Rountree v. Phelps

1948 OK 152, 197 P.2d 973, 200 Okla. 528, 1948 Okla. LEXIS 355
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 15, 1948
DocketNo. 33264
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1948 OK 152 (Rountree v. Phelps) 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
Rountree v. Phelps, 1948 OK 152, 197 P.2d 973, 200 Okla. 528, 1948 Okla. LEXIS 355 (Okla. 1948).

Opinion

ARNOLD, J.

Original proceeding in mandamus by the above-named plaintiffs to compel Roger Phelps, State Budget Director, to allow certain claims presented to him by plaintiffs and to compel A. S. J. Shaw, State Auditor, to issue his warrants upon such approved claims and to compel John Conner, State Treasurer, to pay said warrants when presented from the proper fund in the State Treasury.

It is alleged in plaintiffs’ petition that they are the duly appointed, qualified, and acting members of the State Board of Health during the time covered by their claims here involved; that the defendant officers are the duly qualified and acting State Budget Director, State Auditor, and State Treasurer, respectively, and that their respective duties in the allowance of claims, the issuance of warrants and their payment are defined by law; that by virtue of their services as such members of the State Board of Health plaintiffs became entitled under the provisions of Title 63, chapter, I, Session Laws 1945, to be paid the per diem and expenses set forth in said Act; that the plaintiffs filed their claims duly approved by the State Board of Health for per diem and expenses earned and incurred by them during the biennium ending June 30, 1947, with the defendant, Roger Phelps, State Budget Director; that notwithstanding there are sufficient unencumbered monies in the appropriation made by House Bill No. 74 of the 21st Oklahoma Legislature to pay said claims, the defendant, Roger Phelps, State Budget Director, has failed and refused to allow for payment the aforesaid claims of these plaintiffs; that plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law and that it is the clear, plain, and mandatory duty of the defendants to allow and pay said claims, but that the defendants and each of them will not, unless directed by order of this court, allow and pay said claims of plaintiffs as authorized and provided by the Constitution and statutes of this state.

To the application of plaintiffs to assume original jurisdiction, defendants made their response and to plaintiffs’ petition defendants filed an answer in substance a demurrer alleging that plaintiffs’ petition does not state facts sufficient to entitle them to the relief sought.

At the regular session of the Legislature in 1945 it enacted House Bill No. 77 (63 O.S. Supp. 1945, §§1.1 to 1.5, inc.). By section I of this Act a State Board of Health was created to consist of nine members, one from each of the congressional districts of the state and one member at large. The appointment was to be made by the Governor with the approval of the Senate on or after July 1, 1945, and their terms of office were fixed. The language of section I of the Act which is involved here reads:

“The members of such board shall receive as compensation for their services the sum of ten dollars ($10.00) per day and their actual and necessary expense while engaged in the performance of their official duties, provided, the total expenses for each member may not exceed one hundred dollars ($100.00) per year.”

[530]*530It appears that no appropriation was made at that session of the Legislature to pay the per diem and expenses of the members of the Board, but at the regular session of the Legislature in 1947, it enacted House Bill No. 74, section I of which reads:

“There is hereby appropriated from any monies in the emergency appropriation fund in the State Treasury, not otherwise appropriated, the sum of eighteen hundred dollars ($1800.00) for the biennium ending June 30, 1947 to be expended by the State Board of Health to pay members of said board compensation for their services and their actual and necessary expenses while engaged in the performance of their official duties as provided by House Bill No. 77, regular session of the 20th Legislature, same being Title' 63, Chapter I, Oklahoma Session Laws 1945.”

Section 2 of the Act carried the emergency clause.

Plaintiffs’ contention as stated in their brief reads:

“Enrolled House Bill No. 74 was enacted by the 1945 Legislature to carry out the provisions of Section 17 of the Schedule to the Constitution. Section 17 of the Schedule is a mandate in the Constitution that the State officers involved here ‘shall receive such compensation for their services as may be provided by law.’ The three sections quoted above from the Schedule to the Constitution (Sections 15, 16, and 17) show that it is the intent of the Constitution that State officers shall receive for their services the compensation fixed by law for them to receive, and the failure of the Legislature to make an appropriation to pay them such compensation does not defeat their right to such compensation.”

Sections 15,16, and 17 of the Schedule to the Constitution have been considered and their language interpreted and applied by this court in numerous cases. Notable among these decisions are: Riley v. Carter, State Auditor, 165 Okla. 262, 25 P. 2d 666; Edwards v. Carter, State Auditor, 167 Okla. 287, 29 P. 2d 610; State ex rel. Telle v. Carter, State Auditor, 170 Okla. 50, 39 P. 2d 134; and Battles v. Childers, State Auditor, 177 Okla. 589, 61 P. 2d 253.

It has been the uniform holding of this court that where a state office has been created by constitutional provision or by legislative enactment and an annual salary therefor has been fixed, the salary so fixed is a constitutional appropriation from current revenues of the amount required to pay such salary. This is the gist of the decisions in the above-cited cases: We recall no decision by this court, and none is cited, which holds that the creation of an office by legislative enactment which provides no fixed annual salary, but authorizes a per diem compensation for days actually engaged in discharging the duties of the office together with actual and necessary traveling expenses, constitutes an appropriation by law for the payment of such compensation.

In the instant case the Board of Health was created and the compensation of its members was fixed at ten dollars ($10) per day while actually engaged in discharge of their duties and in addition they were to be reimbursed for their actual and necessary traveling expenses. This act was passed in 1945, but at that session of the Legislature it failed to make any appropriation to take care ,of the compensation of the members thus fixed. House Bill No. 74, passed in 1947, was evidently intended to rectify the oversight of the 1945 session in failing to make the necessary appropriation for the biennium beginning July 1, 1945, and ending June 30, 1947.

In 1941, Laws 1941, p. 547, the Legislature, by House Joint Resolution No. 10, drafted and caused to be submitted for adoption by the people an amendment to section 23, art. 10 of the Constitution, which was adopted March 11, 1941. Thereafter, and at the same session, the Legislature passed an act, being House Bill No. 461 to become effective July 1, 1941, vitalizing the constitutional amendment adopted March [531]*53111, 1941, which act was approved April 25, 1941, and carried the emergency. This constitutional amendment, and this vitalizing legislative act were intended to more definitely systematize the state’s finances by establishing a budgetary system of accounting.

Throughout this amendment ahd the vitalizing act the predominant idea is to make the fiscal year, as defined in section 1 of article 10, Const., the basis for the encumbrance and expenditure of revenues appropriated.

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Bluebook (online)
1948 OK 152, 197 P.2d 973, 200 Okla. 528, 1948 Okla. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rountree-v-phelps-okla-1948.