Board of Sup'rs v. Kergosien

112 So. 595, 146 Miss. 885, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 257
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1927
DocketNo. 26436.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 112 So. 595 (Board of Sup'rs v. Kergosien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi 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 Sup'rs v. Kergosien, 112 So. 595, 146 Miss. 885, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 257 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

*888 Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The board of supervisors of Hancock county on four separate occasions, March 1, 1923, March 1, 1925, May 1, 1925, and July 1, 1925, respectively, issued road and bridge bonds of said county, the total number of these bonds being one thousand three hundred eighty-five. Each separate issue of these bonds was submitted to the state bond attorney for his opinion as to their validity, and subsequent thereto each issue was validated by a *889 decree of the chancery court rendered in proceedings in accordance with chapter 28, Laws of 1917 and thereafter in accordance with section 4 of said chapter 28, Laws of 1917, appellee, the chancery clerk of the county, certified to the validation of each of said one thousand three hundred eighty-five bonds by writing or stamping-on the same the words, “I, A. A. Kergosien, chancery clerk of Hancock county, Miss., do hereby certify that the within bond has been validated and confirmed by decree of the chancery court of Hancock county, Miss.,” with the date of the particular decree, the signature, and official seal of said clerk being affixed to said certificate. There was also stamped on the back of each bond a registration certificate, this certificate likewise being signed by the appellee and sealed with his official seal.

At the February, 1926, meeting of the board of supervisors, the appellee filed a bill for services rendered bj7 him “in certifying- to Hancock county road and bridge bonds in the total number of one thousand three hundred eighty-five at fifty cents for the certificate on each bond,” amounting to six hundred eighty-two dollars and fifty cents. The board of supervisors rejected and disallowed the bill, and from the order disallowing the same an appeal was taken to the circuit court. The cause was thereafter, by agreement of counsel, heard by the judge in vacation without a jury, and a judgment allowing the claim and directing the board of supervisors to .pay the same was entered, and from that judgment the board of supervisors has prosecuted this appeal.

The only provisions of chapter 28, Laws of 1917, which are pertinent to the solution of the question presented by this appeal are found in sections 4 and 5 of the act, which read as follows:

‘‘ Section 4. "Whenever any bonds are validated under the provisions of this act, the clerk or other proper officer of the county, municipality or district issuing same, shall stamp or write on each of said bonds over his signature and seal, the words ‘validated and confirmed by *890 decree of the chancery (or supreme) court,’ together with the date of the rendition of the final decree validating same, which entry shall be taken as evidence of the validation of said bonds in any court in this state-
“ Section 5. The court costs in all such cases shall be paid by the county, municipality or district proposing to issue said bonds, and in addition to such costs, it shall also pay to the bond attorney a fee of not more than one-tenth of one per cent., provided said fee shall not be less than twenty-five dollars nor more than one hundred dollars, of the amount of the bonds issued or proposed to be issued. The payment of this fee shall be full compensation for all legal services rendered in connection with the issuance of said bonds.”

The appellee does not claim these fees under any of the provisions of chapter 28, Laws of 1917, the act which imposes -the duty of certifying the validation of bonds upon “the clerk or other proper officer of the county, municipality or district issuing the same,” but he baises his claim and right solely upon the provisions of the general statute fixing the fees which county officers are allowed to charge and collect, this statute being chapter 206, Laws of 1924, the particular sections thereof upon which he bases his claim being subdivisions (s) and (t), under the “Fees of .the chancery clerk,” and subdivision (w), under “Fees of the circuit clerk,” which read as follows:

(s) Certifying the official act of a justice of the peace, or other certificates with seal.50

(t) For all other services, the same fees as are allowed clerks of the circuit court for similar services.

(w) Each separate certificate, except to jurors, required to be under seal.50'

Counsel for the appellee insist that, in certifying the validation of these bonds, the appellee was acting in the capacity of clerk of the chancery court, but it seems to us that there is more reason for the view that in so doing he was acting in the capacity of clerk of the board of su *891 pervisors. It is not made the duty of the clerk of the chancery court to certify to the fact of validation of all bonds validated by that court, bnt the statute expressly imposes that duty on the clerk of the body politic issuing the bonds. It is true that in the absence of a statute providing otherwise the clerk of the chancery court is the proper person to certify to proceeding’s had in the chancery court, but this statute has provided otherwise and has authorized only the clerk of the issuing board to perform this duty, and it requires this clerk to so certify whether the validation is by a decree of the chancery court or by final decree in the supreme court. In view of the fact, however, that we are of the opinion that appellee’s claim to this compensation cannot be upheld under either vieiv, we deem it unnecessary to expressly decide this point.

Under the provisions of section 2163, Code of 1906 (section 1844, Hemingway’s Code), it is provided that it shall be lawful for the various officers in the state to receive and take the fees specified by statute, and no more. The rule is well settled that statutes authorizing officers to charge and collect fees will be strictly construed as against the officer, and if compensation for services is not clearly provided by statute it must be denied.

The act authorizing the validation of bonds expressly provides that the court costs incurred in such cases shall be paid by the county, municipality, or district proposing to issue such bonds, and, in addition to such costs, that it shall pay a prescribed fee to the bond attorney, but no provision whatever is made for fees for after-wards certifying the fact of validation. The validation proceedings are ended when a final decree is entered of record in the chancery court, unless there is an appeal, in which case the proceedings are finally terminated upon the entry of a final decree in this court, and the fees here claimed are in no sense a part of the court costs. Since the act itself provides for the payment of the *892 clerk’s court costs ill sucli cases, but makes no provision for payment to the officer who is required to certify to the validation of the bonds, we think it is clear that it was not the intention of the legislature that the county should be liable, either under this act or the general fee statutes, for fees for this certification.

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Bluebook (online)
112 So. 595, 146 Miss. 885, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-suprs-v-kergosien-miss-1927.