Charlton v. Harris County

228 S.W. 969, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 796
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 2, 1921
DocketNo. 7972.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 228 S.W. 969 (Charlton v. Harris County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charlton v. Harris County, 228 S.W. 969, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 796 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

James Charlton, as county treasurer for Harris county, collected and retained as his commissions for each of the years 1915 to 1918, inclusive, the sum of $2,-000. In addition, in his capacity as treasurer of the various drainage and navigation districts within the county, he collected and retained during the same four-year period— part of it from one and part from another of such districts — as his compensation for the latter service an aggregate amount of $3,-248.52. In the court below the.county recovered judgment for this $3,248.52 against him and his bondsmen, and they appeal.

[1] Appellants contend that Revised Statutes, article 3875, providing that, “The commissions allowed to any county treasurer shall not exceed $2,000.00 annually,” merely prescribes the maximum annual amount that may be allowed the treasurer by the commissioners’ court - for handling strictly county funds, and neither applies to nor precludes retention by. him of compensation received during the same year from drainage and navigation districts for like service with reference to their funds. In our opinion this position is correct. The county treasurer is not now, nor has he ever been, included in what is known as the Maximum Fee Bill; which fixes a limitation upon the fees of other officers. See original form of that measure as passed in 1897 (Acts S. S. 1897, pp. 9, 43) as well as amendment of 1913 (ch. 4, tit. 58, Vernon’s Sayles’ Statutes 1914).

Article 3875, relating to treasurers, must therefore be considered as standing apart *970 When that is done in the light of its history and of present foregoing articles 3873 and 3874, its terms, simple and plain as they are, seem to us to clearly indicate that it was never intended to be other than a mere limitation upon the power conferred by the Legislature upon the commissioners’ court to fix the treasurer’s commissions on purely county business. The office was created by an act approved May 13, 1846, under which the Legislature, instead of itself fixing the holder’s compensation, delegated that authority to the county court in this language:

“The county treasurer shall receive and may retain in his hands, such commission, not exceeding five per centum, upon the amount received and disbursed by him, as the county court in their discretion may allow.” Gammel’s Laws of Texas, vol. 2, p. 1646; Acts 1846, p. 340, § 9.

By preceding section 3 of the Same act it had been made the treasurer’s duty to receive all moneys belonging to the county, and pay and apply them as required by law.

Then in 1876 a law regulating the fees of different officers was passed, that portion relating to county treasurers being this:

“Sec. 15. County treasurer's shall receive the following fees: The county treasurer.shall receive not more than two and one-half per cent, on all sums received by him, and not more than two and one-half per cent, on all sums paid out by him; but shall receive not more than one per cent, for receiving and paying out monies belonging to the school fund: The commissions of the county treasurer shall be fixed by the County Commissioners’ Court, within the limits prescribed in this act; provided, that the county treasurer shall receive no commissions for receiving money from his'predecessor or for paying over money to his successor in office; provided further, that the compensation allowed to any county treasurer shall not exceed three thousand dollars per annum in any county of this state.” Acts of 1876, p. 292; Gammel’s Laws of Texas, vol. S, p. 1128.

While this quoted section 15, after being split into three parts was carried into the Revised Statutes of 1879 as articles 2403, 2404, and 2405 (the last-mentioned one being the portion dealing with the $3,000 limitation), there were only two material changes in the law as therein declared then or since that time:

First, section 1 of an act approved April 7, 1879, amended article 2405 by reducing the specified $3,000 maximum to $2,000, the form of the amendment being in the precise language of present article 3S75, quoted above. Acts 1879, chapter 69, p. 79; Gammel’s Laws of Texas, vol. 8, p. 1379.

Second, in 1891, by amended section 47 of the School Bill (Acts of 1891, p. 147), the power of allowing compensation for handling school funds was taken a why from) the commissioners’ court and exercised by the Legislature direct, as it has ever since been. See present article 3874, already referred to. In other respects the provisions of this original section 15 have come on down without material change, and are now embodied in present article 3873, cited supra.

So that the law affecting the fees of a county treasurer stands substantially to-day as it was thus enacted in 1876, except that the commissioners’ court may now neither allow such officer commissions on purely county funds of whatever kind in excess of $2,000 per year, nor at all on school funds.

Bearing in mind these two respects in which alone it has been changed, a reading of this statute as so first passed, irresistibly, it seems to us, impresses the idea that the Legislature was doing nothing more than conferring a power upon the commissioners’ court, and then attaching a limitation to its exercise by that body. The solution of the meaning and purpose of the measure is found in its proviso, that is, the restriction was evidently intended to apply to the commissioners’ court, and not to what the Legislature itself in the future might see fit to do. In other words, having in the main body of the article delegated to the local authority the power of fixing their treasurer’s compensation, the last provisó — which, as above stated, has been reproduced as present article 3875 — was added simply as a curb against an excessive exercise of the prerogative granted, nothing more. And if that was the meaning of the proviso then, it is now that of its counterpart, the statute under construction.

We have been cited to no Texas decision holding to the contrary. Unlike the one before us, the cases cited and relied upon by the appellee fall under one or the other of two classes: they deal either (1) with funds or business belonging to the county as an entirety, or (2) with offices and officers expressly included in the Maximum Fee Bill. Within the first class are Bastrop County v. Hearn, 70 Tex. 563, 8 S. W. 303, Presidio Co. v. Walker, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 609, 69 S. W. 99, and Davenport v. Eastland County, 94 Tex. 277, 60 S. W. 243, while under the second come Ward, Hammond, Curtis, and Jones v. Harris County, reported, respectively, in 209 S. W. 793, 203 S. W. 448, 203 S. W. 453, 209 S. W. 208, as well as Nichols v. Galveston County, No. 6800 in this court, recently decided by the Supreme Court on certified questions, 228 S. W. 547. While therefore neither line of these holdings has any direct application here, we are inclined to think the Supreme Court in the Eastland County Case, which arose after the authority to fix any fees for the treasurer on school funds had been taken away from the commissioners’ court, put the same construction we have on the statute here involved, when in the course of a discussion of it this is said:

“The commissioners’ court of Eastland county fixed the treasurer’s compensation at 2% *971 per cent, on sums received and on sums paid out.

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Related

Bernardoni v. Holman
177 S.W.2d 321 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1944)
Settegast v. Harris County
159 S.W.2d 543 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1942)
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115 S.W.2d 1102 (Texas Supreme Court, 1938)
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Charlton v. Harris County
234 S.W. 135 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1921)

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Bluebook (online)
228 S.W. 969, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charlton-v-harris-county-texapp-1921.