State Ex Rel. Chanaberry v. Stooksbury

145 S.W.2d 775, 176 Tenn. 687, 12 Beeler 687, 1940 Tenn. LEXIS 120
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 145 S.W.2d 775 (State Ex Rel. Chanaberry v. Stooksbury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Chanaberry v. Stooksbury, 145 S.W.2d 775, 176 Tenn. 687, 12 Beeler 687, 1940 Tenn. LEXIS 120 (Tenn. 1940).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Chambliss

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This petition for mandamus was dismissed on demurrer by the trial judge. Petitioners are certain justices of the peace and officers serving process in their courts, who seek to compel the attorney-general and criminal court *689 judge for Knox County to approve for payment costs and fees earned and taxed by petitioners in various and sundry cases in which the defendants were found guilty under the small offense law and sent to the county workhouse, where they worked out their fines and costs.

Petitioners must carry the burden in respect to both the right they assert to collect costs from the State and the remedy of mandamus which they have selected; also they must overcome the presumption in this Court in favor of the judgment of the trial court on a point peculiarly within that court’s discretion. As said in Harris v. Skate ex rel., 96 Tenn., 496, 34 S. W., 1017, the granting of a writ of mandamus, even where the right thereto is clear, lies in the sound discretion of the court. And exercise of this discretion will not be controlled by mandamus. Whitesides v. Stuart, 91 Tenn., 710, 20 S. W., 245; Peerless Construction Co. v. Bass, 158 Tenn., 518, 14 S. W. (2d), 732, and other cases cited in "Williáms’ Code, Volume 6-, page 577.

The right here asserted to collect costs from the State is not a common-law right, but dependent wholly on statute, and “in all cases the strictest rule prevails in construing the liability of the State therefor. State v. Odom, 93 Tenn., 446, 25 S. W., 105.” The grant of specific authority must be shown for the assertion of a claim against the State for costs. All of this is strongly stressed by Wilkes, J., in Henley v. State, 98 Tenn., 665, 41 S. W., 352, 357, 1104, 39 L. R. A., 126,

The basis of this petition for mandamus is the alleged failure, or refusal, of the defendants to comply with Code, section 12229, providing for the examination and approval of justices’ cost bills as a condition precedent to their payment by the State and County. This section reads:

*690 “Justice’s cost bills examined; when disallowed. — It shall be the duty of the judge and district attorney to carefully examine and inspect all bills of cost certified for payment by justices of the peace in which the state or county has been charged with the costs of criminal prosecution; and if it shall appear to the judge and district attorney, in any manner, that the prosecution in which the state or county has been taxed with the cost by the justice of the peace is frivolous, malicious, or commenced to procure fees, it shall be the duty of the judge and district attorney 'to disapprove and disallow. said bill of cost, and no part of said cost shall be paid by the state or county in such case.”

It is followed by Section 12230, reading as follows:

‘ ‘ Certificate not conclusive; judge and district attorney may inquire. — The certificate of the justice of the peace trying a cause, that the prosecution is not frivolous, malicious, or set on foot to procure fees, shall not be conclusive on the judge or district attorney, but they may, and it is hereby made their duty to, inquire, and, if it shall appear to them that the prosecution is frivolous, malicious, or commenced to procure fees, to disapprove said bills of cost as provided in the last section.”

These two Code sections are exact reproductions of Sections 1 and 2 of Chapter 139 of the Act of 18891.

It is a matter of legislative history that this act was passed in an effort to stem the rising tide of costs and fees of minor public officials, heavily burdening* the State treasury, being followed a few years later by the enactment of what has been popularly known as the “Jarvis law, ’ ’ the validity of which was upheld in Henley v. State, supra. The Act of 18891 was reviewed by this Court in Musgrove v. Hamilton County, 111 Tenn., 1; 77 S. W., 779, 782, in which a bill had been filed by justices of the *691 peace and other officers seeking to recover from the County of Hamilton certain fees and costs which had been disapproved and disallowed by the circuit judge and attorney-general under the provisions of this act. It was therein held that the action of the circuit judge and district attorney-general was “prima facie, if not conclusive, evidence that the prosecutions were malicious, frivolous, and made for the purpose of securing fees, or that they are, for some other reason, not properly taxable against the county.”

The demurrer filed herein by the defendants went upon the grounds, (1) that it appeared from the face of the petition that the cost bills in question had been disapproved by the judge and attorney-general in the exercise of their discretion, and that their action in this regard was conclusive, in the absence of specific allegations of fact to the effect that they had acted maliciously, or in fraud of the rights of the petitioners; it being insisted that the broad and general allegation that the defendants had acted arbitrarily, wilfully, and unlawfully was a mere conclusion of the pleader and was not supported by any detailed statement of facts; and (2) that the bills of cost were not accompanied by certificates that the prosecutions were not frivolous, malicious, or for the purpose of procuring fees; (3) that it was not shown that the various defendants were insolvent, or that executions had been returned against them nulla dona; and (4) that the county was an interested party and had not been made a defendant.

We do not understand that counsel for petitioners here seriously question the proposition that the discretion, so broadly vested in the judge and attorney-general under this statute, cannot be controlled by mandamus, although counsel do suggest, rather than argue, *692 that these duties are ministerial and not judicial, and in that view are not within this rule. We think there is no doubt that it is a judicial discretion that is vested by the act in the judge and attorney-general. But counsel’s main contention appears to he that these officials may he required by mandamus to perform the duty of examination and inspection rested upon them by this statute, and the controversy in this case narrows to whether or not petitioners here so framed their petition as to so limit and confine it. While the circuit judge did not state his reasons for the record, we assume that he found that, upon a proper construction of the petition as a whole, it sought to require these officials, the judge and attorney-general, to allow and approve for payment the bills of cost involved.

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Bluebook (online)
145 S.W.2d 775, 176 Tenn. 687, 12 Beeler 687, 1940 Tenn. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-chanaberry-v-stooksbury-tenn-1940.