Hughes v. Board of Com'rs of Oklahoma County

1915 OK 432, 105 P. 1029, 50 Okla. 410, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 445
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 8, 1915
Docket3989
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 1915 OK 432 (Hughes v. Board of Com'rs of Oklahoma County) 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
Hughes v. Board of Com'rs of Oklahoma County, 1915 OK 432, 105 P. 1029, 50 Okla. 410, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 445 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion by

BREWER, C.

The board of county commissioners of Oklahoma county brought this suit against W. C. Hughes, who served said county as • clerk of the superior court from June 28, 1909, to January 9, 1911, and the Southern Surety Company, surety on his official bond, for the purpose of recovering certain fees and emoluments received by him in excess of the compensation to which he was justly entitled; for certain deposits in his hands when he went out of office, which should have been turned over to his successor; and for certain fees and *413 fines, collected by him and not turned into the county treasury, etc. The cause was tried, by agreement of parties, by the court upon an agreed statement of facts, upon which the court gave judgment against defendant Hughes for $10,087.25 and against the surety company for the sum of $10,000; the same being the extent of the obligation of its bond.

Inasmuch as the surety company raises different questions relative to the different items entering into the judgment, we find it expedient to analyze the statement of facts and findings of the court based thereon, and .to set out and classify the items entering into the judgment, as follows: (1) $4,488.95, in the hands of the clerk when he went out of office, same being deposited by various litigants in various causes, out of which costs, witness fees, etc., were to be paid as earned, and which ought to have been turned over to his successor; (2) $21.65, erroneously allowed the clerk by the county on claims filed; (3) $1,607.90, criminal fees allowed and paid the clerk by the county after June 17, 1910; (4) $196.12, excess of civil fees collected after June 17, 1910, above the salary for himself and assistants allowed by the act of the Legislature of that date; (5) $1,598.33, charged and collected as criminal fees, fines, and as sheriff and stenographer’s fees in excess of the sum turned over to the county; (6) $47.50, allowed by the county for expenses of operating office prior to June 17, 1910; (7) $1,521.80, paid him by the county as per diem fees of $5 per day for attending court prior to June 17, 1910; (8) $655, paid him by the county as such per diem fees after June 17, 1910. The total of the items, as enumerated above, aggregates the sum of $10,087.25, the amount of the judgment against the principal defendant.

*414 As to. defendant Hughes, it may be said that his defenses are quite similar, if not identical, with those set out in the case of Hathaway Harper v. Board of County Commissioners of Oklahoma County, 149 Pac. 1102, 154 Pac. 529, handed down with this opinion (modified on rehearing January 11, 1916), not yet officially reported. These defenses, generally and briefly stated, are to, the effect that, under the act creating superior courts and providing for each a clerk (Sess. Laws 1909, p. 181), it was provided that his compensation should be the same as that of clerks of the district courts, and that the clerks of the district courts were allowed certain fees and emoluments, under the federal fee bill, in force after statehood; that he was therefore entitled to all fees taxed under such fee bill that came into his hands, including the per diem fee of $5 per-day for attending court; and, further, that inasmuch as he was holding office, with fixed fees and emoluments appertaining thereto, at the date the fee and salary act was passed by the Legislature and approved by the Governor on March 19, 1910, without the emergency clause, which went into effect June 17, 1910, and which provided for a salary for the clerks of the superior courts and certain assistants, said act was not applicable nor operative as to him, because it would change the compensation allowed him by law during his term of office, contrary to section 10. art, 23, of the Constitution; and that therefore he was entitled to all the civil fees coming into his office, and to charge and collect from the county criminal fees during the entire term he was in office. We do not understand that he contends that he has any right to retain the court deposits and the criminal fees and fines collected by him from criminals, and the fees taxed as sheriff and stenographer’s fees, which *415 came into his possession; and as to the defenses he does make it is sufficient to say that none of his contentions are sound, as we think is clearly shown by the Harper Case, supra. The holding in the Harper Case, briefly' stated, is that the office of clerk of the district court was. created by section 2, art. 17, of the Constitution; that the federal fee bill, in force in Oklahoma Territory, as shown by section 13 of the Organic Act (Wilson’s Rev. & Ann. Stat. 1903, sec. 73) and chapter 16, tit. “Judiciary,” see. 828, Rev. St. U. S. (Comp. St. U. S. 1913, sec. 1383), was not brought over and put in force by the Constitution, because of inconsistency, repugnancy, and local inapplicability; that, there being no law in force after statehood prescribing salary or other compensation for clerks of the district courts prior thereto, the act of the Legislature approved March 19, 1910, without the. emergency clause, was effective and operative as to such clerks, and in no wise infringed upon section 10, art. 23, Constitution, relative to changing the salary of an officer during his term; that said act, being a non-emergency act, went into effect on June 17, 1910, under section 58, art. 5, Constitution, and this notwithstanding the fees and salaries provided for were based, for the different counties, on the federal census of 1910, which on that date had not been officially promulgated; that the per diem fees of $5 claimed and the sums allowed for office expense were illegal and without authority of law, and, if allowed and paid by the county, could be recovered, notwithstanding no appeal had been taken from its allowance. The Harper Case disposes of all the defenses possible to the defendant Hughes in the suit against him. Therefore the judgment was correct as to all 'the items -composing it.

*416 2. We will consider whether or not the defendant Southern Surety Company is liable as surety on the official bond of its codefendant, Hughes, and the extent of that liability, if any attaches. This bond is in the sum of $10,000, and runs in the name of the county of Oklahoma as obligee, was properly executed by the company, and was' filed and approved on June 28, 1909, the day upon which Hughes assumed the duties of the office of clerk of the superior court. The obligation of the bond is as follows:

“Now, if the said Wm. C.

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Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 432, 105 P. 1029, 50 Okla. 410, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-board-of-comrs-of-oklahoma-county-okla-1915.