Meador v. County Court of McDowell County

87 S.E.2d 725, 141 W. Va. 96, 1955 W. Va. LEXIS 31
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1955
Docket10715
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 87 S.E.2d 725 (Meador v. County Court of McDowell County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meador v. County Court of McDowell County, 87 S.E.2d 725, 141 W. Va. 96, 1955 W. Va. LEXIS 31 (W. Va. 1955).

Opinions

Riley, Judge:

Invoking the original jurisdiction of this Court, the petitioner, William A. Meador, Probation Officer of McDowell County, West Virginia, filed on December 7, 1954, his petition directed to the County Court of McDowell County, West Virginia, a corporation, praying that a writ of mandamus be issued compelling the respondent county court to pay to the petitioner salary in the amount of two hundred twenty-five dollars a month for each month since July, 1954, and also to pay petitioner three hundred dollars to defray field expenses incurred by petitioner as such probation officer since July 1, 1954.

The case was submitted to this Court upon petitioner’s original petition, respondent’s answer to the original petition, petitioner’s demurrer to the respondent’s [99]*99answer, petitioner’s amended and supplemental petition, respondent’s answer to the amended and supplemental petition, petitioner’s demurrer to respondent’s answer to the amended and supplemental petition, petitioner’s general replication to respondent’s answer to petitioner’s amended and supplemental petition, and voluminous depositions taken on behalf of both petitioner and respondent, bearing in the main upon the fiscal conditions of McDowell County.

From the original and amended and supplemental petitions it appears that on October 16, 1952, petitioner, William A. Meador, was appointed Probation Officer of McDowell County, effective the same day, by the Honorable Richard R. Parsons, Judge of the Criminal Court of McDowell County.

The foregoing appointment was made pursuant to Chapter 62, Code, 1931, as amended by Chapter 27, Acts of the Legislature, Regular Session, 1939, by adding thereto a new article, Article 12, composed of twenty-two sections, relating to probation and parole, and amending and reenacting Section 5 of said Article 12, by Chapter 38, Acts of the Legislature, Regular Session, 1949, relating to the appointment and fixing of salaries of court and county court probation officers and clerical assistants.

From the original, the amended and supplemental petitions, and the answers thereto it appears that at the time of the appointment of petitioner on October 16, 1952, as Probation Officer of McDowell County, the Honorable Richard R. Parsons was, and is now, the Judge of the Criminal Court of McDowell County, and as such actively exercises jurisdiction in criminal cases and has authority to place offenders on probation.

The original and the amended and supplemental petitions allege, and respondent’s answers thereto deny, that prior to the appointment of the petitioner by the Judge of the Criminal Court of McDowell County on October 16, 1952, the Judge obtained the approval of the McDowell County Court of expenses to be incurred of three hundred [100]*100dollars a year and a salary of two hundred twenty-five dollars a month to be paid to the petitioner as probation officer; and that for that fiscal year the county court allotted and appropriated the sum of three thousand dollars for the salary and field expenses of the Probation Officer of McDowell County in a levy made for the fiscal year 1953-54.

The original and the amended and supplemental petitions allege that, pursuant to such appointment, an order of appointment of the petitioner as such probation officer was entered in the proper order book of the criminal court of that county; that the petitioner was at the time of his appointment on October 16, 1952, a person qualified to perform the duties as probation officer, in that petitioner is not related to the Judge of the Criminal Court of McDowell County either by consanguinity or affinity; and that after his appointment petitioner gave bond in the penalty of one thousand dollars with Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland, as surety thereon, which bond was approved by both the Criminal Court and the County Court of McDowell County; and the original and amended and supplemental petitions allege, and respondent’s answers thereto admit, that the petitioner has continuously performed the duties of Probation Officer of McDowell County, and is performing the duties of such office, which allegations are not controverted in this record.

It is further alleged in the petitions, and nothing contrary thereto is established by this record, that petitioner’s appointment as Probation Officer of McDowell County, if valid in the first instance, has never been revoked by the Judge of the Criminal Court of McDowell County, and that at a regular meeting of the County Court of McDowell County held on Wednesday, June 23, 1954, that court entered an order which recited that funds would not be available to defray the salary and expenses of a Probation Officer for McDowell County for the fiscal year beginning July 1,1954, and ending June 30,1955; ordered that the Judge of the Criminal Court of McDowell County [101]*101“do not appoint or continue the appointment of a probation officer for McDowell County for the Fiscal Year beginning July 1, 1954, and ending June 30, 1955”; and further ordered that the duties heretofore performed by the probation officer appointed by the Criminal Court of McDowell County be performed by the sheriff of that county, which order of the county court is set forth in verbatim in the original petition.

Thereafter in the original petition and in the amended and supplemental petitions and the answers thereto, as well as in the depositions filed with this Court, there is brought into issue the question whether “funds would not be available to defray the salary and expenses of a Probation Officer for McDowell County for the Fiscal Year beginning July 1, 1954, and ending June 30, 1955”, as recited in the order of the county court entered at its regular meeting on June 23, 1954.

It is asserted in the original and in the amended and supplemental petitions, and not controverted in any of the pleadings, that there was a balance of $137,335.32 carried over for general county purposes for the fiscal year 1953-1954, to the fiscal year 1954-1955; and that such sum represents money appropriated for general purposes for the fiscal year 1953-54, which was not used and spent, and thus could be, and was, carried over for general county purposes for the fiscal year 1954-1955. Then in minute detail the original and the amended and supplemental petitions, as well as the answers thereto, contain allegations bearing on the question whether the recital contained in the order of the county court entered at its regular meeting on June 23, 1954, “that funds will not be available to pay the salary and expenses of the Probation Officer for McDowell County for the Fiscal Year beginning July 1,1954, and ending June 30,1955,” is a true statement of the fiscal affairs of McDowell County at the time the order was entered.

From the allegations of respondent’s answers to the petitioner’s original and amended and supplemental petitions it appears that for the fiscal year 1952-1953, the [102]

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Meador v. County Court of McDowell County
87 S.E.2d 725 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1955)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 S.E.2d 725, 141 W. Va. 96, 1955 W. Va. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meador-v-county-court-of-mcdowell-county-wva-1955.