Muenninghoff v. Bartholomew, Constable

106 S.W.2d 97, 269 Ky. 36, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 554
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 1, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 106 S.W.2d 97 (Muenninghoff v. Bartholomew, Constable) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Muenninghoff v. Bartholomew, Constable, 106 S.W.2d 97, 269 Ky. 36, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 554 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner — -

Reversing.

*38 'The justices of the peace, constables and deputy-constables of Jefferson county are controlled by the . provisions of section 1083a-l et seq. of the Statutes, which are the various sections of chapter 147 of the 'Acts of 1932. Under the terms of section 1083a-2, all fees, costs, and other money collected by those officers for or in the performance of their respective duties become a part of the general fund of the county. There is a recorder for each magisterial district whose duty it is to receive that money and keep a proper record thereof. He is required by section 1083a-7 to furnish the fiscal court, in the manner and form prescribed by it, a sworn statement each month showing the sums so received during the preceding month from the administration of the offices of the justices of the peace, constables, and deputy constables, and to pay over the amount to the county treasurer. His records must be such that from time to time the correct amounts received or due and not received may be ascertained. Section 1083a-9 fixes the salary of the constable at $2,400 per annum to be paid in equal monthly installments out of the general- fund of the county, and of ■each deputy constable at $1,500 a year payable in the same way, “provided, however, that in no event shall the amount paid to any constable or deputy constable for any month exceed the amount paid into the general fund of said county by the said constable or deputy constable, pursuant to section (2) DKy. Stats, sec. 1083a-2] hereof, during the preceding month.”

In Commonwealth v. Bartholomew, 265 Ky. 703, 97 S. W. (2d) 591, these several sections of the statute were construed as regulating the office of constable, including the payment of the salaries of the constable and his deputies, as a unit and as meaning that he and his deputies collectively should earn in the performance of their duties enough to meet the monthly payment of the salaries of all of them.

The same appellee, A. J. Bartholomew, the constable for the Third magisterial district of Jefferson county, brought this suit against the county commissioners, praying a writ of mandamus commanding that each of them individually, and that they collectively, as constituting the fiscal court, pay him $200 as representing the fees he had earned during the preceding month of September, 1936, out of the funds paid into the .eounty treasury (by himself and deputies. It is alleged *39 that the snm so received aggregated $580.96, while total, monthly salaries amounted to $575. It was made to-appear that Ben F. Ewing, county judge, and George-C. Burton, one of the commissioners, had voted to approve the payment of the salary, while Joseph Muenninghoff and Allen R. Carter, the other two commissioners, had voted against doing so; the deadlock preventing affirmative action as a body. No defense was interposed by the first two named members, but Messrs. Muenninghoff and Carter filed demurrers and a joint answer denying the right of plaintiff to receive the-salary or to the relief sought.

By the first paragraph of the answer, some of the averments of the petition were denied, but they were largely legal conclusions or constructions of the applicable statutes. In the second paragraph, the answering defendants asserted that they had respectively exercised judicial discretion in rejecting the claim of the plaintiff to the salaries sought to be recovered and that, their action in this respect could not be controlled by mandamus. The third paragraph alleged that prior to September, 1936, an audit of the records of the magisterial district in which the plaintiff served revealed that on three different months in 1935 and 1936 the plaintiff had been overpaid for his services as constable the aggregate of $146.56, which he had refused to refund. This, it was said, the fiscal court was entitled to have set off against any proper claim of the plaintiff for his salary for September, 1936.

Justification for refusing to allow the plaintiff’s, salary was further based upon the allegation, in substance, that included in the account of collections out of which the plaintiff was claiming the right to be paid, were numerous deposits of $1 required by section 1083a-ll to 'be collected by justices of the peace upon the filing of each original civil action or proceeding; no other costs having been collected in those actions. The calcula'tions of salaries of the constable and his deputies in the report of the recorder are charged to be erroneous to such extent. It was asserted that no part, of these cost deposits should be credited to the account-of his salary for that month. In the alternative, it was pleaded that in no event could there be considered more than a sum equal to the proportion which the constable’s fee for serving process in each particular action bore to the total court costs, and fees. It is alleged. *40 that, applying only his proportionate share of these deposits, he lacked $54 of having earned $200 in that month.

Upon the joining of the issues, evidence was taken which, for the purposes of the decision, both in the circuit court and here, may be said to be as stated in the' pleadings thus outlined, except as to the $1 costs paid. The record does not disclose what they amounted to or what the division would be if allocated ratably between the magistrate and constable.

The trial court sustained a demurrer, to the second and third paragraphs of the answer and granted a writ of mandamus against- the four members of the fiscal court, individually and collectively, directing them to allow the plaintiff’s claim for his salary for the month of September, 1936. Commissioners Muenninghoff and Carter appeal. ■

The appellants predicate their argument that the court erred in sustaining a demurrer to the second paragraph of their answer and in granting the writ of mandamus upon the ground that they had acted judicially and exercised a discretion vested in them in denying the claim of the appellee. This is upon the idea that it was an unliquidated claim, the amount due him as salary 'being in dispute. The appellee concedes this general proposition of law where general claims of creditors are involved or where the validity of the authority to_ act is questionable. Such, it seems, were the conditions in the several cases cited by the appellants where this court so ruled. But we think that no such discretionary right existed in this case. The statute fixes the constable’s compensation, which is to be ascertained in a particular way. Beginning with Page v. Hardin, 47 Ky. (8 B. Mon.) 648, it has been held that a public officer is entitled, under the law, to receive his salary and that the writ of mandamus is an appropriate remedy with which to enforce that right. Bell County Board of Education v. Howard, 248 Ky. 766, 59 S. W. (2d) 982; Riley v. Shannon, Auditor, 266 Ky. 265, 98 S. W. (2d) 906. We concur in the view of the trial court that when the recorder has filed the statement in the manner and form directed and required by the statutes and the 'fiscal court, and has paid over the money collected to the treasurer, that record is conclusive in the absence of fraud or mistake. When that has been done, it is merely a matter of inspection, *41

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.W.2d 97, 269 Ky. 36, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muenninghoff-v-bartholomew-constable-kyctapphigh-1937.