not discharged his duty as such.

2. Is the said clerk entitled, in the instant causes, to interest on the unpaid amount of the allowances made him by order of said board of August 81, 1917, to-wit, on the instalments thereof of $215.00 from July 1, 1917, and on $215.00 from October 1, 1917, until paid?

On this question the cases of Lynchburg v. Amherst Co., 115 Va. 600, 80 S. E. 117, and Blair v. Marye, Auditor, 80 Va. 485, are cited by counsel for the clerk, and in that connection it is stated by counsel: “We simply mention what at least appears to be a conflict in the two cases mentioned for whatever it may be worth to the court.” On this subject we deem it sufficient to say that we do not consider that there is any conflict between the two cases referred to, and that it is settled by the case of Lynchburg v. Amherst Co., supra, that the obligations of the counties of the State of the character in question bear no interest.

3. What is the true construction of the statute law of the State on the subject of the allowance to a clerk of extra compensation, in addition to his salary as clerk, for current general indexing, i. e., the general indexing of the deed, will and judgment lien docket books according to a general [798]*798index system adopted prior to or in use in the county at the time of such current general indexing — so far as brought in question in the instant causes?

This question can best be answered by having before us the statute law on the subject. The statute under which the questions involved in the instant causes all arose was enacted February 29, 1892, is contained in Acts of Assembly 1891-2, p. 772, and, so far as material, is as follows:

Section 3184. “The court of every county * * * wherein a general index to the deed books, will books * * * judgment lien docket books * * * in the clerks office of such county * * * has not been provided or wherein such general index has been provided and has become so defaced as to render another general index necessary or proper, or wherein the index does not show the Christian names or the initials of the grantor, grantee, or testator, may, in its discretion, appoint a suitable person, whose duty it shall be to make a general index to such deed books in the full names of the grantor and grantee, and a general index to the will books * * * judgment lien docket books * * *; and the said court shall certify a proper allowance to the person so appointed as compensation for services performed under such order, and direct warrant therefor payable out of the treasury of such county * * * and the board of supervisors of the county * * * shall make sufficient levy for same. It shall be the duty of the clerk of every court * * * to index all recorded deeds, wills, * * * docketed judgments * * * as well as in the general index as in the deed books, will books * * * judgment lien docket books * * *” (“as” italicized above is evidently redundant, due to an error in draft of act or in printing. This word is absent in section 3184 of Code of 1887 which this act amends.)

[799]*799This statute did not in terms go beyond providing for a general index containing the Christian names or initials of the persons indexed, in lieu of no general index, or of one defaced so as to render another necessary and proper, or of one which did not show the Christian names or initials of the persons indexed. This was the extent of the improvement in general indexing then contemplated by statute or for which compensation was expressly authorized thereby to be paid. But however that may be, the payment authorized by the statute is to some person, not necessarily the clerk, specially appointed by the court to make the general index mentioned in the statute. That general index did not include books of deeds, wills and judgments recorded and docketed subsequently to the order of court making such appointment. That is made clear by the closing provision of the statute that, “It shall be the duty of the clerk of every county * * * to index all recorded deeds, wills * * * docketed judgments * * * in the general index * * *” where one has been provided.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 S.E. 201, 121 Va. 783, 1917 Va. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-supervisors-v-coons-vactapp-1917.