Hurst v. Sumter County

1 S.E.2d 238, 189 S.C. 376, 1939 S.C. LEXIS 175
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 6, 1939
Docket14816
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1 S.E.2d 238 (Hurst v. Sumter County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hurst v. Sumter County, 1 S.E.2d 238, 189 S.C. 376, 1939 S.C. LEXIS 175 (S.C. 1939).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Baker.

In that both sides to this controversy have appealed, we will hereafter refer to C. M. Hurst, respondent-appellant, as plaintiff, and to Sumter County et al. as defendant.

Plaintiff is the sheriff for Sumter County, and has been for a number of years, having been duly elected to this office, and qualified and commissioned on March 1, 1929, March 1, 1933, and on March 11, 1937. The plaintiff having abandoned the second cause of action relating to salary, *378 we are concerned in this appeal with only the first cause of action in the complaint, which alleges that by various Acts of the Legislature, plaintiff has been deprived of tax execution fees, costs and commissions; and fees for the service of process. It is negatively admitted that any Act having local application passed after the Act of 1935 ratifying the amendment of Article 3, Section 34, Subdivision 9, of the Constitution of 1895, would not be subject to attack as in violation of said article, Section and subdivision.

The Acts specifically alleged in the complaint to be special Acts where a general law is applicable, are as follows:

“Act No. 1135 Acts of 1930, approved March 20, 1930, appearing as Section (s) 4811 (and 4812), Code of 1932 —wherein it is provided, in substance, that from and after the next election and qualification as Sheriff of Sumter County, the said Sheriff so elected should be paid a salary of Three Thousand ($3,000.00) Dollars per annum, in lieu of all fees, costs and commissions.
“Act No. 12 Acts of 1931, appearing as Section 2171, Code of 1932, so as to provide, in substance, that all land bid in at public sale under tax execution, by the Forfeited Land Commission, the Sheriff of Sumter County should receive no mileage, fees, costs or commissions.
“Act No. 756 Acts of 1932 [37 St. at Large, p. 1336], approved March 26, 1932, providing, in'substance, that the Sheriff of Sumter County, upon next election and qualification, should be paid a salary of Two Thousand Four Hundred ($2,400.00) Dollars per annum, in lieu of all fees, costs and commissions, and that such fees, costs and commissions should be paid over to the County Treasurer and deposited in the ordinary funds of said County.
“Act No. 131 Acts of 1933 [38 St. at Large,' p. 159], approved March 18, 1933, providing, in substance, that the Rural Police of Sumter County should perform all duties of the Sheriff of Sumter County in relation to the collec *379 tion of tax executions, and that all fees, costs and commissions should be paid to the Treasurer of Sumter County and be deposited by him in the ordinary County funds, except that the fees, costs and commissions of tax executions issued prior to the effective date thereof should be paid to the Sheriff of said County.
“Act No. 13, Acts of 1931, approved March 1 [13], 1931, being an amendment to Section 521, Code of 1922, Vol. Ill [Act No. 521 of 1922], now appearing as Section 4950, Code of 1932, providing, in substance, that all fees collected by the Sheriff of Sumter County for service of process should be collected and paid over to the County Treasurer and by him deposited in the County ordinary funds.”

The defendant denies that the laws referred to by plaintiff are null and void, and deny that they are special Acts where a general law is applicable and pleads justification under said Act, “and various and sundry other statutes and provisions in the Code, not referred to by plaintiff, * * * which lawfully deprives him of the fees, costs, mileage, and commissions which he is claiming in this action.”

Apparently from the record, plaintiff is claiming under his said first cause of action, the execution fees, costs and commissions on tax executions for the years 1932, 1933 and 1934, regardless of when collected. It may be that some executions for 1931 are involved — we are unable to determine this from the limited record — also the fees for service of civil process from 1932 through 1934, and commissions on sales made by the Forfeited Fand Commission of Sumter County. The defendant is withholding the above fees, costs and commissions from plaintiff under and by virtue of a series of local acts, and appropriated same to its general fund.

We quote from the order of the trial Judge, his “Findings of Fact”: “I find from the testimony that there has been collected in costs and commissions on tax executions *380 for the years 1932 through 1934, the sum of Sixteen Thousand Six Hundred Four and 64/100 ($16,604.64 Dollars; there has also been collected the sum of Five Hundred Fifty-one ($551.00) Dollars fees in civil cases and an additional sum of One Hundred Seventeen and 63/100 ($117-.63) Dollars as claimed by the Sheriff on sales to the Forfeited Land Commission during the period raised by the pleadings. The whole amount as shown by the testimony, the same not having been controverted by the defendants, aggregating the sum of Seventeen Thousand Two Hundred Seventy-three and 27/100 ($17,273.27) Dollars. The testimony further shows, and I so find, that during the period that the Rural Police for Sumter County were in charge of the collection of taxes, the plaintiff herein was responsible for the handling of the funds, prepared the execution books, made monthly reports to the County Board of Commissioners, made all settlements with the Treasurer and collected in person between sixty and seventy-five per. cent of the taxes. In addition to this the Sheriff searched the records of the office of the Clerk of Court for descriptions of property to be levied on for sale of taxes, prepared the advertisements, conducted the sales of property sold under tax levy, and when there was no redemption, prepared the deeds. These facts are not controverted by the defendants, but are borne out by the testimony of the witness offered by the defendants, to wit: W. J. Seale, Chief of Rural Police.”

The answer of the defendant did not plead an offset for salary paid plaintiff for the years involved, and no testimony was offered to sustain an offset. Plowever, the trial Judge in his order for judgment allowed an offset in the amount of the salary paid plaintiff from March 1, 1931, through December 31, 1934, aggregating $7,166.67, and rendered judgment for plaintiff against defendant in the sum of $10,106.60, with interest from October 1, 1937.

The defendant appealed upon seventeen exceptions, but abandoned Nos. 13, 14 and 15. The plaintiff appealed from *381 the finding and holding that defendant was entitled to an offset in the amount of the salary paid plaintiff as against any amount defendant was due plaintiff on account of fees, commissions, etc., when such offset was not pleaded, and no evidence offered thereabout.

We will first consider plaintiff’s exception. Under the settled law of this State,'an essential preliminary to the allowance of an offset is that the offset claimed must be pleaded, and there must be some evidence tending to establish such plea. The answer of defendant did not plead the salary paid plaintiff, as an offset, and it follows that it was error to allow same. In the case of Gamble v.

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Bluebook (online)
1 S.E.2d 238, 189 S.C. 376, 1939 S.C. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurst-v-sumter-county-sc-1939.