Greer v. Hunt County

249 S.W. 831
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedMarch 28, 1923
DocketNo. 372-3412
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 249 S.W. 831 (Greer v. Hunt County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greer v. Hunt County, 249 S.W. 831 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1923).

Opinion

McCLENDON, P. j.

j. L. Greer brought this suit against Hunt county for balance due him on commissions as county treasurer from November 14, 1914, to December 2, 1918. The suit' was filed on November 21, 1918, and the trial court sustained a special exception which pleaded the statute of limitations of two years as to all amounts accruing before November 21, 1916. The trial was to the court without a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff for $1,633 besides interest. This judgment was reversed, and judgment rendered in favor of Hunt county by the Court of Civil Appeals. 214 S. W. 605.

The facts which control the issues in the case are substantially without dispute. At the December term, 1909, of the commissioners’ court of Hunt county the following order was passed:

“Ordered by the court that the county treasurer’s salary be fixed at $1,200 per annum, same to take effect at the expiration of Louis Payne’s present term, but on December 1, .1910,' at the latest.”

Greer was elected county treasurer at ihe November election, 1914, and was re-elected in November, 1916. He was defeated in the 1918 election and surrendered the office to his successor on December 2, 1918. The commissions which he would have been entitled to under the statutes (R. S. arts. 3873-3875) amounted during each year of his tenure of office to more than the $2,000 maximum. The commissioners’ court made no order affecting the amount of the treasurer’s compensation 'other than the order of 1909 above quoted. During each month of Greer’s incumbency the commissioners’ court issued to l?im [832]*832a warrant for $100 as Ms monthly salary, and each of these warrants was paid to him by check drawn by himself on the account of the county in the county depository. The trial court made the foHowing findings of fact, which are fair conclusions to be drawn from the testimony:

“That at the time plaintiff was elected and qualified in 1914 he knew of said order and that the county treasurer had been receiving a salary of $1,200 per annum thereunder; that the plaintiff’s salary was paid to him in monthly installments of $100 each; that he received the same without formal protest, but that he did at various times during his incumbency complain to the county judge and two other members of the commissioners’ court that he was not being paid enough for his services and thought that the commissioners’ court ought to allow him more money; that during the time he was so receiving said salary he had no intention of claiming the commissions allowed by law, but upon one occasion he did have an attorney to go before the commissioners’ court and request that they fix his salary at the amount allowed by law, on account of his work being heavier by reason of having to handle a good roads fund.”

The Court of Civil Appeals held that the order of 1909 attempting to fix the salary of the treasurer was void, but that the action of Greer in accepting the salary and settling with his successor in office by turning over the balance in his hands as treasurer without retaining the unpaid balance of his commissions amounted to a waiver of his right thereto and precluded his recovery. The correctness of this holding is the main ground of controversy in the case.

It is urged by counsel for Hunt county that the order of the commissioners’ court is valid; and we are requested to so hold. This question, however, is settled in Montgomery County v. Talley (Tex. Civ. App.) 169 S. W. 1141, Smith v. Wise County (Tex. Civ. App.) 187 S. W. 705, and Wood v. Leath (Tex. Civ. App.) 204 S. W. 454, in each of which cases the Supreme Court denied a writ of error. In the first two of these cases it is held that R. S. art. 3873, while conferring upon the commissioners’ court the power to reduce below the $2,000 maximum provided in article 3875, the rate or percentage which the treasurer shall be paid as commissions, does not authorize the substitution of a fixed amount as salary in lieu of commissions contingent upon the amount of receipts and disbursements ; and any attempt to fix a definite salary in lieu of commissions is void.

The Leath Case holds that the commissioners’ court has the power to reduce below the statutory limit, of $2,000 the maximum amount which the treasurer, may be paid as commissions, so long as the compensation of the treasurer is not changed from a commission basis.

The controlling distinction between the order in the Leath Case, on the one hand, and those in the Talley and Smith Cases, on the other, is that in the former the commissioners’ court did not attempt to change the commission basis of the treasurer’s compensation, but, in addition to reducing below the statutory maximum the percentage of his commissions, merely reduced the maximum of his yearly compensation under the commission basis to $1,600; whereas in the Talley and Smith Cases the commissioners’ court attempted to substitute a fixed annual salary in lieu of the commissions which the treasurer would otherwise receive. It was held in all of these cases that this could not be done.

There is no question but that the order in the present' cáse was void under this holding. There was no effort to limit the maximum amount of commissions which the treasurer could earn; but in lieu thereof a definite fixed salary of $1,200 per annum was substituted. This salary was payable, under the order, whether or not the commissions amounted to' as much as the salary. We agree with counsel for defendant in error that merely calling the compensation a salary or calling it commissions is not necessarily controlling. If' the commissioners’ court had ordered that the treasurer should receive “a salary” of $1,200 per annum with the proviso that, if his lawful commissions should amount to less than the salary, he should not receive in excess of his lawful commissions, this' in fact would have been fixing a maximum wMch the treasurer could earn as commissions. On the other hand, had the commissioners’ court ordered that the treasurer should receive,the definite sum of $1,200 per annum “as commissions,” regardless of the amount of money passing through his hands upon which he would by statute be entitled to commissions, we think the effect of this order would be to fix a salary basis of compensation, and the order would be void, regardless of the fact that it denominated the compensation as commissions. The controlling element in determining whether the amount to be received is upon a commission or salary basis is whether that amount, by whatever name it may be called, is absolute and fixed regardless of what the lawful commissions may be, or is made contingent upon earning that amount as commissions.

The holding of the Oourt of Civil Appeals denying recovery to plaintiff is based upon the general doctrine denying recovery for money voluntarily paid with a full knowledge of all the facts and without any fraud, duress, or extortion, although no obligation to make such payment existed. 'The authorities cited in support of this holding are Kinsey v. Messerly, 198 Mo. 351, 95 S. W. 913; U. S. v. Wilson, 168 U. S. 273, 18 Sup. Ct. 85, 42 L. Ed. 464; Hardaway v. Railway, 90 S. C. 475, 73 S. E. 1020, Ann. Cas. 1913D, 266; 30 Cyc. 1290. We have examined these [833]*833authorities and have no doubt but that they support the general proposition asserted.

However, the facts in Smith v. Wise County are so nearly identical with those of the present case that we regard the two cases as without distinguishing feature, and the holding in the.

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249 S.W. 831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greer-v-hunt-county-texcommnapp-1923.