Leaphart v. County Commissioners

552 P.2d 70, 170 Mont. 218, 1976 Mont. LEXIS 595
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1976
DocketNos. 13328, 13345
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 552 P.2d 70 (Leaphart v. County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leaphart v. County Commissioners, 552 P.2d 70, 170 Mont. 218, 1976 Mont. LEXIS 595 (Mo. 1976).

Opinions

The HONORABLE W. W. LESSLEY, District Judge, sitting for Mr. Chief Justice Harrison,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a consolidation of an appeal from the district court, Lewis and Clark County, and an original writ of mandate from the district court, Cascade County; both causes basically deal with the payment for services of appointed counsel of criminal defense of Workmen’s Compensation cases.

Peripheral maters in this appeal are the claim of Timothy S. Thane, court reporter, for preparation of transcripts of the district court trial; Leaphart, a court appointed attorney’s claim for his fees on this appeal in one of these causes; and the question of the reasonableness of Barron’s attorney fees.

It is admitted the services of the court appointed counsel were performed. It is further admitted the fees for the services performed in the Lewis and Clark County cases are reasonable. The reasonableness of counsel fees in the Cascade County case is not admitted.

The central issue to be answered on this appeal is who pays for the attorneys’ services and costs. Both district courts have held that in these Workmen’s Compensation cases the department of justice must pay.

The attorney general as head of the department of justice appeals.

These criminal cases before us are the result of a state-wide program investigated and prosecuted by the attorney general as head of the department of justice.

The authority to so act comes to the attorney general by section 79-2315, R.C.M.,1947. The statute was enacted in 1974 and provides;

[220]*220“The attorney general shall conduct on behalf of the state, all prosecutions for public offenses disclosed by an audit of a state agency performed by the legislative auditor.”

This Court prior to enactment of this special statute held that the attorney general had no such authority. State ex rel. Woodahl v. District Court, 159 Mont. 112, 495 P.2d 182.

Montana’s legislature fully intended this state-wide program of investigation and prosecution be carried on to a final conclusion, in what the media has called the Workmen’s Compensation scandals; it appropriated money for that specific task. A reading of H.B. 520, Laws of 1975, makes clear the money is appropriated for a definite purpose; the bill describes that purpose in these words:

“FOR INVESTIGATION AND PROSECUTION OF WORKMEN’S COMPENSATION DIVISION RELATED MATTERS * *

Armed with the specific authority of the statute, section 79-2315, R.C.M.1947, and furnished with money by the legislature for that purpose, the department of justice, acting through its head, the attorney general, proceeded with the task. These cases are now before us because the department of justice is acting under the mandates of those statutes.

We now reach the crucial question: Who pays for these court appointed services?

The answer must come from section 95-1005, R.C.M.1947, enacted in 1967, amended in 1973, and in its present form as of 1974, and provides:

“Whenever, in a criminal action or proceeding, an attorney at law represents or defends any person by order of the court, on the ground that the person is financially unable to employ counsel, such attorney shall be paid for his services such sum as a district court or justice of the state supreme court certifies to be a reasonable compensation therefor and shall be reimbursed for reasonable costs incurred in the criminal proceeding. Such costs shall be chargeable to the county in which the proceeding [221]*221arose, except that (a) in proceedings solely involving the violation of a city ordinance or state statute prosecuted in a municipal, city or police court wherein costs shall be chargeable to the city or town in which the proceeding arose, and (b) in arrests in criminal proceedings by agents of the department of fish and game and arrests by agents of the department of justice, the costs (including attorneys’ fees of attorneys appointed by the court for the defendant) must be borne by the state agency causing the arrest.” (Emphasis added).

A reading of this statute makes evident (1) costs are chargeable to the county with two exceptions and (2) costs include attorneys’ fees for attorneys appointed by the court in criminal causes for the defendant.

Here, we are faced with the more specific question of who must pay under the exception of this statute. We are dealing with the exception of subdivision (b). This is a single sentence starting with the words “in arrests” and concluding with the words “causing the arrest.” The attorney general underlines and emphasizes the phrase, “arrests in criminal proceedings by agents * * * of the department of justice.” He takes one narrow step further in his construction of the statute and in its application to the facts here, and states that in these cases no agent of the department of justice physically made an arrest; this is true; he further states that in those cases where arrests were necessary the arrests were physically made by local law enforcement agencies or agents, such as the sheriff of Toole County.

Merely to state this construction and the meaning inferred by the attorney general is to show and emphasize its narrowness. He insists the statutory exceptions deal with and are intended to deal only with arrests actually made by game wardens and highway patrolmen in their respective departments, fish and game and justice.

When we consider what was actually done here in the Cline cases now before us, we illustrate the absurdity of such a narrow [222]*222approach. There the department of justice, through Dzivi, requested the warrants of arrest; the warrants, after issue by the court, were returned to the department of justice; a telephone call was made by an agent of the department to Sheriff Brooks of Toole County; later a teletype copy of the warrant was sent to the sheriff by an agent of the department of justice and the sheriff was asked to apprehend and physically take into custody the Clines and then notify the department of that occurrence; the Clines were physically taken into custody by the sheriff, the department notified, and then the Clines were physically transported to Helena by investigators of the department of justice.

In the other cases before us no actual physical act of arrest was made; it is clear however that the defendants appeared at arraignments as the result of Informations filed by officers and agents of the department of justice. The record is barren of any acts by any agents of any counties except Sheriff Brooks’ directed activities by the department of justice.

Is the mere ministerial physical act of arrest to determine the operative effect of the subsection (b) exception? We think not.

Are we to say the single physical act of arrest by a sheriff in Toole County or the lack of a physical act of arrest is the pivotal question? Surely we must not gather the intent and purpose of the legislature on such narrow ground.

The legislature’s purpose of section 95-1005, R.C.M. 1947, was to assure payment of the services of appointed defense counsel in criminal proceedings.

In State ex rel. Langan v. District Court, 111 Mont.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Bretz
605 P.2d 974 (Montana Supreme Court, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
552 P.2d 70, 170 Mont. 218, 1976 Mont. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leaphart-v-county-commissioners-mont-1976.