County Court of Tyler County v. Long

77 S.E. 328, 72 W. Va. 8, 1913 W. Va. LEXIS 2
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 77 S.E. 328 (County Court of Tyler County v. Long) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County Court of Tyler County v. Long, 77 S.E. 328, 72 W. Va. 8, 1913 W. Va. LEXIS 2 (W. Va. 1913).

Opinion

Miller, Judge :

Plaintiff sued defendant to recover moneys alleged to have been illegally paid him out of the county treasury. The case was [9]*9submitted to the court on agreed facts. The court below found for plaintiff items aggregating $332.25, and for defendant as to the other items, aggregating $133.38, and gave judgment accordingly. Plaintiff has brought the case here to review that finding and judgment.

The items disallowed aggregate $133.38. Classified they fall under one of the other of the following heads: First: Charges for services rendered the. County Court in civil cases: Second: Charges for making arrests in misdemeanor cases: Third: Charges for seizing gambling devices under section 1, chapter 151, of the Code: Fourth: Charges for tobacco and other supplies furnished prisoners in jails: Fifth: Rewards offered for apprehension of criminals or search for bodies.

Two ••questions presented are, first, were the items involved legally chargeable against the county, and payable out of public moneys in the county treasury ? and, second, if not, but having been paid, are they recoverable from defendant?

A general rule applicable alike to each of the several classes of items is that the right of a sheriff to compensation is wholly derived from statute, and, being in derogation of the common law, the statute should be strictly construed. 25 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 730; 35 Cyc. 1547, et seq.

Section- 9, chapter 15, Acts 1908, in force when defendant performed the services in question, a chapter which by its title was an act to prescribe the duties and fix compensation of sheriffs and other officers of the several counties of the state and for other purposes, and which by its terms repeals all acts and parts of acts inconsistent therewith, says: “Each sheriff * * * shall receive as compensation for his services as such sheriff * * * the following sums, to-iwit: (a) The salaries authorized by law to be fixed by the county court of the respective counties and paid out of the county treasury; (b) Such allowance or allowances as may be made by the county court of the different counties to such officers by authority of law now in effect, (c) Eighty-five per centum of all other fees, costs, percentages, perquisites, commissions and emoluments; provided, however, that such sheriff * * * * shall receive all fees, costs, percentages, perqui[10]*10sites, emoluments and commissions collected or received by him until the gross income of his office from all sources including salaries and allowances as aforesaid shall equal the following sums, that is to say: For the office of sheriff, three thousand dollars.” Section 49, of chapter 39, Code, as amended by chapter 32, Acts 1909, in effect May 26, 1909, authorized the county -court of Tyler County to allow annually to the sheriff of that county, and for which no other fee or reward is allowed by law, to.be paid out of the county treasury, a sum not to exceed three hundred dollars. The last provision of that section, relating to the pros-euting attorney, is significant, as follows: “And it shall be the duty of the prosecuting attorney to attend to, bring or prosecute, or defend, as the case may be, all actions, suits and proceedings in which his county or any district board of education is interested, Avithout additional compensation.”

As pertinent also to the questions presented the State Tax Commissioner urges upon us consideration of a provision of section 9, chapter 9, Acts 1908, an act, according to its title, “to regulate the rate and manner of laying levies for taxation in counties * * * and to provide penalties for the illegal expenditure of public moneys, incurring of illegal obligations,” etc. Section 9 of that act, among other things, provides that, “It Shall be unlawful for any county court, board of education, or council of a municipal corporation, or other body charged with the administration of the fiscal affairs of any county, * * * * to expend any money or to incur any obligation or indebtedness which such tribunal is not expressly authorized by law to expend or to incur.” Another statute, which the State Tax Commissioner regards as determinative of the questions here presented, is section 24, of chapter 137, Code 1906. This chapter relates to fees of officers. Those provisions are as follows: “The fees mentioned in this chapter shall be chargeable to the party at whose instance the service is performed. * * * .No sheriff shall charge for serving such or any other'publie orders nor for summoning and impaneling grand juries. No clerk or sheriff shall receive payment out of the treasury for any service rendered in case of the State, except where it is allowed by law.”

[11]*11Of equal or greater significance, we think, is the provision of section 23, of said chapter, as follows: “There shall be paid out of the state treasury to clerks and sheriffs for services rendered the state in a civil case such fees as would be chargeable for the like service of an individual, after such fees are duly certified to the auditor.” The rest of this section relates to the payment by the county court of fees to sheriffs for the arrest and care of prisoners in-felony cases, according to the provisions of chapter 161 of the Code. What we wish to emphasize with respect to this provision is that although it provides for special fees for clerks and sheriffs, for services rendered the state in civil causes, there is no provision in any statute, for compensation to clerks or sheriffs for services rendered counties in civil causes; nor is there to be found in any statute any provision for extra compensation to sheriffs, for making arrests in misdemeanor cases, nor for making seizure of gambling devices, under section 1, chapter 151, Code 1906, other than out of the money or property actually^seized. Nor do we find any specific provision for allowances to sheriffs for tobacco and other supplies furnished prisoners in jail, or for rewards for apprehension of criminals or searching for bodies.

The reason why by section 23, of chapter 137, clerks and sheriffs are given extra compensation for services rendered the state in civil cases, no doubt, is because such services are not covered by any salaries paid by the state. By omitting to provide special compensation for services rendered the county in civil cases, we must say the Legislature plainly intended, that all such services, as well as all other services not provided for by law, were intended to be covered by the annual allowances or salaries paid by the counties by order of the county court.

By all authorities a public officer takes his office subject to all burdens which the law imposes, and his compensation is limited to what is expressly authorized by law. This proposition is fully supported by the many decisions, which by diligence the State Tax Commissioner has collated and cited in his brief. It will be sufficient for our purposes to refer to them merely by reference to the style of the case and the books and pages where recorded, [12]*12as follows: State ex rel. Pollard v. Brewer, 59 Ala. 130; Norfolk v. Pollard, 94 Va. 279; Stephens v. Old Town, 102 Me. 21; Crocker v. Supervisors of Brown County, 35 Wis. 284; Hempstead County v. Jones, 62 Ark. 272; State v. Brown, 146 Mo. 401; B. of C. of Tippecanoe County v. Barnes, 123 Ind. 403; Red Willow County v. Smith, 67 Neb. 213; Murfree on Sheriffs, §§1078, 1082; Lancaster v. Barnwell, 40 S. C. 446; Mason County v.

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Bluebook (online)
77 S.E. 328, 72 W. Va. 8, 1913 W. Va. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-court-of-tyler-county-v-long-wva-1913.