Gardner, County Judge v. State Ex Rel.

1910 OK 214, 110 P. 749, 27 Okla. 1, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 158
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 12, 1910
Docket1394
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1910 OK 214 (Gardner, County Judge v. State Ex Rel.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner, County Judge v. State Ex Rel., 1910 OK 214, 110 P. 749, 27 Okla. 1, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 158 (Okla. 1910).

Opinion

DUNN, C. J.

This action presents error from the district court of Hughes county, and is brought for the purpose of requiring P. W. Gardner, judge of the county court of that County, to account to the board of county commissioners for all fees or money, received by him for approving deeds provided for under section 9 of an act of Congress of May 27, 1908 (chapter 199, 35 Stat. 312), which provides that:

“The death of an allottee of the Five Civilized Tribes shall operate .to remove all restrictions upon the alienation of said al-lottee’s land: Provided, that no conveyance of any interest of any fullblood Indian heir in such land shall be valid unless appjoved by the court having jurisdiction of the settlement of the estate of said deceased allottee.”

The action is brought by W. P. Langston, as county attorney for that county, who contends that under the then existing fee and salary law of the state (Sess. Laws Okla. 1907-1908, p. 289) the county judge of Hughes county was entitled to receive, as full compensation for his services, the sum of $2,000 a year, and no more, and that under section 1 of article 5 of the same act he was required to keep an account of all fees for services rendered by him, and by section 2, Id., to present regularly to the board of county commissioners of the county a detailed statement of all fees received by him during the preceding quarter, and by section 3, Id., to pay the same into the county treasury, and that his salary was to be paid as were paid the salaries of county *3 attorneys for the several counties. Plaintiff in error was elected in the fall of 1907, and the federal act referred to was passed during his term of office.

There is no statute fixing the fees to be allowed for the services rendered thereunder nor providing the disposition thereof, and it is the contention of defendant in error that by virtue of the statute of the state above noted it was the duty of the county judge to report such fees, or money, as he received for approving the deeds mentioned to the county commissioners, and to pay the same into the county treasury, as belonging to Hughes county In support of this claim, counsel relies principally upon two cases, Finley v. Territory of Oklahoma, 12 Okla. 621, 73 Pac. 273, and Rhea v. Board of County Commissioners, 12 Idaho, 455, 88 Pac. 89. In the Finley case the plaintiff in error was probate judge of Kiowa county, while Oklahoma was a territory, and Congress, in addition .to the jurisdiction granted by the ■ Territorial Legislature, conferred upon him jurisdiction in townsite matters, and, on the question arising as to whether or not he should account for all fees received while acting under the authority so conferred, the court held this to be his duty. This case cannot be said to be controlling where’the question arises in a state, however, for Congress had primary authority to fix the jurisdiction, duty and compensation of all territorial officers. It was stated by this court in the case of Territory v. Long Bell Lumber Co. et al., 22 Okla. 890, 99 Pac. 911:

“Congress not only may abrogate the laws of any of the territories, but it may itself, if it chooses, legislate directly for the entire local government. It may make a valid act of the Legislature void, and a void act valid. It has complete legislative authority over the people inhabiting the territories and all of the departments of the territorial government. It may restrict all legislation for a territory .to itself, or it may portion it out to subordinate bodies; but, when these bodies act, they act by virtue of federal authority, and their legislation is federal legislation applicable solely to their local conditions.”

So the federal act under which the probate judge acted in *4 that case was absolutely controlling, superior in fact to any act of the local Legislature.

Where a similar question to the one at bar arose in Utah, the Supreme Court of the state, referring to the Finley case, in the case of Eldridge v. Salt Lake County, 106 Pac. 939, said:

“It was held that the duties imposed by the act of Congress were a part of the duties of the office of probate judge, and were compensated for by the salary paid to the judge. In classifying that case, it must be kept in mind that the territorial offices, as well as ifneumbents thereof, were always under the paramount control of Congress. In the very act under consideration in that case, Congress expressly ratified the acts of the territorial ■ Legislature with regard to the powers and duties that had been imposed on the office of probate judge and on the judge himself, and, after such ratification, also made it the duty of probate judges to perform the services required by the act.”

. The other case cited, that of Rhea v. Board of Com'rs, 12 Idaho, 455, 88 Pac. 89, was predicated largely, if not wholly, upon the Finley case, and of it the Supreme Court of Utah, in the case from that court just above noted, said:

“The decision in the case of Rhea v. Board of Com’rs., 12 Idaho, 455, 88 Pac. 89, is based entirely upon the authority of Finley v. Territory, supra. This being so, we need not now inquire whether the Rhea case is sound or not. We have shown that the doctrine on which the Finley case rests is foreign to the doctrine involved in the ease at bar, and, if this be true, then all cases, whether few or many, that are based on the principle decided in the Finley case, can have no influence on the case at bar.”

The logic and reasoning of the court in the case of Eldridge v. Salt Lake County, supra, appear to our minds to be sound, and are conclusive against the claim of defendant in error in the case at bar. In that case the appellant was clerk of the district court of Salt Lake county, Utah, taking his office January 1, 1907. Pursuant to provisions of an act of Congress of June 29, 1906 (chapter 3592, 34 Stat. 596 [U. S. Comp. St. Supp. 1909, p. 97]), he had accepted and retained one-half of the fees for services rendered in naturalizing aliens. Under the laws of the State of Utah, the appellant discharged the duties of clerk of *5 the district court and county clerk for that county, and under the Constitution of the state (section 1 of article 21) it was provided that he should be paid a fixed and definite salary, and under the statutes passed pursuant to that constitutional requirement he was required to make a true and correct account of all the fees collected and to pay the same into the county treasury. Under the federal act, he was permitted to retain one-half of the fees collected by him in the naturalization proceedings and was required to account for the balance to the Bureau of Immigration and Naturalization; the money so collected to be deposited in the treasury of the United States.

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Bluebook (online)
1910 OK 214, 110 P. 749, 27 Okla. 1, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-county-judge-v-state-ex-rel-okla-1910.