I. X. L. Lime Co. v. Superior Court

76 P. 973, 143 Cal. 170, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 797
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1904
DocketS.F. No. 3368.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 76 P. 973 (I. X. L. Lime Co. v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
I. X. L. Lime Co. v. Superior Court, 76 P. 973, 143 Cal. 170, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 797 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

On the verified petition of the plaintiffs, alleging that the superior court of Santa Cruz County had, in an action pending therein, wherein these plaintiffs were defendants and one Henry Steen was plaintiff, exceeded its jurisdiction, and that there was no appeal or plain, speedy, or adequate remedy, a writ of review was issued by this court, directed to the said superior court and the judge thereof, commanding them, within twenty days after service of the writ, to certify to this court a transcript of the record and proceedings in the action aforesaid, in order that the same might be reviewed by this court.

The clerk of said court, the officer upon whom the duty of returning the transcript required is imposed by the law, has failed to make such return, but in response to the writ filed his affidavit, from which it appears that at the time of the service of the writ upon him he demanded certain fees, which, he claims, he was compelled by law to charge and collect for making and certifying such return, that said demand was refused, and that such fees have never been tendered or paid to him.

The judge of the court has also filed his affidavit, stating that he directed said clerk to comply with the provisions of said writ upon the prepayment to him of the fees provided by law for the making and certifying of the transcript of the record.

It is contended by plaintiffs that this is no answer to the writ, and that the defendant court, through its clerk, should be compelled to certify the record to this court without the payment of any fees or charges by plaintiffs to the clerk. An application for process compelling such certification is the matter now before this court.

The chapter of our Code of Civil Procedure relative to the *172 writ of certiorari or review (chap. I, title I, part III) is entirely silent as to the matter of costs. It is not to be doubted, however, and is not disputed, that the proceeding being a civil proceeding, the party seeking the writ must pay to the clerk of the court in which he institutes his proceedings the fees fixed by law for the services of such clerk in such proceeding. (Pol. Code, sec. 752; Stats. 1895, p. 267.) It is likewise clear that he must pay any fee fixed by law for the •service of the writ when issued. Here, it is claimed by petitioners, their duty ends, and it is the duty of the person to whom the writ is directed to comply with the requirements thereof.

Our statute provides that the writ may be directed to the inferior tribunal, board, or officer, or to any other person having the custody of the record or proceeding to be certified, and must command such party to certify fully to the court issuing the writ a transcript of the record and proceedings. It further provides that when the writ is directed to a tribunal, the clerk, if there be one, must return the writ with the transcript required. (Code Civ. Proe., sees. 1070, 1071.)

The direction that the clerk must return the writ with the transcript required is explicit in terms and apparently without condition, but it is no more so than directions contained in various other statutory provisions relating to the duties of the clerk and other public officers.

The legislature has seen fit to provide that for many services rendered by public officials certain fees shall be charged and collected by the officers, as a condition precedent to the performance thereof, which fees are usually, under the system now in operation in this state, the property of the state or county, and must be paid into the public treasury.

The County Government Act now in force provides that “The officers mentioned in this act are not in any case, except for the state or county, to perform any official services, unless upon the prepayment of fees prescribed for such services, except in cases on habeas corpus and for naturalization, and on such payment the officer must perform the services required. ’ ’ (County Government Act, sec. 222; Stats. 1897, p. 574.) Section 227 of the same act provides that no fee or compensation must be charged for services in proceedings upon habeas corpus or naturalization, for administering or certifying the *173 oath of office, in affidavits or applications relating to the securing of a pension or payment of a pension voucher, or filing or swearing to any claim or demand against any county in the state. No other exception is made by this statute.

The act further provides that all salaried officers of the county shall charge and collect for the use of their respective counties, and pay into the county treasury on the first Monday in each month, the fees allowed by law less such portion as they may be allowed by the law to retain (sec. 216), and that- no warrant for the salary of any officer shall be drawn until such officer has made the settlement required by the law. (See. 221.)

The county clerk, who is ex officio the clerk of the superior court, is one of the salaried officers provided for and mentioned in the act, and is in the matter of fees to be charged for official services governed by the provisions thereof. Unless it be clear from the language of an existing statute prescribing some particular service to be performed by him, that no fee shall be charged therefor, and the service required by such statute is one for which, by the statutes relating to fees, a fee is fixed, the peremptory language of the statute prescribing a service or duty is of no avail, in the absence of a payment or tender of the legal fee prescribed. Where a fee is required by the law to be prepaid for any official service, any order or writ of any court requiring or necessitating the service must be deemed to have been made or issued upon the condition that such fee will be paid or tendered by the party requiring the service, and such payment or tender is, unless waived by the officer, a condition precedent to the performance of the service.

The statute relating to fees provides that the county clerk shall charge and collect for any copy made by him of any record, proceeding, or paper on file in the office of the clerk relating to any civil action pending in the superior court, ten cents per folio, and for each certificate, under the seal of the court, twenty-five cents. It further provides that for examining and certifying to a copy of any paper, record, or proceeding prepared by another, and presented for his certificate, fifty cents, and one cent per folio for comparing said copy with the original shall be charged. (Stats. 1895, pp. 267, 268.)

*174 There can be no doubt that the furnishing of a certified transcript of the record in his office of an action that was instituted or prosecuted in the superior court of which he is ex officio clerk is included in these provisions, and that, unless the writ of review requiring the record to be certified tabes the case from the operation of the laws relative to fees, he is not only entitled, but is required by express provision of law, to insist upon the payment of the specified fees as a condition precedent to the performance of the service.

We see nothing in our statutory provisions relating to the special proceeding of certiorari

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Bluebook (online)
76 P. 973, 143 Cal. 170, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/i-x-l-lime-co-v-superior-court-cal-1904.