County of Washoe v. County of Humboldt

14 Nev. 123
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1879
DocketNo. 912
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 14 Nev. 123 (County of Washoe v. County of Humboldt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Washoe v. County of Humboldt, 14 Nev. 123 (Neb. 1879).

Opinions

By tbe Court,

Hawley, J.:

The case of The State v. Rover (indicted for murder) was transferred from the county to Humboldt to tbe county of Wasboe for trial. It was twice tried in Wasboe county.

Tbis action was commenced to recover tbe sum of three thousand six hundred and forty-five dollars and five cents, tbe amount of indebtedness alleged to have been legally incurred by Wasboe county upon tbe trials of said case. It was tried before tbe court without a jury and a judgment was rendered in favor of Wasboe county in tbe sum of three thousand five hundred and seventy-three dollars and twenty-five cents.

Several of tbe items objected to relate exclusively to alleged irregularities in tbe form and manner of tbe presentation and allowance of certain claims by tbe officers of respondent and it becomes material to ascertain, in advance, whether or not appellant can complain of such irregularities, if any exist.

By the transfer of the Rover case it became tbe duty of the respondent to act for appellant, and for all services rendered by any of its officers, or other parties, or costs incurred, relating to tbe trials of said case, tbe appellant became liable (1 Comp. Laws, 2300; ex parte Taylor, 4 Ind. 479), and it is not in a position to complain that tbe treasurer of respondent paid certain claims that were informally or irregularly presented to him for payment.

Tbe material questions involved on tbis appeal are whether tbe accounts complained of were necessarily incurred during tbe trials of tbe Rover case and constitute legal charges against appellant, and not whether tbe treasurer of respondent could or should have objected to tbe payment of tbe same because certain orders for tbe payment of witness fees were indorsed upon tbe affidavits presented by tbe witnesses who were entitled to compensation, and were signed “ S. H. Wright, District Judge,” instead of “ being spread upon tbe minutes of tbe court,” as required by [127]*127statute (1 Comp. Laws, 2169, 2170), or because some' of the other claims were not indorsed in the manner provided for by the statute.

But appellant is not bound to pay every claim because it was presented to, examined, allowed, and paid by the respondent. It had the right to show, if it could, that the services charged for were never in fact rendered, or that the fees charged were unauthorized by the statute.

There is a preliminary objection against the examination of any of the accounts complained of. There are no findings containing an itemized statement of the disallowed accounts.

In order to have the accounts reviewed by this court appellant ought to have asked for a specific finding as to the particular accounts allowed or disallowed by the district court. (Young v. Clule, 12 Nev. 37.)

This objection, however, was not urged by the respondent’s counsel, and hence we shall proceed to examine and dispose of all the objections to such accounts as come within the rule above stated.

Prior to such examination it is proper to state, in general terms, that where the accounts depend solely upon the question whether the same are, or are not, reasonable, no argument has been advanced by appellant’s counsel which, in our opinion, calls for any reduction of the amounts allowed by the county commissioners of Washoe county.

1. Attorneys’ Pees. The language of the second section of the act entitled “An Act to provide for'the payment of attorneys in certain cases,” approved March 5, 1875 (Stat. 1875, 112), being ambiguous, it becomes our duty to determine the real intention of the legislature.

Section 1 provides that any attorney appointed by the court to defend a prisoner is entitled to “ such fee as the court may fix, not to exceed fifty dollars.”

Section 2 provides that the attorney so appointed can not “be compelled to follow a case to another county or into the supreme court.” But if he does follow the case he “ may recover an enlarged compensation, to be graduated on a scale corresponding to the prices allowed.”

Now, if this section invests the court with discretionary [128]*128power in fixing the fees to take into consideration the inconvenience and expense resulting from the attorney’s absence from his professional duties at home, then the allowances made in this case were reasonable and should not be disturbed. But we are of opinion that it was not the intention of the legislature to invest the courts with any such discretionary power.

Without any action on the part of the legislature, it Avould be the duty of an attorney appointed by the court to defend the prisoner without any compensation. (Rowe v. Yuba County, 17 Cal. 61; Lamont v. Solano County, 49 Cal. 158; Samuels v. The County of Dubuque, 13 Iowa, 536; Johnston v. Lewis and Clarke County, 2 Montana, 159; Elam v. Johnson, 48 Ga. 348.)

By the act in question, the legislature very properly made provision for some compensation, but expressly limited the amount to be allowed. By the express terms of the act it is left optional with the attorney to follow the case to another county, or into the supreme court, or to refuse to do so.

We are of opinion that it was the intention of the legislature to provide for the payment of a fee, not exceeding fifty dollars, to every attorney who defends a prisoner charged with crime, under appointment from the court; that an attorney appointed to defend a prisoner charged with any of the offenses specified in section one is entitled to a fee, not exceeding fifty dollars, for defending the case in the county where the prisoner is indicted, and if, after the trial in that county, the cause is transferred to another county, and the attorney thus appointed voluntarily folloAvs the case and defends the prisoner, he Avould be entitled to an additional compensation, not to exceed the sum of fifty dollars. If the case was thereafter followed to the supreme court, the attorney Avould be entitled to a further compensation, not to exceed fifty dollars. In other Avords, the attorney voluntarily following the case stands upon the same footing, so far as the fee is concerned, as any other attorney Avould who might be appointed by the court in the county to which the case is transferred.

[129]*129Under the provisions of the statute, he has the right to follow the case and claim the enlarged compensation. If he refuses to follow the case, it would be the duty of the court to appoint some other attorney, who would be entitled to a fee not exceeding fifty dollars.

The only service, therefore, -which the second section of the act performs is to give the attorney first appointed the privilege of following the case to another county, or into the supreme court, and claiming the enlarged compensation.

From this construction of the law it follows that Messrs. Bonnifield and Davies were each entitled to a fee, to be fixed by the court, in a sum not exceeding fifty dollars for each trial of the case in Washoe county. The amount allowed in excess thereof is unauthorized by the statute, and must be rejected.

The allowance of twenty-five dollars to T. W. W. Davies for arguing the motion in arrest of judgment is clearly erroneous. The court has no authority, under the provisions of the statute, to fix any fee, except for defending the case, which necessarily includes all the motions to be made therein.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Nev. 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-washoe-v-county-of-humboldt-nev-1879.