Frazier v. Schultz

206 N.W. 781, 53 N.D. 464, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 104
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1925
StatusPublished

This text of 206 N.W. 781 (Frazier v. Schultz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frazier v. Schultz, 206 N.W. 781, 53 N.D. 464, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 104 (N.D. 1925).

Opinion

This is an appeal from a judgment canceling as void a certain contract for the collection of taxes as entered into between the county commissioners and the sheriff of Divide county. The relator filed a petition in the district court for a writ of certiorari, in which it is set up that, without jurisdiction and without authority in law, the county commissioners entered into a contract with the sheriff with reference to all delinquent personal property taxes for the years 1918 to 1922, both inclusive, and for all years prior thereto, whereby the sheriff was to receive compensation for his efforts in the collection of such taxes amounting to 25 per cent on all taxes collected for the years *Page 465 1919 and prior; 20 per cent for 1920; 15 per cent for 1921 and 10 per cent for 1922. The writ issued and the return set up the contract in substance as alleged in the petition. In reviewing the proceedings, the district court held that the county commissioners had no authority to make a separate contract with the sheriff for the collection of delinquent taxes; that § 2173 of the Compiled Laws for 1913, which purports to authorize such contract, had been abrogated by chapter 275 of the Session Laws of 1911, as amended by chapter 112 of the Session Laws of 1915 and by chapter 52 of the Session Laws of 1921. In accordance with this view of the law, the court directed the entry of the judgment appealed from.

Section 2173 of the Compiled Laws for 1913 reads as follows:

"In any county where for any reason personal property taxes that have been delinquent more than one year remain unpaid, uncancelled or not put into personal property tax judgment, or in any county where delinquent taxes have been put into tax judgment, the commissioners of such county may contract with the sheriff of the county to pay him a percentage of such delinquent personal property taxes, or personal property tax judgments, as compensation for collecting the same, in lieu of or in addition to the compensation now provided by law. And such expense of collection shall be borne pro rata by the state, county, city, village, township or school district in which such tax is laid."

At the time of the enactment of this section as chapter 164 of the Laws of 1901, the sheriff's compensation was on a fee basis. In 1911 the legislature, by the enactment of chapter 275 of the Laws of 1911 (Comp. Laws 1913, §§ 3520 to 3526), provided that the salary of the sheriff should be regulated by the population of his county according to the last preceding official state or federal census. The language employed to express the measure of compensation is as follows: "Provided, that no sheriff shall receive more than fifteen hundred dollars for his personal services in any one year in counties having a population of less than five thousand," with increasing amounts dependent upon population and ending with the further proviso "that no sheriff within the state of North Dakota shall receive for his personal services more than thirty-five hundred dollars in one year." In addition to the salary it was provided that the sheriff or his deputies should be allowed ten cents a mile for each and every mile necessarily traveled *Page 466 in the performance of any of his official duties (Comp. Laws 1913, § 3521), and that he should be reimbursed for livery hire which should not exceed five dollars per day, the days being reckoned on a mileage basis. Comp. Laws 1913, § 3522. It was further provided in § 6 of chapter 275, Session Laws of 1911 (Comp. Laws 1913, § 3525), that in all civil actions the fees should be collected by the sheriff and paid in advance, and at the expiration of each month he should turn over to the county treasurer the fees so collected and make a report to the board of county commissioners showing all fees earned and collected; that he should keep a complete record of the fees due his office for services rendered in criminal actions and present his itemized statement for mileage and livery in connection with such criminal actions and file the same with the county auditor at the expiration of each month and receive his warrant for mileage and livery; and, in § 7, that he should report to the board of county commissioners at the expiration of each month all fees collected and the failure to collect the fees and turn the same over to the county treasurer, as prescribed in the preceding section, or the making of a false report, is made a felony and punishable as such.

In 1915 the legislature enacted a comprehensive act regulating the salary of county auditors, treasurers, registers of deeds, county judges, states' attorneys and assistants, clerks of district courts and sheriffs, specifically repealing § 1 of the 1911 Act (Comp. Laws 1913, § 3520), and substituting a new section in its place containing a different salary scale. The wording is substantially the same in that it provides "that no sheriff shall receive more than fifteen hundred dollars for his personal services in any one year in counties having a population of less than seven thousand," etc. (Laws 1915, § 6, chap. 112), the section concluding, however, as follows: "All moneys received as fees of every nature, kind or description in his official capacity, or commissions and compensation for services on boards created by law, excepting mileage and livery, shall be paid by the sheriff at the end of each month into the general fund of the county." In 1921 another act was passed, similar in scope to chapter 112 of the Laws of 1915. This act (Sess. Laws 1921, chap. 52) purports in its title to repeal chapter 112 of the Laws of 1915 and all acts and parts of acts in conflict. The repealing clause, however, is not as comprehensive as the title indicates. *Page 467 It reads: "All acts and parts of acts in conflict herewith are hereby repealed." The act provides that the salary of the sheriff shall be according to the last preceding official state or Federal census and that sheriffs shall receive "for their personal and official services in each year" stated amounts depending on population. Section 2173 of the Compiled Laws for 1913, quoted above, being a special provision dealing with the collection of public revenues and providing for the compensation of the sheriff in that connection, is not specifically repealed by any of the subsequent enactments. The single question involved in this case is whether or not this section is repealed by implication. The principle that repeals by implication are not favored is so well understood that it is hardly necessary to state it. It is not and can not be contended within this principle that a prior act is repealed by the enactment of a subsequent act, unless the latter purports to cover the same subject. The serious question in the instant case, then, is whether or not the legislature, in any of its successive acts regulating the salaries of sheriffs, dealt with the subject of his compensation in terms sufficiently broad to clearly indicate an intention to cover the compensation with reference to the collection of delinquent taxes, which had previously been the subject of contract between him and the board of county commissioners. Or, whether or not, in providing the amount that should be paid to the sheriff "for his personal services," it meant to include an amount that he might earn under a contract for the collection of taxes. Stated another way, the real question is even broader, namely, whether or not, in legislating with regard to the salary of sheriffs, the legislature also intended to curtail the powers of county commissioners with reference to the collection of delinquent taxes. If the contentions of the respondent be correct, then one of two alternatives is inevitable.

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Related

State ex rel. Braatelien v. Drakeley
143 N.W. 768 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1913)
County of Sargent v. Sweetman
150 N.W. 876 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1915)
County of Sargent v. Cooper
150 N.W. 878 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 N.W. 781, 53 N.D. 464, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazier-v-schultz-nd-1925.