Foster v. Mallory

18 S.E.2d 740, 199 S.C. 144, 1942 S.C. LEXIS 30
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 11, 1942
Docket15372
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 S.E.2d 740 (Foster v. Mallory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foster v. Mallory, 18 S.E.2d 740, 199 S.C. 144, 1942 S.C. LEXIS 30 (S.C. 1942).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Acting Associate Justice E. H. Henderson.

The respondent, Dewey D. Foster, was formerly the Judge of Probate for Spartanburg County. Prior to the year 1922, the Probate Judges of that county received the fees and costs provided by law, and paid for clerical help and for certain other expenses for the operation of the office.

In 1922, the General Assembly passed an Act, the part of it relating to Spartanburg County now being Section 4770 of the Code, providing a salary for the Probate Judge of that county in lieu of fees of whatever nature or description, and clerical help in the sum of $1,200.00, to be paid to bona fide clerks; all fees to be collected by the officer and turned over to the county treasurer.

Pursuant to this Act, which became effective January 1, 1923, the legislature in enacting the county supply bill for 1923 included, for the first time, a provision for the payment of a salary to the Probate Judge, and for the payment of clerical help in his office. In each annual supply bill thereafter varying amounts have been appropriated as salary for the Probate Judge and for his clerical assistance.

This action was commenced by the respondent on June 16, 1938, to recover the sum of $18,141.91, representing the difference between the amount of the fees alleged to have *147 been collected by the county during- the six years immediately preceding the institution of the suit and the amount of salary paid to the plaintiff as Probate Judge during that period; and it was alleged that the act of the legislature taking away his fees was invalid as being in conflict with Article 3, Section 34, of the Constitution.

In their amended answer the defendants set up six defenses, but we are here concerned with the second and the sixth defenses only.

We shall take up, now, the second defense.

This defense alleges, among other things, that the defendants are entitled to an offset, against the fees and costs, for clerk hire and general office expenses for plaintiff’s own benefit or the benefit of his office; that practically all the matters-handled through the office of the plaintiff and embraced within this action were performed by subordinate clerks in the office, whose salary was paid by the county; that the clerk hire and office expenses for the period in question amounts to $12,879.96; that prior to the passage of the salary act of 1922, the clerk hire and office expenses were paid by the Probate Judge; and that the plaintiff received the benefit of such sums as were paid by the county for clerk hire and other office expenses of the Probate Court which the plaintiff would have been required to pay under the fee system and but for the enactment of the salary statute, and that to the extent that it may be determined that plaintiff was relieved of paying clerk hire and office expenses during such period, if he had paid for them personally, defendants are entitled to an offset; and that the duties and work of the Probate Court for Spartanburg County are such that it would have been necessary, if the salary statute and county payment of clerical help and other expenses had not been enacted and provided, for the Probate Judge to have employed assistants and to have expended other sums from his own funds, and that for these reasons the defendants are entitled to such offset as represents the amounts the plain *148 tiff would have been required to pay for the proper operation of the office.

To this defense the plaintiff demurred, on the ground that it appears upon the face of the answer that no facts are alleged giving to the defendants a right of offset, and that consequently no valid defense is stated. The demurrer was heard by his Honor, Judge T. S. Sease, and he passed an order sustaining it.

The point is not contested by the county, that in depriving the respondent of his fees and costs the salary . Act is unconstitutional, being in conflict with Article 3, Section 34, of the Constitution. Salley v. McCoy, 182 S. C., 249, 189 S. E., 196; Hudson v. Pickens County, 190 S. C, 490, 3 S. E. (2d), 603.

Nor is any question made by the respondent as to' the county’s right of offset with respect to his salary, that being conceded under the cases of Gamble v. Clarendon County, 188 S. C., 250, 198 S. E., 857, and Ridgill v. Clarendon County, 192 S. C., 321, 6 S. E. (2d), 766.

The real question before us is: Is the county entitled to offset, against respondent’s claim for fees and costs, the amounts paid by the county for such clerk hire and office expenses as were actually necessary to the proper operation of the Probate Court, and which the respondent himself would have had to pay but for the passage of the invalid salary Act ?

In the consideration of the demurrer the facts alleged in the answer are, of course, admitted. The facts of prime importance are that prior to 1922, the Probate Judges for Spartanburg County, under the fee system, themselves paid whatever expense was necessary for the proper operation of the office; that since 1922, practically all the work of the office has been done by clerks, and the compensation of such clerks has been paid by the county; and that it would have been necessary for the Probate Judge him *149 self to have employed help and to have paid for at least some of this expense if the salary Act had not been enacted.

The situation is the same, we think, in so far as it relates to the necessary help, whether the county paid that amount to the Probate Judge and he in turn paid it over to the clerks, or whether the payments were made directly to the clerks. There is no difference in principle between the actual receipt and disbursement of the money by the Probate Judge on the one hand, and the payment on the other by the county to one whom the officer would have been obliged to pay. If the expense was necessary, the Probate Judge received the benefit of the funds so paid.

The compensation of the respondent has been increased to the extent of the amount of clerical and other expenses actually necessary in his office. He will, if his view prevails, receive the fees and costs, and in addition the amount he would necessarily have paid out for clerk hire and expenses.

The invalid salary Act should not result in a loss to an officer; at the same time there is no reason why it should result in an increase of his compensation at the expense of the county.

We think that the county should be allowed to show, if it can, that the clerk hire and expenses, or part of it, were necessary, and that the Probate Judge would have had to pay it; and that the county is entitled to offset, against the claim of the plaintiff, whatever amount of the clerk hire and expenses paid for by the county was necessary for the proper operation of the office and which would have been paid for by the plaintiff if the salary Act had never been passed.

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Related

Foster v. Taylor
42 S.E.2d 531 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1947)
Spartanburg County v. Pace
29 S.E.2d 333 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
18 S.E.2d 740, 199 S.C. 144, 1942 S.C. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-mallory-sc-1942.