Lane v. Coos County

10 Or. 123
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 10 Or. 123 (Lane v. Coos County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lane v. Coos County, 10 Or. 123 (Or. 1882).

Opinion

.By tlie Court,

Lord, C. J., Watson, L,

concurring:

This was an action upon a written submission made by the parties, the object of which was to ascertain whether the plaintiff, as sheriff of Coos county, the defendant in this action, is entitled to the per centum prescribed by the revenue act for the collection of taxes during a certain period alleged in the submission. The inquiry arises out of an act passed at' the last session of the legislature providing compensation to the sheriffs and clerks of certain counties therein enumerated, which was subsequently declared void by this court. From the taking effect of that act to the time it was judicially pronounced void, the appellant received the compensation provided by the act, but insists, notwithstanding this, that he is entitled to receive the per centum allowed by the act of 1874 for the collection of taxes, because the office of sheriff and tax collector are separate and distinct offices. (Session Laws, 1880, p. 125; Session Laws, 1874, sec. 5, p. 125; Manning v. Klippel, 9 Oregon, 367.)

It is not disputed that the act of 1880 did not provide the full compensation to be paid the sheriff for services rendered as such, but the argument is, that it is immaterial [125]*125whether that act is valid or void, the services which he renders in the collection of taxes, and the per centum allowed by law therefor, are not incident to his office as sheriff, but as tax collector. The particular question then, presented for our decision is, is the office of sheriff and tax collector separate and distinct offices? Or in other words, are there two distinct offices — that of the sheriff and that of the tax collector? If there are two, then the claim of the appellant to the per centum must be allowed, if not, he has received the full compensation for his services, and it must be disallowed.

The constitution of this state provides: “There shall be elected in each county by the qualified electors thereof at the time of holding general elections, a county clerk, treasurer, sheriff, coroner and surveyor, who shall severally hold their offices for the term of two years.” (Sec. 6, art. 6.) A tax collector, as an officer per se, is not named in the constitution, but the succeeding section undoubtedly confers the power upon the legislature, when the exigency of the public service require it, to provide for the election or appointment of such officer. That section provides: “Such other county * *■ officers as may be necessary, shall be elected or appointed in such manner as may be prescribed by law.” (Sec. 7, art 6.)

Under this provision the legislature may provide for the election of a tax collector fer se as they have provided for the election of an assessor for each county, although such officer is not enumerated in section 6, art. 6. (General Laws, p. 694.) But the constitution further provides: “A sheriff shall be elected in each county for the term of twro years, who shall be the ministerial officer of the circuit and county courts, and shall perform such other duties as may be prescribed by law.” (Sec. 16, art. 7, Const.)

[126]*126Now under this provision of the constitution, the duties of the sheriff are not necessarily confined to the execution of orders, judgments and process of the county, the service of papers in actions and the like, but may include the performance of “such other duties as may be prescribed by law.” Nor can it make any difference that the “other duties,” which the legislature is authorized to impose, are even incongruous in their nature with those already existing, when the authority to impose such duties is derived from the paramount law. And whatever “other duties” are prescribed by the legislative authority, the effect is only to impose additional duties upon the sheriff, and not to confer an additional office, unless the intent of the legislature is otherwise plainly manifested. And when the legislature imposed the duty of collecting the revenue, in the shape of taxes, upon the sheriff of each county, and required him to file an additional bond to secure the increased public trust confided to him by the law, no new or distinct office was created thereby, but simply other or additional duties were prescribed by the legislature in pursuance of the authority invested in them by the constitution. (General Laws, pages 762, 763 et seq.) Except to say in the first section of the revenue act that the sheriff shall be tax collector in each county, a tax collector, es nomine, is not named afterwards in that act. It is the sheriff who is to collect the taxes, to give the required bond, and to do all the numerous acts enumerated in the revenue act. It is no more in effect than saying the sheriff shall collect the taxes, and making the duty of collecting the taxes a part of the duties of his office. Nor are .the duties of collecting the revenue incompatible with, or incongruous in their nature, with the office of sheriff.

To a similar objection in Wood et al. v. Cook, 31 Ill., [127]*127274, it was said, “there is nothing in the office to inhibit the legislature from imposing other duties upon them, even if incongruous in their nature. But there is really no incongruity between the collection of taxes on 'a warrant or tax list, which empowers the sheriff to levy and sell in case of default, and the collection of money on an ordinary jifa. In tact the one is quite germane to the other.” And the court in construing the revenue act of 1815, which provided that the sheriff should be ex oficio the collector of taxes, held that it merged the office and duties of collector into those of sheriff.

In Kilgore v. The People, 76 Ill., 548, the court, in construing section 144 of the revenue law, in which it is declared that the treasurer of counties under township organizations, and the sheriffs of counties not under such organization, shall be ex officio collectors of their respective coifnties, say: “This is a duty the legislature had a right to impose upon those officers, and to require of them additional bonds for the performance of such additional duties. No office was created thereby, but a legislative order that all county treasurers in certain counties shall, by virtue of their office of treasurer, collect the revenue of the county. Should one of these treasurers fail or refuse to give bond for the faithful performance of the duty of collecting, the office may be declared vacated. What office? The office of treasurer, there being no other.” And the resrdt reached by the court on a careful re-examination of the case of Wood et al. v. Cook, supra, was to reaffirm the principles therein enumerated, and hold that the proper construction of the statute is to consider it as imposing additional duties only, and not as conferring an additional office upon the county treasurer. (Broadwell v. The People, 76 Ill., 555; [128]*128Hughes et al. v. The People, 82 Ill., 79; Price v. Adamson, 37 Mo., 151.)

In Jarnagagin v.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Or. 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-coos-county-or-1882.