State ex rel. Bybee v. Hackmann

207 S.W. 64, 276 Mo. 110, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 107
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 12, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 207 S.W. 64 (State ex rel. Bybee v. Hackmann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Bybee v. Hackmann, 207 S.W. 64, 276 Mo. 110, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 107 (Mo. 1918).

Opinion

FARIS, J.

This is an original proceeding by mandamus to compel respondent as State Auditor to audit for payment an account of the relator for services rendered by him as stenographer in taking down in shorthand and transcribing the evidence heard by the State Board of Equalization.

The petition filed herein upon application for our ■alternative writ makes clear the grounds upon which the relief prayed for is bottomed. Pertinent parts of that petition read thus:

“Your petitioner says that pursuant to said constitutional and statutory provisions, above cited and quoted, said State Board of Equalization, acting by and through its duly and legally constituted agent, the secretary of said board of equalization, on the 2nd day of July, 1918, employed your petitioner as an expert shorthand reporter or stenographer to take stenographic notes of the evidence taken before said board and to transcribe the same; and that on the 9th day of July, 1918, the said State Board of Equalization, by order duly entered on the records of said board, duly' approved the appointment and employment of your petitioner for the purposes aforesaid.

[113]*113“ Your petitioner alleges that pursuant to said appointment and employment as aforesaid, he entered upon the duties of said employment on the 8th day of July, 1918, and continued to take the evidence at hearings before said board for seventeen days thereafter, which, at $10 per day, amounts to the sum of $170; that your petitioner was ordered by said board to transcribe the evidence taken by him at the hearing before said board, and to deliver to said board, for the use of the members thereof, one original copy and five carbon copies of said evidence so transcribed, and that your petitioner, in obedience to said order of said board, did furnish to said board one original copy and five carbon copies of said evidence so taken and transcribed by him as aforesaid, charging therefor 15 cents per folio, or 45 cents per page, for said original copy and 5 cents per folio, or 15 cents per page, for each of said five carbon copies; that there were 330 pages of said evidence, so taken and transcribed by him as aforesaid, which, at 45 cents per page for said original copy, amounts to $148.50; and that the five carbon copies, furnished for him as aforesaid at 15 cents per page for each copy, amounts to $247.50; and that the items of said account of your petitioner for his services aforesaid more fully and particularly appear from an itemized statement hereto attached and made a part of this petition and marked ‘Exhibit A.’

“Your petitioner says that the total of all the items of said account, for the services rendered by bim as aforesaid, is $566; and your petitioner says that he presented said account to said State Board of Equalization for its approval, and that on the 24th day of September, 1918, said board duly approved your petitioner’s account in said sum of $566; and your petitioner says that said charges, so made by him as aforesaid, were and are the legal and reasonable charges for such services.

“Your petitioner says that, on the 27th day of September, 1918, he duly presented to and filed with the said George E. Hackmann, State Auditor as aforesaid, said itemized statement and account (so approved bv [114]*114said State Board of Equalization, as aforesaid) in said sum of $566, for audit, allowance and payment as a claim against the State of Missouri, and to be paid out of the moneys appropriated for the cost of assessing and collecting the revenue for the years 1917 and 1918, including the contingent expenses of the State Board of Equalization, said moneys being appropriated by Act approved April 9, 1917, entitled, ‘An act to appropriate money for the cost of assessing and collecting the revenue for the years 1917 and 1918, including the contingent expenses of the State Board of Equalization, with an emergency clause,’ and being Section 1, page 46, Laws of Missouri 1917; that at the time your petitioner presented and filed said account with the said George E. Hackmann, State Auditor as aforesaid, for audit, allowance and payment, there was and is now in the State Treasury, to the credit of the appropriation for the cost of assessing and collecting the revenue for the years 1917 and 1918, including the contingent expenses of the State Board of Equalization, more than sufficient money to pay said account for said sum of $566,’ and that it then and thereupon became the duty of the said George E. Hackmann, State Auditor as aforesaid, to audit and allow said account in said sum of $566, and to draw his warrant upon the State Treasury in favor of your petitioner for the payment of the same; hut your petitioner says that the said George E. Hackmann, State Auditor as aforesaid, wrongfully failed and refused, and does still wrongfully fail and refuse, to audit and allow said account and to draw his warrant upon the State Treasury in favor of your petitioner for the payment of the same, in said sum of $566, or in any other sum.”

The return to our writ is signed and was filed herein by private counsel and not by the chief law-officer of the State. However, absent any objection, we assume of course ample authority in private counsel to appear here and represent respondent, even though the statutes in such cases made and provided might lead us to expect to see the State Auditor represented by the Attorney-General in a case like this. Be all this as may be, this [115]*115return serves to make clear the issues and the whole of them involved in this controversy. So much of this return as seems meet to this end reads thus:

“Now comes George E. Hackmann, State Auditor, respondent herein, and for his return to the writ of mandamus heretofore issued, says that relator ought not to have this writ of peremptory mandamus, and for reason thereof states that the employment of relator by the State Board of Equalization was not pursuant to or authorized by any' statutory or constitutional provision of the State of Missouri, and was not authorized by law.

“Respondent states that the charge made by relator for the services rendered, to-wit, the sum of $566, is not a legal charge against the State of Missouri, and no portion of said charge is legal or authorized by law, but respondent admits that the said sum of $566 is the reasonable value for the services performed.

“Respondent denies that it at any time became the duty of respondent to audit and allow said account in the sum of $566 or any other sum, or to draw his warrant upon the State Treasury for the payment of same.

“Respondent admits that he refused, and still refuses, to audit and allow said account and to draw his warrant upon the State Treasury for the payment of same, but respondent states that his said refusal is not wrongful, but that he refused to audit and allow said account and to draw his warrant upon the State Treasury in favor of relator for the reason that the said claim of relator is not a proper and legal claim against the State: that the employment of relator by the State Board of Equalization was without authority or warrant of law, and that respondent had no legal right or authority to audit said account or to draw a warrant upon the State Treasury for same. ’ ’

Upon the coming in of this return relator, averring its insufficiency as a matter of law, moved for judgment upon the pleadings. Therefore, since the return expressly admits that the sum demanded is a reasonable charge for the services rendered, the case is at issue upon a single clear-cut question of law.

[116]

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Bluebook (online)
207 S.W. 64, 276 Mo. 110, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-bybee-v-hackmann-mo-1918.