Schmitt v. Dooling

140 S.W. 197, 145 Ky. 240, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 830
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 2, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 140 S.W. 197 (Schmitt v. Dooling) 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
Schmitt v. Dooling, 140 S.W. 197, 145 Ky. 240, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 830 (Ky. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Lassing

Affirming.

Martin Dooling, William Sabrie, William Weissenberger and Joseph Binder are members of the Fire Department of the city of Louisville. At some time prior to July 1,1911, each of them assigned to L. Simons & Co. his salary for the mouth of July. This assignment was presented by L. Simons & Co. to Adolph Schmitt, Auditor of the city of Louisville, on July 24th, 1911. On the 28th of July following, these firemen, through their attorney, delivered to the Auditor a notice, advising him that the assignments which were held by L. Simons & Co. were void, and that he must not pay the salaries due them for the month of July to L. Simons & Co. A similar communication was addressed to the Mayor. The council approved the payroll for July, and on August 4th the warrants were drawn by the Auditor, dated August 5th, and directed to the City Treasurer, in favor of the plaintiffs, as follows: Dooling, $99, Sabrie, $66.72, Weissenberger, $84.40, and Binder, $84.40. These warrants were delivered by the Auditor to L. Simons & Co. after said Simons &• Co. had executed to him for the city a bond in[241]*241demuifying the city against loss on account of his having surrendered the warrants to them. After the warrants were issued, and before they were delivered, the claimants, through their attorney, called on the Auditor for them, but the Auditor, having accepted the bond of L. Simons & Co., refused to deliver them. A suit was thereupon instituted by these firemen in which they sought to mandamus the Auditor, compelling him to draw his warrants in favor of the plaintiffs for their salaries. The Auditor sought to have L. Simons & Co. made parties defendant; to which plaintiffs objected. The court sustained the objection upon the ground that L. Simons & Co. had no interest whatever in the litigation, but that the question involved was one purely between the plaintiffs and the Auditor.

Two questions were raised in the lower court, first, the right of a fireman to assign his unearned salary, and second, the right of plaintiffs to proceed by mandamus. It was most earnestly insisted for the defendant, that as firemen are not public officers they may assign their salary before it is earned, and that, as it was made to appear that Simons & Co. were asserting a claim to this same salary, no mandamus should have been issued, but that Simons & Co. should have been made parties to the suit and required to litigate the question of ownership of this money with the plaintiffs. The chancellor was of opinion that mandamus was the proper remedy for plaintiffs, and that firemen are officers, and, as such, it is against public policy to permit them to assign or transfer their salary to another before it is earned. He accordingly entered a decree directing the Auditor to issue to the plaintiffs the warrants for their respective salaries due them for the month of July. Prom that judgment this appeal is prosecuted. It is admitted that the assignments to Simons & Co. were made prior to July 1, 1911; that before the payroll for the month of July was approved by council, the Auditor and the Mayor had been notified by these firemen that the' assignments were void and that no payment must be made thereunder to Simons & Co.; that the firemen, through their attorney, called upon the Auditor and demanded that the warrants be delivered, to them, and that the Auditor declined to comply with this request, but delivered them to Simons & Co., who received the money on them.

[242]*242It has- been frequently held that a public officer may not anticipate his salary, that is, that he cannot assign it before it is due. The reason for this rule, as announced by all the courts of this country and of England, is that it is against public policy to permit it to be done, upon the ground that it would tend to impair the service to permit an officer to draw in advance his pay therefor —that he would lose interest in his work and that his service would accordingly be less valuable.

In Holt v. Thurman, 111 Ky., 84, this court had under consideration the right of a city attorney, employed at a fixed salary, to assign the unearned portion thereof, and, in holding that it was against a sound public policy to permit him to do so, adopted the text upon this subject as found in the American and English Encyclopedia of Law, Vol. 2, 2nd Ed., p. 1033, as expressing the best reason for .the rule. This text is as follows:

“The protection thus extended to those engaged in the performance of public duties is not based upon the ground of their private interest, but upon the necessity of securing the efficiency of the public service by insuring that the funds provided for its maintenance shall be received by those who are to perform the work, at the periods appointed for their payment. The assignment of such funds before they are due impairs the efficiency of the public service, and is void both in law and equity as being against public policy.”

An examination of all the authorities which hold that it is against public policy to permit a public officer to assign the unearned portion of his salary shows that they are rested upon the same principle, to-wit: That such assignments, if countenanced, would tend to impair the efficiency of the service.

The word “public officer,” as used in these opinions, means one who renders a public service; a service in which the general public is interested. For if it were not so the reason for the rule would be wanting, inasmuch as all the opinions expressly declare that the rule is not adopted for the benefit of the one rendering the service. Is a fireman a public officer within this meaning? It is insisted for appellant that he is not; and the case of City of Lexington v. Thompson, 113 Ky., 540, is cited as supporting this view. In that case it was held that a fireman was not such an officer as that the Legislature was authorized to fix or regulate his compensation. The word “officer,” as used in that opinion, was [243]*243restricted .to its narrower meaning. Webster, in his New International Dictionary, defines “office” to be—

“A special duty, trust, charge, or position, conferred by an exercise of governmental authority and for a public purpose; a position of trust or authority conferred by'an act of governmental power; a right to exercise a public function or employment and receive the emoluments (if any) thereto belonging; as an executive or judicial office; a municipal office; distinguishing from an employment. In its fullest sense an officer embraces the elements of tenure, duration, duties, and emoluments, but the element of emoluments is not essential to the existence of an office.”

And the same authority defines an “officer” to be—

“One charged with a duty; one who holds an office; a person lawfully invested with an office, whether civil, military, or ecclesiastical, and whether under the State or a private corporation or the like.”

_ In Olmstead v. Mayor, 42 N. Y. Super. Ct., 481, it is. said the term ‘ ‘ officer ’ ’ implies—

“An authority to exercise some portion of the sovereign power of the State, either in making, administering, or executing the laws.”

In Eliason v. Coleman, 86 N. C., 235, it is said:

“The true test of a puplic office seems to be that it is a part of the administration of government, civil or military.”

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Bluebook (online)
140 S.W. 197, 145 Ky. 240, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 830, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmitt-v-dooling-kyctapp-1911.