Hood v. State

73 S.W.2d 611, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 703
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 9, 1934
DocketNo. 11465.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 73 S.W.2d 611 (Hood v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hood v. State, 73 S.W.2d 611, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 703 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

BOND, Justice.

This suit was filed in the name of the state of Texas, for the benefit of Dallas county, to recover of H. A. Hood, sheriff, and the Constitution Indemnity Company of Pennsylvania, the surety on his official bond, the various items of indebtedness, reflected by the related evidence.

The material facts admitted by the parties are: (a) That H. A. Hood, as sheriff of Dallas county, received $6,373 from the United States government, for feeding and housing federal prisoners during the year 1929, and $13,571 during the year of 1930; that the money was received by the sheriff under a contract entered into by him and the United States marshal for the Northern District of Texas, under authority granted by the Attorney General of the United States, and that a settlement for the collections was made with the commissioners’ court of Dallas county, whereby the sheriff paid the county the sum of $2,500 for the amount received during the year 1929 and $2,'000 for the year 1930, and the commissioners’ court accepted the amounts, in full and complete satisfaction of the respective sums received; (b) that the sheriff re-1 ceived $6,048.35 during the year 1929 and $6,-593.22 during the year 1930, as fees for the serving of various process issued out of courts’ in counties' other than Dallas, known as “out of-the-county process”; (c) that the sheriff, under an order of the commissioners’ court, employed an attorney to aid him in litigations incident to the conduct of his office, at a stated sum of $50 per .month, and in pursuance thereto paid the attorney out of the fees of office the sum of $1,200 ($300< in 1929 and $900 in 1930); (d) that the sheriff paid $236.67 in 1929 and $133.33 in 1930, as interest on money borrowed by him and secured by state warrants, not then redeemable at the state treasury, which money was necessary to operate his office; and (e) that the sheriff paid to one of his deputies, under and by virtue of an order of the commissioners’ court, the sum of $25 per month in excess of the deputy's legal maximum salary for work performed outside of his regular duties, which expense was necessary in the proper conduct of his office.

The case being submitted to the court without a jury, a judgment was entered against H. A. Hood and his bondsman for $10,000, and against H. A. Hood individually for $19,-055.57, and against the county on the $900 item, the amount paid during the year 1930 *613 by the sheriff to the attorney. Each of the parties excepted to the respective adverse portions of the judgment.

The legal proposition upon which this appeal is predicated, the facts being undisputed, are: (a) Whether moneys received by a sheriff under a contract with the United States marshal, for the safe-keeping and subsistence of federal prisoners in the jail of his county, are accountable fees of office; (b) whether a legal settlement of the items can be affected by the commissioners’ court, by a payment and acceptance of an amount below the receipts; (c) whether fees received by á sheriff for serving “out-of-the-county process” are accountable fees of office; (d) whether the commissioners’ court of a county has legal authority to empower the sheriff to employ an attorney, by the month, and pay the attorney from the fees of office to handle legal matters in connection with the sheriff’s office; (e) whether interest on moneys borrowed by the sheriff to run his office, pending payment of state warrants, earned and pledged to secure the loan, is a proper c-harge expense of the office, and (f) whether the sheriff can, under authority granted by the commissioners’ court, pay a deputy for extra work, not required of him in his employment, a sum above the maximum salary allowed by law.

The first of these propositions is the more difficult. The status of the account, affecting federal prisoners, as being accountable fees of office, is not entirely free from doubt, and has been so expressed in the holding of the Galveston Court of Civil Appeals, in the case of Binford, Sheriff, v. Harris County et ah, 261 S. W. 535, a writ of error refused by the Supreme Court on the issues there presented; and by the El Paso Court of Civil Appeals, in the case of Orndorf, Sheriff, v. El Paso County et al., 295 S. W. 219, a writ of error Was also refused by the Supreme Court.

Fees of office are regulated by statute and, the Legislature has determined that certain enumerated fees, charges, and perquisites are accountable in determining the maximum salary officers shall retain for their services. Our Constitution (article 5, § 23), in creating the office of sheriff, provides that the “duties, and perquisites, and fees of office, shall be prescribed by the Legislature.” A perquisite is “an incidental emolument, profit, gain or fee over and above the fixed or settled income, salary or wage, something received incidentally and in addition to regular wages, salary, fees, etc.” Cent. Diet. & Encyc. In the case of Harris County v. Hammond, 203 S. W. 445, the Galveston Court of Civil Appeals held that, under the statute (article 1142, C. C. P.), as it then existed, the charges received by the sheriff, for the subsistence and care of county prisoners, allowed and paid to him by the commissioners’ court of Harris county, for the safe-keeping of county prisoners, were perquisites of office, and not accountable fees, and the holding was approved by our Supreme Court, in denying a writ, of error.

After the decision in the Hammond Case, and perhaps induced by it, the Legislature amended article 1142, of the Code of Criminal Procedure, by enacting the present article of the Code (article 1040). The effect of the amendment- is to place the amount allowed and paid to the sheriff by the commissioners’ court of a county, as accountable fees of office, and not perquisites, as they were theretofore determined by the courts of this state. This amendment, article 1040, was placed by the codifiers of the 1925 statutes under the title “Costs Paid by Counties,” and under that title provisions are placed, article 1037, that “each county shall be liable for all expense incurred on account of the safe-keeping of prisoners,” etc.; and, article 1046, that at “each regular term of the commissioners court, the sheriff shall present to such court his account verified by his affidavit for the expense incurred by him since the last account presented for the safe-keeping and maintenance of prisoners,” etc.; and, article 1047, that “the commissioners court shall examine such account and allow the same, or so much thereof as is reasonable and in accordance with law, and shall order a draft issued to the sheriff upon the county,” etc.

Manifestly, these articles deal with county prisoners, their safe-keeping and maintenance, the duties of the sheriff in regard to making reports for their subsistence and care, and the commissioners’ court of the respective counties to audit the sheriff’s account and direct payment of the amount due from the county treasurer, for the safe-keeping and maintenance of county prisoners.

While article 1040 in general terms provides a remuneration of the sheriff, within prescribed limits, for each prisoner “confined in jail or under guard,” yet it further deals with “expenditures and the amount allowed by the commissioners court,” and in the succeeding articles provision is made only for such allowance to be paid by the commissioners’ court for the subsistence and care of county prisoners.

The doubt arises as to the construction of *614

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.W.2d 611, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hood-v-state-texapp-1934.