Linley v. Citizens National Bank

94 S.E. 874, 108 S.C. 372, 1918 S.C. LEXIS 147
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 18, 1918
Docket9854
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 94 S.E. 874 (Linley v. Citizens National Bank) 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
Linley v. Citizens National Bank, 94 S.E. 874, 108 S.C. 372, 1918 S.C. LEXIS 147 (S.C. 1918).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gage.

The’case involves the validity of a proposed bond issue of $33,000 by the board of drainage, commissioners of Eighteen Mile Creek drainage district in Anderson, tenta *377 tively sold to the defendants by the plaintiffs. The issue is not made by those who are liable to pay the bonds, but by two banks which have agreed to buy them, and which with characteristic timidity have shied at suspected defects in the security. The Circuit Court sustained the bonds, and we think that event fixed their character; but the banks have nevertheless appealed. The circuit decree is generally right, and none of the exceptions are sound, except a part of that set down as the fourth ground. Time and the exigencies of the case suggest a speedy judgment.

There are four main grounds of appeal so argued by the appellants. They are: (1) That the clerk had no jurisdiction under the Constitution to do the acts he did; (2) that the clerk’s deputy had no power to find in the deputy’s name or at all for the preliminary report of the viewers (section 2199) ; (3) that the clerk did not give the notice required by law (section 2200) of his purpose to consider and pass upon the report of the viewers; (4) that the board of drainage commissioners had no power to let to contract a part of the work of drainage, and to do the balance of it by day labor.

Th'e primary right involved, which is the clerk’s jurisdiction, rests upon the amendment to the Constitution adopted in 1901 (23 Stats. 616) and the well-considered statute enacted in 1911 pursuant thereto' (27 Stats. 92). The Reporter will print the annexed digest of the clerk’s duties under the statute. The amendment to thé Constitution will be fully reported. That instrument creates the fundamental right. It authorizes the General Assembly: (1) To provide by law for the condemnation of lands necessary for drainage; (2) to provide for the equitable assessment of lands so drained; and (3) to provide for paying the expenses of such condemnation and drainage; and (4) to provide “proper official channels” to effect those ends. The numerals are supplied.

*378 1 The brunt of the appellants’ attack is on the jurisdiction of the clerk to exercise the many powers conferred upon him by the statute. The statute plainly lodges in the clerk plenary jurisdiction to accomplish the ends of the statute. It declares:

“The clerk of the Court * * * shall have jurisdiction, power and authority to establish a levee drainage district * * * in his county.” Act Feb. 18, 1911 (27 St. at Large, p. 92), sec. 1.

And it is equally plain that some of the powers thus conferred upon the clerk are judicial; that is to say, they are the power to weigh and consider.

It is true that the legislature would be without power to authorize 'a clerk to try, for instance, an action for the recovery of money. That would be to exercise a judicial power lodged by the Constitution in Courts alone. It is true that generally the clerk is a ministerial officer, and not a judicial officer, if these words- enlighten more than they confuse. And it is true that the legislature could not have conferred on the clerk some of the powers, those which are judicial, enumerated in the statute but for the enabling constitutional amendment before referred to. But that amendment, passed by a vote of the people for a great public purpose, ought not to be dissipated by verbal discriminations; it ought to be given force to compass the end in view.

We reject as unsound the appellants’ suggestion that the amendment is a limitation upon the power of the legislature to designate a channel to effect the end; and that only such a channel may be designated by the legislature as might have been designated before the amendment, to wit, a person theretofore empowered by the other provisions of the Constitution to exercise judicial powers. The amendment conferred new and enlarged powers on the legislature. It looked to a new order, and not to an old. The amendment undertook, as before suggested, to provide for four things, and one of them, and the chiefest, because first mentioned, *379 was an instrumentality to effect the end in view. “Proper official channel” is synonymous with suitable official channel, or expedient official channel, or eligible official channel. It was manifest to the lawmakers who drafted the amendment, and to the people who adopted it, that a novel enterprise was being inaugurated, and that there was no efficient, convenient and adaptable agency then at hand to execute its provisions. Had the amendment been written into the legislature article of the Constitution when that instrument was adopted as ideally it was, then it is plain the language of it would not be limited so as to make proper official channel mean only the Courts elsewhere established in the instrument. If the intent of the amendment had been that suggested by the appellants, the apt words to express it would have been “through those channels now existent,” or language of similar import. The power to provide by law for “proper official channels” to accomplish the ends in view included the power to designate what persons should be the official channel. The legislature might have designated as the “proper official channel” a Circuit Judge, a clerk of Court, a sheriff, or any other agency it deemed proper. Considering all the provisions of the statute, it is altogether likely, indeed it is manifest, that a clerk of Court is the most available and efficient agency to compass the end in viéw.

2 When the preliminary report (section 2199) of the engineer and viewers was filed in the clerk’s office, an order was made confirming the same, “because the facts have been determined to my satisfaction as clerk of Court.” But the order ' was signed: “Clarence W. Beaty, Dept. C. C. C. P. (Seal.)” The contention of the appellant, and that fetches us to the second ground, is that the order is a nullity because a deputy clerk made it, and had no power to make it. There is no suggestion that the clerk would not have made the order, or that the clerk was ignorant of the making, or that the order was wrong.

*380 As long ago as 1768 clerks were given the power “to act by themselves, in the business of their proper Courts, or to appoint clerks of the said Courts * * * for the conduct of which clerks they shall, respectively, be answerable.” 7 Stats. 201. The italics are supplied. And before that the chief clerk in the Court of King’s Bench “had the appointment of the secondary or deputy to the chief clerk.” 1 Tidd’s Pr. 229. Our present statute declares the same law. Code, sec. 1304. It is manifest that this deputy is but another clerk; and when he performs the duties incident to the office, he is acting as clerk; and it is immaterial whether he signs' the clerk’s name or his own to certify to his act.

In the instant case the deputy signed his own name, and used the seal of office. He was appointed clerk of Pear-man, the chief clerk, and as such he had the right to act in his own person and to certify his action by his own name.

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

Related

Hancock-Nelson Mercantile Co. v. Commissioner of Taxation
215 N.W.2d 620 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1974)
Eustace v. Speckhart
514 P.2d 65 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1973)
State Ex Rel. Emmert v. Union Trust Co.
86 N.E.2d 450 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 S.E. 874, 108 S.C. 372, 1918 S.C. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linley-v-citizens-national-bank-sc-1918.