Leonard v. Board of County Commissioners

8 Colo. App. 338
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Colo. App. 338 (Leonard v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leonard v. Board of County Commissioners, 8 Colo. App. 338 (Colo. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Thomson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in error was the duly elected, qualified and acting county clerk of the county of Garfield, from the 8tlt day of January, 1888, to the 1st day of January, 1891, and between those dates, as county clerk, and as clerk of the board of commissioners of that county, performed a variety of services,- his claims for which, upon proper demand, the board refused to allow. This proceeding was instituted to recover the amount which he claimed to be due ; and from a judgment in the cause, rendered by the district court against him, he has appealed to this court.

The performance of the service is conceded, but the recovery is resisted upon the theory that by a proper construction of the statutes defining his duties and regulating his compensation, he has received full pay from the county, and cannot therefore maintain this suit. The county clerk is charged with the general duties of his office, and is also, ex officio, recorder of deeds, and clerk of the board of commissioners. [340]*340He therefore acts in three capacities. By the law in force when these services were rendered, he received his pay, as recorder of deeds, from private individuals who had occasion for his services in that capacity. There is no question in this case which affects him as recorder of deeds. It is the compensation to which he was entitled by law as county clerk, and as clerk of the board of commissioners, concerning which counsel disagree. By the law under which these services were rendered, the office of county clerk was not a salaried office, but a compensation was provided by the statute to which he was entitled for his services either as county clerk or clerk of the board, which compensation was pajmble by the county. His compensation as clerk of the board was not, however, entirely payable in fixed fees; and for services performed as such clerk, for which no specific fees were provided, he was entitled to a reasonable compensation, to be allowed by the board and paid by the county. General Statutes, 1883, section 557.

The latter section was amended in 1885, so as to read as follows: “ Such clerk shall receive a reasonable compensation for such services as he may perform, as clerk of the board, where no specific fees are allowed by the board, and paid by the county; Provided, That in any county of the third class the board of commissioners shall not allow, and there shall not be paid by the county to any such clerk, more than the sum of six hundred dollars, in the warrants of the county, per annum.” Session Laws, 1885, p. 161.

The construction of the foregoing section contended for in'behalf of the defendant would limit the compensation to which the plaintiff was entitled for any and all services performed by him as clerk of the board to the maximum amount of $600. It does not seem to us that the language is complicated or involved, or that any recondite learning is necessary to determine what it means. There is but one sentence in the entire amended section. The proviso is dependent upon, and must be interpreted by, what immediately precedes it; and the whole amounts to this, that in all counties ex[341]*341cept those of the third class, for services as clerk of the board, for which no specific fees are provided, the county clerk shall receive a reasonable compensation ; but that in counties of the third class this reasonable compensation shall not exceed $600 per annum. Garfield county is a county of the third class, and in that county, therefore, the extreme amount which the commissioners could allow the plaintiff in any one year for services as clerk of the board, for which no compensation in the way of fees was provided by law, was $600. There is nothing in this section which interferes with his right to claim his statutoiy fees. On the eontraiy, his right to them is recognized, and when services for which they are payable are rendered to the county, the county must pay them, no matter what the amount may be. The foregoing statutory provision affects the county clerk only in his capacity as clerk of the board of commissioners.

Several different accounts are set forth in the complaint. The first claim is for entering and recording on the records of the proceedings of the board 4,529 orders, made by the board, at thirtj'-five cents for each order. Section 554, of the General Statutes, makes it the duty of the clerk of the board to record in a book provided for that purpose all proceedings of the board. The act concerning fees and officers provides that county clerks in counties of the third class are authorized to receive the same fees as district clerks for like services, and contains the following among other specific provisions: “For entering each order of court, thirty-five cents per folio.” Geueral Statutes, section 1452. Each of these orders consists of one folio. Counsel for the county build an argument upon the phraseology “ order of court,” to this effect, that section 1452 has come down to us unaltered from the revision of 1868, when the county clerk was ex officio clerk of the probate court; that the words “ order of court ” therefore refer to proceedings in the probate court; that by the act of the legislature in 1877 the county clerk ceased to be clerk of the probate court; and that although the words have been retained in subsequent revisions and compila[342]*342tions, yet, the office of clerk of the court having heen abolished, there is nothiug to which the words can be applied, and. they are therefore no longer operative. The argument would he plausible if counsel’s assumptions concerning the legislation on the subject were correct. By section 7 of an act approved March 11, 1864, the county clerks of certain specified counties were made ex officio clerks of the probate courts in their respective counties. Session Laws, 1864, p. 118. Very few of the present counties of the third class were named in the act; and the others, or a majority of them, were not then in existence. The act did not embrace all the counties in the state, and its provisions were confined specifically to those named. Nothing can therefore be predicated upon the fact that in those particular counties county clerks were clerks of the probate court. Prior to 1864 the county clerk was not clerk of the probate court in any county. The first act regulating the fees of officers was passed and approved on the 8th day of November, 1861. Counties were not then classified, and the law was equally applicable to all counties. We find in that act the following provisions: “The county clerk shall be and is hereby authorized to receive the same fees as clerks of the district court for like services.” “ For entering each order of court twenty-five cents.” Session Laws, 1861, p. 392. Section 33, of an act relating to counties and county officers, approved November 6,1861 (Session Laws, 1861, p. 90), made it the duty of the county clerk, as clerk of the board of commissioners, to record in a book, to be provided for that purpose, all proceedings of the board. In 1861 the county clerk was not ex officio the clerk of any court, and the only orders which he was required.by law to record were the orders of the board. By the words “ each order of court” must have been 'meant each order of the board, because the duties of the clerk did not concern any orders except those of the board, and he was not entitled to fees except for the performance of his official duties. In the respects we have noticed, the law has undergone no substantial change from that time to this; and we must hold that [343]

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Bluebook (online)
8 Colo. App. 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leonard-v-board-of-county-commissioners-coloctapp-1896.