People v. Stewart

6 Ill. App. 62, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 20
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 2, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 Ill. App. 62 (People v. Stewart) 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
People v. Stewart, 6 Ill. App. 62, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 20 (Ill. Ct. App. 1880).

Opinion

Wall, J.

Suit was brought upon the official bond of Stewart, clerk of the Circuit Court of White county. The breach assigned was that he had failed to pay over to the county treasury the sum of §369.76, which was a balance remaining in his hands from fees collected in his office for the half of year ending May 31st, 1879, after-deducting the amount allowable to him under the order of the county board for compensation, clerk hire, and other expenses. The clerk made to the board his semi-annual report, stating his receipts for the half year:

For clerks’ fees in suits and miscellaneous services . . $480.75

For recording deed, etc........... 830.80

$1,311.55

CORTEA.

Salary half year.....$ 500.00

Clerk hire....... 400.00

Stationery, etc.......41.79

Balance on hand ..... 369.76

This report was approved by the Board, and the clerk was ordered to pay the balance to the County Treasurer, which he refused to do.

On the trial, the clerk testified that he had made this report; that his compensation had been fixed by the County Board at $1,000 per annum, and his allowance for clerk hire at $800 per annum; and that these amounts had never been increased, nor had he made any claim for additional allowance when he made this report, or previously, but that the balance shown by said report had all been expended by him in getting the work done in the office, and that at the time the report was made there was in fact no part of said sum of money in his hands. As he had .made the report showing the money was in hand, he could not be permitted to deny it for the purpose of relieving his sureties. Morley v. Town of Metamora, 78 Ill. 394; Roper v. Sangamon Lodge, 91 Ill. 518.

The amount of his compensation, etc., having been fixed by the county board, could not be increased or diminished during his term of office. Const. Art. 10, §11; Hughes v. People, 82 Ill. 80. His testimony upon the point was, therefore, not competent, and had the case been upon trial before a jury, the court would, no doubt, have excluded it; but as the case was tried without a jury, it will be presumed the court did not consider this proof in arriving at a decision.

The real point of dispute grows out of the fact that a considerable portion of the money which was so reported by the clerk was received for recording deeds, etc., in his capacity as ex officio recorder. It is urged that for fees received on this account recourse should be had to the bond given by the officer in his capacity as recorder, and not upon the bond given by him in his capacity as clerk of the circuit court; and it is urged that as the allowance made to him by the county board is in respect of his office of clerk of the circuit court, he must first appropriate the fees received by him for the ordinary services of the office (which we may call court fees) to the payment of his compensation, including clerk hire and other expenses. In other words, the court fees are the primary fund for the payment of his compensation, etc.; and as in this case the amount so received for court fees was but §480.75, a sum less than he was entitled to retain for compensation, etc., therefore his liability for the balance must be upon the bond given by him as recorder.

By the eighth section of Art. 10 of the Constitution, provision is made for the election of a clerk of the circuit court, who may be ex officio recorder, except in counties having a population of 60,000 or more, in which counties a recorder of deeds shall be elected, etc., and this is the substance of the legislative enactment found in § 1, Ch. 115, R. S. The second section of that chapter provides that every recorder, -whether holding his office as such ex officio, or by election, shall, before entering upon his duties, give a bond with surety, etc., conditioned for the faithful performance of his duties and the surrender of his books, papers, etc., to his successors, etc.

Section 4, chapter 25, makes provision for the giving of a bond by the clerk of the circuit court for the faithful performance of the duties of his office, the payment of all moneys that may come to his hands to the persons entitled to receive the same, and for the surrender of his books, papers, etc., to his successor. The tenth section, Art. 10 of the Constitution, makes it the duty of the county board to fix the compensation of all county officers, with the amount of their clerk hire, stationery, etc., and in all cases where fees are provided the compensation shall be paid only out of, and shall in no instance exceed the fees actually collected'; and all fees received in excess of compensation shall be paid into the county treasury.

Chapter 53, R. S., fixes the fees for the various services of clerks and recorders, and § 57, of the same chapter, requires every county officer therein mentioned, who, shall be paid in whole or in part by fees, to keep an account of all receipts, for what service, and by whom paid, and of all expenditures for clerk hire, etc., and to make report to the county board semi-annually; the report to be audited by the board, the officer to retain the amount allowed him for compensation, etc., and the balance to be paid into the county treasury.

Now, the first question is whether the office of recorder in this county (which has less than 60,000 inhabitants) is distinct from that of the circuit clerk, or whether the office and the only office involved is that of the circuit clerk, to which the duties and emoluments of the recorder are appendant. We think it quite clear that the latter is the better view, and, indeed, that the point is made utterly free from difficulty by the decision of the Supreme Court in the analagous case of the sheriff who is ex officio collector in counties not under township organization, and in the. case (also analagous) of the county treasurer who is by law ex officio collector in counties under township organization. These decisions are familiar to the profession, and we will but cite them without further comment on this branch of the case. Wood v. Cook, 31 Ill. 271; Kilgore v. People, etc., 76 Ill. 548; Broadwell v. People, etc., 76 Ill. 554.

Assuming, then, that these are not two separate and distinct offices, and that there is but one office — which is that of the circuit clerk — to which the duties and fees of the recorder are by law attached, we must conclude that the amount fixed and allowed by the county board for compensation, etc., must be taken to include his allowance for performing the duties of recorder as well as performing the ordinary duties of clerk, such as issuing process and making the necessary entries in the records of court and the like. If the clerk were to sue the county for compensation as recorder, he would be well answered by the proposition that his allowance as clerk covered his compensation as recorder, and if he were sued for fees collected by him as recorder, the same consideration would preclude a defense. The office is one; the compensation is one; and by law all the fees of the office, whether received for recording or for other services, constitute one fund from which the officer may retain the amount allowed him by the county board, and the balance must be paid into the county treasury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Ill. App. 62, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-stewart-illappct-1880.