Rogers v. Slaton

113 S.W. 509, 130 Ky. 423, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 295
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 17, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 113 S.W. 509 (Rogers v. Slaton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogers v. Slaton, 113 S.W. 509, 130 Ky. 423, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 295 (Ky. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Lassing —

Reversing.

J. L. Rogers was the county attorney of Muhlenberg county. On October 10, 1900, the fiscal court of said county made the .following order: “Ordered that county attorney, J. L. Rogers, be and is hereby authorized to institute any legal proceedings he may deem proper to collect back taxes upon property not heretofore listed, certified or assessed for taxation, and that he be allowed a sum equal to 25 per cent, of the amount he may cause to be collected for the county by any motion, suit, proceeding or otherwise, heretofore or hereafter begun.” Under this authority he collected a large sum of money for the county, and for said services under his contract he was paid the sum of $4,801.22. Thereafter appellee, T. J. Slaton, a taxpayer, suing in his own behalf and in behalf of all other taxpayers of the county, filed suit against said county attorney and the members of the fiscal court-, in which he recited the fact that at the time this' contract was entered into the said Rogers was the regularly elected and qualified county attorney /or Muhlenberg county, and that during each year that he held the office he was paid an annual salary out of the general expense fund of said county^ and that the annual salary so paid to him was a reasonable salary for the services which he rendered, that he had no right to receive the additional compensation, and that the orders making the employment and paying [427]*427for same were illegal and void. He prayed judgment against the county attorney for the amount which, he had received under said orders, with interest from the date of its payment. The defendant, Rogers, demurred to the petition and, pending the demurrer, filed an answer in three paragraphs. In the first paragraph he pleaded that the annual salary of $500 which he received was intended to be his compensation for the discharge of the ordinary duties pertaining to his office as county attorney, and was not intended to be a general compensation for the performance of the services mentioned in the petition. That, taking these services into consideration, the annual compensation was not at all adequate or reasonable. That at the time the contract was made with the county it was understood he would associate other counsel with him in his effort to collect these taxes, and it was agreed between himself and the fiscal court that W. O. Davis should be such counsel, but by mistake and oversight on the part of the draftsman this part of the understanding and agreement of the fiscal court was omitted from the order. That later, however, the orders of the fiscal court in dealing with this matter recognized that said Davis had been so employed, and was assisting the county attorney in his efforts to collect this tax'; that the services were reasonably worth much more than the price which the fiscal court paid to himself and Davis; that a large part of the money received by him was paid to M'r. Davis for his services; that in addition to this he was compelled to and did expend large sums of money in going to courts, State and federal, in other counties, in his efforts to collect the tax referred to in ihe order, under which he was acting. He denied that the orders were void, or that any money had [428]*428been wrongfully paid to him. In the second paragraph he recited that he had collected for the county $24,405, and that under the contract he should have received $6,601.25, but that by agreement between himself and associate counsel and the fiscal court they had accepted the sum of $4,801.22 in satisfaction of their claim for services, and he pleaded this settlement in bar to plaintiff’s right to recover. In the third paragraph he pleaded that on October 10, 1900, when the contract was entered intq, he had not been elected .to office for the second term, and, as the contract for the contingent compensation was made prior to his election for the second term in-1902, that therefore' he entered upon his second- term* of office in 1902 with this contingent contract in full force and effect, that a large part of the services rendered in his efforts to collect this money were rendered during the second term of office, and that the entire amount collected for the county was actually collected during that term, and the amount paid to him was paid., during that term; To this answer a general demurrer was filed. The case was submitted upon the demurrers to the petition and the answer, and" the demurrer to the petition was overruled? and' sustained as to the answer. The defendant, the county attorney, having declined to plead further, judgment was entered against him for the full amount ofi the claim sued for, and he appeals.

Questions similar to these have recently been before the court in the cases of Terrell v. Trimble County, 128 Ky. 519, 108 S. W. 848, 33 Ky. Law Rep. 364, and Spalding v. Thornbury, 128 Ky. 533. 108 S. W. 906, 33 Ky. Law Rep. 362. In these eases, after full consideration, it- was held that the county attorney was entitled to*no extra compen[429]*429sation whatever for services which he rendered in person in the State courts, in his efforts to collect taxes due the county, as this was clearly a part of his official duty, hut that he should be credited with such sum as he actually paid to associate counsel, and such further sums as were expended by him in looking after the collection of this tax in courts in counties other than his own. He is also entitled, to pay for his personal services in looking after litigation in the federal courts. The first paragraph of the answer, therefore, presented a defense to at least a part of plaintiff’s claim, and the county attorney should have been permitted to show what sums he paid to Davis, his associate counsel, and what expenses he incurred in attending courts in counties other than his own in his efforts to collect this tax. No defense is presented in either the second or third paragraph of the answer.

On October 10th, when the contract under which this special service was rendered, was entered into, appellant was in office discharging the duties of county attorney, under a salary that had theretofore been fixed at $500 per annum. If any additional compensation whatever could be allowed him for this service, it would have to be under this contract of date October 10th. It cannot be said that in making this order the fiscal court of Muhlenberg county was attempting to fix the annual compensation of the county attorney who should thereafter be elected and inducted into office. On the contrary, it is plain that the attention of the members of the fiscal court having been called to the fact that certain corporations had not been paying to the county taxes to which she was entitled, they were willing to pay to the county attorney an additional compensation for his efforts to collect this tax, and this additional sum agreed upon. [430]*430as evidence by tbe order, was one-fourth, of what he might recover. The best evidence that neither the county attorney nor the fiscal court looked upon this order of October 10th as in no wise changing the order which had theretofore been made, fixing the compensation of the county attorney is found in the fact that they continued to pay him and he continued to receive the same annual salary as had theretofore been paid him. This order must be construed as an attempt, on the part of the fiscal court, to pay to the county attorney an extra compensation for the collection of this tax. Both appellant and the fiscal court regarded the effort of the county attorney to collect this money as a special service for which they attempted to give him extra compensation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 S.W. 509, 130 Ky. 423, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-slaton-kyctapp-1908.