Musgrove v. Hamilton County

111 Tenn. 1
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 111 Tenn. 1 (Musgrove v. Hamilton County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Musgrove v. Hamilton County, 111 Tenn. 1 (Tenn. 1903).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Wilkes

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The various complainants in this case are justices of the peace, constables, and deputy sheriffs of Hamilton county. They sue the county of Hamilton to recover from it certain fees and costs which they claim to have earned in the discharge of their official duties, and which they allege have been paid into the county treasury of Hamilton county, either in money, or in work and labor done for the county, in accordance with the statutes of the State.

[4]*4There was a demurrer to the bill, which was overruled, and the county has appealed.

The allegations of the bill are, in detail: That up to the September term, 1902, of the circuit court of the county, there was a fund of about $4,000 in the treasury of the county belonging to complainants in unequal amounts, and held by the county in trust for them. That this fund arose in the following manner: Such of the complainants as are justices of the peace of the county had each issued warrants against persons guilty of offenses known and designated under the laws of the State as “small offenses.” That such persons were arrested, brought before the justice of the peace issuing the warrant, and, having pleaded guilty, were fined a small amount, and adjudged liable for the costs accrued in the case. Failing to pay or secure the fine and cpsts so adjudged against them, they were sent to the jail or workhouse of the county, to be. confined at labor until such fines and costs were worked out or paid. That the number of cases, the names of the defendants, and the amount of costs in each case, cannot be specifically stated, because the warrants upon which the cases were tried, and judgments indorsed showing these facts, are on file in the office of the county judge of the county, and are not accessible to complainants, but that the costs, and to whom payable, can be readily shown upon a reference to the master.

The bill alleges that in each of these cases the defendants therein were lawfully charged with having [5]*5committed a small offense under the statutes, that they each pleaded guilty, or submitted their cases, and were fined, and a judgment was duly rendered against each. The costs were legally taxed and entered on the warrants, showing, in separate items, their character, and the officer and witnesses 'to whom going. That in all of the cases the defendants failing to pay or secure the fine and costs were committed to the workhouse to work out the same. That, a number of these defendants, after they reached the jail or workhouse, paid to the county judge the fine and costs adjudged against them, which was covered into the county treasury. Others there gave bond and security, and the amounts were subsequently collected and paid into the county treasury. Others were carried, to the workhouse, where they worked out, under the laws, for the benefit of the county, the fines and costs adjudged against them. That in all these cases complainants have made application to the county for payment to them, respectively, of the amount of costs due them and held by the county for them, but that, instead of paying the money to them, the papers in the cases were referred to the revenue commissioners of the county, who examined the costs taxed and adjudged in each of said cases, and approved the same. That after this, in some way not authorized by law, the circuit judge and attorney-general of the circuit and district embracing Hamilton county assumed to, and did, disapprove the costs in said cases to the amount of $4,000. It is charged that this action of the judge and [6]*6attorney-general was without warrant of law, as neither had any power to pass upon the costs taxed in said cases and paid into the treasury by the parties against whom adjudged. That the county, having collected these costs from the defendants in the cases, and by virtue of the judgments against them, holds the fund so collected in trust for the complainants.

It is further alleged that since the September term, 1902, of the circuit court, and since the original bills of costs mentioned above were presented for payment, various other sums have accrued, and have become due to complainants, to about the same amount as those disapproved by the circuit judge and attorney-general, and these they can also show upon a reference.

It is further alleged that the complainants join in this bill under an agreement with the county attorney that no objection would be taken to the bill because of the multiplicity or misjoinder of parties complainant, it being the desire of all parties to have the legal question involved settled with as little cost as possible.

The prayer of the bill is for an account to ascertain the amount due each complainant, and for a judgment for the same, and for general relief.

The bill was demurred to on several grounds, the only one of any substantial merit being that the bill shows that the costs sued for have been examined and disallowed by the judge and the attorney-general of the circuit, and that their action is conclusive upon the county against the complainant’s right to recover.

[7]*7The case was decided in the court below and in the court of chancery appeals upon this aspect of the case, and is presented and argued before this court upon the same feature. The chancellor held that it was not the province of the judge and attorney-general to pass upon and disallow costs which had .been adjudged against defendants who have submitted their cases and been fined before justices of the peace-, under the “small-offense law;” and this cost, having been paid by the defendant to the county and covered into the treasury, belonged to complainants. The chancellor was of opinion that the right and power of the judge and attorney-general to pass upon such bills of cost depended upon a construction of the statutes (Shannon’s Code, sections 7593, 7602).

Section 7602 makes it the duty of the judge and attorney-general to carefully examine all bills of cost certified for payment by justices .of the peace in which the State or county has been charged with the costs of criminal prosecutions, and if it shall appear in any manner that the prosecution in which the State or county has been taxed with the cost by the justice is frivolous, malicious, or commenced to secure fees, it shall be the duty of the judge and attorney-general to disapprove and disallow said bill of cost, and no part of said cost shall be paid by the State or county in such case.

Section 7593 provides that the cost chargeable upon the State or county in criminal cases shall be made out so as to show the specific items, and be examined, en[8]*8tered of record, and certified to be correct by the court or judge before whom the cause was heard or disposed of, and also by the district attorney-general, and they are granted full power, and it is made their duty, to examine into, inspect, and audit all bills of cost accruing against the State or county, and to disallow any part or all of said bills of cost as may be illegally or wrongfully taxed against the State or county.

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Related

State v. William Cox v. A.C. Gilless
8 S.W.3d 268 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1999)
State Ex Rel. Chanaberry v. Stooksbury
145 S.W.2d 775 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1940)
State Ex Rel. Hurst v. Sullivan County
120 S.W.2d 32 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1938)
Reagan v. Fentress County
83 S.W.2d 244 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1935)
State v. Kerby
136 Tenn. 386 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
111 Tenn. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/musgrove-v-hamilton-county-tenn-1903.