McWilliams v. County of Richland

16 Ill. App. 333, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 21
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 6, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 16 Ill. App. 333 (McWilliams v. County of Richland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McWilliams v. County of Richland, 16 Ill. App. 333, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 21 (Ill. Ct. App. 1885).

Opinion

Baker, J.

This was assumpsit by appellant against the county of Richland, for seven days services at $2.50 per day as bailiff, at the November term, 1831, of the Richland Circuit Court. The verdict and judgment were for defendant. A preliminary point is made, that as plaintiff filed with his declaration an affidavit, showing the nature of his demand and the amount due, and defendant filed no affidavit of merits with its plea, the judgment should have been for appellant for the amount claimed.

Plaintiff did not move in the court below for judgment as in case of default, or to strike the plea from the files, but formally took issue thereon and went to trial, and he must be held to have waived his rights in that respect, and can not now object the plea was not verified by affidavit.

It seems to be admitted that appellant was duly appointed and served as bailiff as claimed by him, but it is objected to his right of recovery, that he has, since 1882, been a duly and regularly appointed deputy sheriff of the county, and was such at the time the services sued for were rendered. There was given in evidence an order of the board of supervisors made in 1882, and showing that, on motion, the salary of the deputy sheriff was fixed at $300 per annum for the ensuing term.

The court instructed the jury, that if they believed from the evidence-that the plaintiff was deputy sheriff at the time the services sued for were rendered, and contracted with the defendant to serve for $300 a year as such, and that the services sued for come under the head of the duties of a deputy sheriff, that then they should find for the defendant.

We do not understand the evidence as showing, or tending to show, a contract between the plaintiff and the defendant, to the effect that plaintiff would serve as deputy sheriff for $300 a year, nor do we understand that it is within the power of the board of supervisors to appoint, or make contracts for the services of deputy sheriffs. The sheriff alone is authorized to appoint deputy sheriffs. R. S. Chap. 125, sections 7, 8 and 9. Such deputy may perform any and all of the duties of the sheriff, but they are performed in the name of the sheriff, and his acts are held to be the acts of the sheriff, and the sheriff is personally liable for any wrongful acts, and for any neglect or omission of duty on the part of his deputy. Chap. 125, sections 12 and 13.

The matter of the compensation of the deputy and the mode of its payment, is wholly a matter of contract and arrangement between the sheriff and the deputy; the law has not assumed to regulate it. If the sheriff sees fit to give his entire compensation and allowances, and even more, to the deputy, as a consideration for his services, neither the board of supervisors, nor any one else, has a right to complain. The law nowhere gives the board authority to fix the salary of a deputy sheriff. The tenth section of article ten of the constitution does, however, impose upon the board the duty to fix the “ compensation ” of the sheriff, with the amount of his necessary “ clerk hire, stationery, fuel and other expenses,” and an allowance for deputy hire properly falls within the purview of this provision.

The mere form of words used in making the allowances, is not deemed essential to its validity. In People v. Gregory, 11 Brad well, 370, an allowance of $1,500 to the sheriff “ to pay his deputies,” was held as intended to cover “clerk hire, stationery, fuel and other expenses;” and in Jennings v. Fayette county, 97 Ill. 419, the allowance was $800 per year for “ pay of deputies,” and in that case it was expressly held the county was not liable for such allowance any more than it was for the sheriff’s compensation or salary, and that the only effect of the order was to allow the sheriff to retain, in addition to his compensation, so much as might he necessary for an additional sum of $800 for pay of deputies, if fees sufficient were collected.

The only item of the order of the board made in 1882 that is in evidence in this case, is the item we have mentioned, and which states that the salary of the deputy sheriff was fixed at $300 per annum. But, as we have seen, the board had no power to fix the deputy’s salary. However, we must disregard the mere form of words, and hold this order was, in substance, an allowance to the sheriff of $300 a year toward paying his deputies, should the expenditure of as much as that become necessary, to be paid, however, only out of fees collected. The order was in no sense a contract, or the basis of a contract, between the county and whoever might he appointed deputy by the sheriff thereafter to be elected.

The sheriff takes his office cum onere-; he is bound to perform its duties either in person or by deputy; is responsible for both malfeasance and nonfeasance in such performance; not only his compensation, but the expenses of his office for deputy hire, clerk hire, stationery, fuel or otherwise, are payable only out of fees collected, and even out of such fees only to the extent fixed by the county board; and he is onlj allowed to charge fees to the amount and in cases allowed by law.

The nineteenth section of the Sheriffs Act, R. S., Chap. 125, provides, in express terms, that each sheriff shall, in person or by deputy, attend upon all courts of record held in his county when in session, and obey the lawful orders and directions of the court. This duty, thus imposed upon him by the statute, may he well performed, either by his personal attendance or that of his deputy, and such attendance of the deputy would, in law, be held to be the attendance of the sheriff. The sheriff would be bound to so attend the court, even though no fees or compensation were allowed him therefor; but, all that the statute requires of him in that behalf is, that either he himself be personally present, or that he be present by deputy— one deputy; it docs not impose upon him the burden of attendance both in person and by deputy, or of attendance by two or more deputies, and of paying such additional deputy or deputies either out of his personal compensation or private means, or out of the sum fixed by the board for the expenses of his office. The Fees and Salaries Act, section 19, does, however, grant him, for attending circuit court, either in person or by deputy, a fee of three dollars per day, to be allowed and paid out of the county treasury; such fee, of course, to be reported and accounted for in his semi-annual reports.

It is plain, that the business and the practice of the circuit court is such, that it would be wholly impracticable such court could properly perform the functions imposed upon it, with but a single sheriff or deputy in attendance, and without constables or bailiffs to assist. In very early times there were bailiffs to attend the judges and justices at the assizes and quarter sessions. 1 Blackstone, 345. To meet a like necessity, a like custom and practice has always prevailed in this State. The power of the circuit court to appoint bailiffs to serve at the term, is fully recognized in the case of McCann v. The People, 88 Ill. 103; and it is provided in section 5, chapter 16, P. S., that no bailiff shall be permitted to be special bail; and it is the plain intendment of section 41 of chapter 53, that constables may be required to attend on the circuit court; and their per diem therefor is fixed, and is provided to be paid out of the county treasury.

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Related

County of Carroll v. Durham
120 Ill. App. 330 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1905)
County of La Salle v. Milligan
34 Ill. App. 346 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1890)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 Ill. App. 333, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcwilliams-v-county-of-richland-illappct-1885.