County of Hennepin v. Ryberg

210 N.W. 105, 168 Minn. 385, 1926 Minn. LEXIS 1580
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedSeptember 17, 1926
DocketNo. 25,524.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 210 N.W. 105 (County of Hennepin v. Ryberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Hennepin v. Ryberg, 210 N.W. 105, 168 Minn. 385, 1926 Minn. LEXIS 1580 (Mich. 1926).

Opinions

Stone, J.

Action for an accounting, the purpose being to recover from the clerk of court of Hennepin County fees which he has received in naturalization proceedings over a long period of years. The plaintiff contends that such fees are required by law to be paid into the county treasury. Defendant clerk of court and the surety on his official bond, the Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company, claim on the other hand that the fees belong to the clerk personally. Judgment went for defendants on the pleadings and plaintiff appeals.

The fees have been paid and received under the Act of Congress of June 29, 1906, entitled “An act to provide for a uniform rule for the naturalization of aliens throughout the United States.” (34 St. 596). After prescribing the fees in naturalization proceedings, the act, in the fourth paragraph of section 13, provides that the clerk collecting such fees “is hereby authorized to retain one-half * * *; the remaining one-half * * * shall be accounted for in their quarterly accounts, which they are hereby required to render the Bureau of Immigration and Naturalization.” On the point here involved, that law did not receive construction at the hands of the Supreme Court of the United States until 1913, when it was dealt with in Mulcrevy v. City and County of San Francisco, 231 U. S. 669, 34 Sup. Ct. 260, 58 L. ed. 425. It was there held that the act did not touch “the relations of a state officer with the state.” The court said: “The act is entirely satisfied without putting the officers of a state in antagonism to the laws of the .state — the laws which give them their official status. It is easily construed and its purpose entirely accomplished by requiring an accounting of one-half of the fees to the United States, leaving the *387 other half to whatever disposition may be provided by the state-law.”

In the meantime the question of the title to the fees retained by the clerk, with the express authority of the naturalization law, had given rise to a marked contrariety of judicial opinion. On the one hand it was held that inasmuch as in naturalizátion proceedings the clerks of state courts functioned as agencies of the Federal government, the state laws dealing with their fees and referring to compensation for official services rendered the state and its citizens had nothing to say to the subject, and that the clerks properly retained as their own the half of the fees which the Federal law said they might retain. State ex rel. v. Quill, 53 Ind. App. 495, 102 N. E. 106; Hampden County v. Morris, 207 Mass. 167, 93 N. E. 579, Ann. Cas. 1912A, 815; Fields v. Multnomah County, 64 Ore; 117, 128 Pac. 1045, 44 L. R. A. (N. S.) 322; Eldredge v. Salt Lake County, 37 Utah, 188, 106 Pac. 939.

Other courts held that the clerks were still state officers and their courts state courts; that the state laws regulated all their functions and required them to accept their salaries as compensation for all services of whatsoever character and to account and pay over to the state their fees in naturalization proceedings. San Francisco v. Mulcrevy, 15 Cal. App. 11, 113 Pac. 339; Franklin County v. Barnes, 68 Wash. 488, 123 Pac. 779; Barron County v. Beckwith, 142 Wis. 519, 124 N. W. 1030, 30 L. R. A. (N. S.) 810, 135 Am. St. 1079. Considering the decision of the supreme court decisive of the whole question, the supreme judicial court of Massachusetts reversed Hampden County v. Morris, supra, in Berkshire County v. Cande, 222 Mass. 87, 109 N. E. 838. We are not required here to review these cases and choose between their opposed principles of decision, for there is another which must control this case.

The naturalization law had not been long in force when on December 3, 1906, Hon. Edward T. Young, then attorney general of Minnesota, was called upon for an opinion on the subject. It was addressed to Hon. P. M. Kerst, then public examiner. Section 2721, R. L. 1905 (G. S. 1923, § 7018), was in effect and provided that *388 every officer of the state receiving a fixed salary should be entitled to -no other compensation. Mr. Young’s opinion was in part as follows:

“I beg to advise you that, in my opinion, Section 2721 of the Revised Laws' was intended to apply only to duties performed under state laws. The duties in relation to naturalization are imposed by federal law, and any compensation derived therefrom is received under a federal law and is not in my opinion, in any manner affected by any law of this state. It follows that such fees may be received and retained by the clerk of the district court in Hennepin County without violating any law of this state.”

Succeeding attorneys general have never departed from that view. Aside from the instant case, not more than one other county attorney, so far as we have been advised, has ever taken issue with it. There is no evidence that the executive department, from the Governor to county commissioners, has ever disagreed. Mr. Kerst, public examiner in 1906, and all of his successors in office have governed themselves accordingly.

The question has been presented to the district court but once and never before to this court. Prior to 1912, in a mandamus proceeding, the right of the clerk of court of Otter Tail county to retain naturalization fees was challenged. The issue was decided for the clerk by Judge Taylor, then one of the judges of the Seventh judicial district. One of the grounds of his decision was stated thus:

“The services in question were not performed for the State of Minnesota nor pursuant to the laws of the State of Minnesota, but for the United States and under and pursuant to the laws of the United States. They were wholly outside the duties imposed upon the clerk by the state laws, and, in my opinion, the fees allowed for such services are not within the purview of the State Laws above cited and the clerk was entitled to retain them.”

The construction put upon the act of Congress by the Mulcrevy case is of course binding upon us. But in the construction of our *389 own statutes it helps only to the extent of saying that those statutes can do as they please with the half of naturalization fees not paid over by the clerk to Federal authority. The question remains, what do our laws say on the subject? The county attorney claims the benefit of the general statutes and cites Sp. L. 1891, p. 987, c. 373; L. 1903, p. 660, c. 365; L. 1907, p. 524, c. 372; L. 1913, p. 641, c. 440; L. 1919, p. 19, c. 18; and finally L. 1921, c. 133. He takes position finally on G. S. 1923, § 7018, which reads:

“Unless otherwise provided by law, every county official in the state of Minnesota receiving a stated salary shall receive the same in full compensation for all services and expenses whatsoever, and shall, on the first Monday of each month, file with the county auditor a correct statement of all fees received by him, and turn the same into the county treasury.”

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Bluebook (online)
210 N.W. 105, 168 Minn. 385, 1926 Minn. LEXIS 1580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-hennepin-v-ryberg-minn-1926.