Pitts v. Logan County

41 P. 584, 3 Okla. 719
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 7, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 41 P. 584 (Pitts v. Logan County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pitts v. Logan County, 41 P. 584, 3 Okla. 719 (Okla. 1895).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Scott, J.:

The principal question for our consideration in this case is, whether the territorial legislature has any right to fix the compensation to be allowed to the clerks of the district courts in this territory, for their services. In the discussion of the subject, we find at the very outset that the disti-ict courts of this territory are creatures of congress. The justices of the supreme court are appointed by the president, and are ecc-offlcio judges of the district courts of the districts to. which they are assigned by the supreme court. The *722 same instrument that gave life to these courts also provided that the judges of the supreme court should appoint the clerk of that court, and the judges of the district courts should appoint the clerks of said district courts. The language of the act is, “each district court shall appoint its clerk.” After having created the office and appointed the clerk, the act further provides what fees the clerk shall receive for his services, which reads as follows:

* * * “ There shall be allowed to the attorney, marshal, clerks of the supreme and district courts, the same fees as are prescribed for similar services by such persons in cli. 16, title Judiciary, of the Revised Statutes of the United States.” (Organic Act, §13)

Section 823, ch. 16, title Judiciary, reads:

“The following and no other compensation shall be taxed and allowed to attorneys, solicitor's and proctors in the courts of the United States, to district attorneys, clerks of the circuit and district courts, marshals, commissioners, witnesses, jurors, and printers in the several states and territories, except in cases otherwise expressly provided by law. But nothing herein shall be construed to prohibit attorneys, solicitors and proctors from charging to and receiving from their clients other than the government such compensation for their services, in addition to the taxable costs, as may be in accordance with general usage iu their respective states, or may be agreed upon between the parties. ”

The act then provides a fee bill under which the clerks are to tax costs as follows: Section 828 reads:

“For issuing and entering every process, commission summons, capias, execution, warrant, attachment, or other writ, except a writ of venire, or a summons or subpoena for a witness, one dollar.
‘! For issuing a writ of summons or subpoena, twenty-five cents.
“For filing and entering every declaration, plea, or other paper, .ten cents.
*723 “For administering an oath of affirmation, except to a juror, ten cents.
‘ ‘ For taking an acknowledgment, twenty-five cents.
“For taking and certifying depositions to file, twenty cents for each folio of one hundred words.
“For a copy of such deposition furnished to a party on request, ten cents a folio.
“For entering any return, rule, order, continuance, judgment, decree or recognizance, or drawing any bond, or making any record, certificate, return, or report, for each folio, fifteen cents.
“For a copy of any entry or record, or of any paper on file, for each folio, ten cents.
“For making dockets and indexes, issuing venire, taxing costs, and all other services, on the trial or argument of a cause were issue is joined and testimony given, three dollars.
“For making dockets and indexes, taxing costs, and all other services, in a cause where issue is joined, but no testimony is given, two dollars.
“For making dockets and indexes, taking costs, and other services, in a cause which is dismissed or discontinued, or where judgment or decree is made or rendered without issue, one dollar.
“For making dockets, and taxing costs, in cases removed by writ of error or appeal, one dollar.
“For affixing the seal of the court to any instrument, when required, twenty cents.
“For every search for any particular mortgage, judgment or other lien, fifteen cents.
“For searching the records of the court for judgments, decrees, or other instruments constituting a general lien on real estate, and certifying the result of such search, fifteen cents for .each person against whom such search is required to be made.
“For receiving, keeping, and paying out money, in pursuance of any statute or order of court, one per centum on the amount so received, kept and paid.
“For traveling from the office of the clerk, where he *724 is required, to reside, to the place of holding any court required by law to be held, five cents a mile for going and live cents for returning, and five dollars a day for his attendance on the court while actually in session.
“All books in the offices of the clerks of the circuit and district courts, containing the docket or minute of the judgments or decrees thereof, shall, during office hours, be open to the inspection of any person desiring to examine the same, without any fees or charge therefor.”

Section 883 reads:

11 Every district attorney, clerk of a district court, clerk of a circuit court, and marshal, shall, on the first days of January and July, in each year, or within thirty days thereafter, make to the attorney general, in such form as he may prescribe, a written return for the half year ending on said days respectively, of all the fees and emoluments of his office, of every name and character, and of all the necessary expenses of his office, including necessary clerk hire, together with the vouchers for the payment of the same for such last half year. He shall state separately in such returns the fees and emoluments received or payable under the bankrupt act; and every marshal shall state separately therein the fees and emoluments received or payable for services rendered by himself personally, those received or payable for services rendered by each of his deputies, naming him, and the proportion of such fees and emoluments which, by the terms of his service, each deputy is to receive. Said returns shall be verified by the oath of the officer making them.”

Section 839 reads:

“No clerk of a district court, or clerk of a circuit coui't, shall be allowed by the attorney general, except as px'ovided in the next sectioxx, axxd ixx section eight hundred and forty-two, to retain of the fees and exnoluments of his office,. or, ixx case both of the said clerkships are .held by the saxne person,- of the fees and emoluments of the said offices, respectively, for his persoxxal compensation, over and above his necessary office expexxses, including necessary clerk hire, to be audited axxd allowed by the px-oper accounting officers

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 P. 584, 3 Okla. 719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pitts-v-logan-county-okla-1895.