Daily Record Co. v. Armel

54 N.W.2d 503, 243 Iowa 913, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 539
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 28, 1952
Docket48088
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 54 N.W.2d 503 (Daily Record Co. v. Armel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daily Record Co. v. Armel, 54 N.W.2d 503, 243 Iowa 913, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 539 (iowa 1952).

Opinion

Smith, J. —- This appeal grows out of the passage-of section 15, chapter 137 (H. F. 421), Acts of the Fifty-fourth General Assembly, but it requires preliminary examination of chapter 270, Acts of the Fiftieth General Assembly, passed in 1943. At that time section 10837, Code 1939, in a chapter entitled “Clerk of the District Court” provided:

This appeal grows out of the passage-of section 15, chapter 137 (H. F. 421), Acts of the Fifty-fourth General Assembly, but it requires preliminary examination of chapter 270, Acts of the Fiftieth General Assembly, passed in 1943. At that time section 10837, Code 1939, in a chapter entitled “Clerk of the District Court” provided:

“The clerk of the district court shall charge and collect the following fees, all of which shall be paid into the county treasury: 1. For filing any petition, appeal, or ivrit of error and docketing the same, one dollar and fifty cents.”

• 'Subsequent paragraphs fixed the amount of fees to be charged for other services.

In 1943 the legislature enacted said chapter 270 to provide for daily publication of district court proceedings and section -4 thereof amended the above quoted part of Code section 10837 by adding: “Provided that in counties of one hundred sixty thousand or over the fee shall be two dollars, of which fifty cents shall be known and designated as journal publication fee, to be *915 charged and collected for tbe purposes provided for in this Act.”

As so amended section 10837 now appears as section 606.15, Code 1950. Polk County of course comes within the stated population classification.

The “purposes provided for in this Act” referred to in section 4, were defined in section 1 of said chapter 270 (now section 618.13, Code 1950) which authorized publication (by the clerk in any such county) of certain information concerning cases as filed and subsequent court proceedings and filings therein in a daily newspaper to be designated by the judges. Plaintiff here publishes the designated paper in Polk County.

Said chapter 270, in section 5 also provided the process by which the fifty cents (“journal publication fee”) provided for in section 4 of the Act would reach the designated newspaper after passing through the county auditor’s hands and into the county treasury. This is now section 622.93, Code 1950. Instead of referring to the journal publication fee by name or merely as the fee provided for in section 4 of the Act (above-quoted) it refers to it specifically as “a charge on the basis of fifty cents for each petition-.” Thus the same fee of fifty cents was mentioned specifically twice in the chapter and later appeared in both Code sections 606.15 and-622.93.

In 1951 the legislature by chapter 137, section 15, Laws of the 54th G.A., amended Code section 606.15, (effective May 11, .1951) “by increasing by one, hundred per cent the amount of the various fees therein directed, to be charged by the cleric of the district court.” This is the legislation directly giving rise to the present case.

The first question under this amendment is whether the clerk in Polk County should hereafter collect a "filing fee of $4.00 (double the $2.00 filing fee provided by Code section 606.15) in literal compliance, with the language of the amendment; or only $3.50 — double the county’s $1.50 share of the $2.00 filing fee, plus fifty cents, the undoubled “journal publication fee.”

Defendant county officers caused this problem to be submitted to the attorney general’s office which ruled that: “To interpret the amendment by converting the two dollars into one and one-half dollars is [would be] changing an Act which was not changed by the legislature. Therefore, _ as a- result of the *916 amendment # * * the filing fee * * * will be‘four dollars, of which fifty cents is allocated as a journal publication fee.”

Thereupon plaintiff commenced this suit naming the board of supervisors, the county auditor and the clerk of the district court defendants. The trial court held plaintiff entitled to $1.00 out of each $4.00 filing fee. Defendants appeal.

I. All parties, as well as the attorney general’s office and the trial court, agree that the clerk’s duty is to collect, not merely $3.50, but the full sum of $4.00, in lieu of the former so-called $2.00 filing fee. That interpretation accords exactly with the language of the amendment as applied to Code section 606.15.

We think it correct. Citations of authority are unnecessary. There is no ambiguity in the amendment on that point.

II. But defendants claim that out of the so-called $4.00 filing fee, fifty cents only should be allocated as “journal publication fee.” That was also the ruling of the attorney general’s office. In other words the fifty cents is doubled as a part of the filing fee but not as a journal publication fee. The practical effect of such an interpretation would be to increase the county’s share of the prior filing fee, originally provided by Code section 606.15, not by 100% but by 133%%. Certainly this does violence in two respects to the language of the amendment — “increasing by one hundred per cent the amount of the various fees therein directed to be charged by the clerk.” It increases the county’s net filing fee one third more than the specified 100% and fails entirely to increase the journal publication fee.

We must conclude with the trial court that the effect of the amendment was to double both fees. This again is in accord with the unambiguous lahguage of the amendment. Whatever uncertainty there is arises from the language of section 606.15, subsection 1, which refers to a “filing fee” of $2.00 whereas the context of said chapter 270 as a whole makes clear the real or net filing fee is only $1.50 (the same as in every county of the state) and the fifty cents was an additional fee for additional service, not rendered in counties of less than 160,000 population.

Part of the confusion at this point perhaps arises from the fact that while said chapter 270 was one complete statute devoted to one purpose, i.e., the publication of district court proceedings *917 in qualified counties, it could not, because of editorial difficulties, be codified as one complete chapter, but the various sections had to be distributed in various appropriate places in the Code. At least that is what happened.

Chapter 270 must nevertheless be interpreted as a whole. See 50 Am. Jur., Statutes, section 349, page 346, where the rule is stated: “Indeed, as a general rule, where legislation dealing with a particular subject consists of a system of related general provisions indicative of a settled policy, new enactments of a fragmentary nature on that subject are to be taken as intended to fit into the existing system and to be carried into effect conformably to it, and they should be so construed as to harmonize the general tenor or purport of the system and make the scheme consistent in all its parts and uniform in its operation, unless a different purpose is shown plainly or with irresistible clearness.” .See also 59 C. J. 1094, 1095.

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54 N.W.2d 503, 243 Iowa 913, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daily-record-co-v-armel-iowa-1952.