State ex rel. Coates v. Board of County Commissioners

22 Ohio C.C. 57
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ohio C.C. 57 (State ex rel. Coates v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Coates v. Board of County Commissioners, 22 Ohio C.C. 57 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

Marvin, J.

The relator is the clerk of the courts of Cuyahoga county, Ohio, and files his petition praying for a writ of mandamus to issue against the ■ defendants, commanding them to allow to him as a valid claim certain money which he says is due' to him as compensation for official services, and which the defendants refuse to allow.

The compensation of the clerk of this county is fixed by section 1365-1 of the Revised Statutes, and the part of such section to be construed here, reads:

“That in each county containing a city of the second grade of the first class, the compensation of the officers thereof shall be as follows: Clerk of the court of common oleas, an annual salary of four thousand dollars, then twenty per cent, the first year after the passage of this act, twenty per cent, the second year, after the passage of this act, and ten per cent, thereafter of all fees actually collected by him and paid by said clerk into the fee fund as hereinafter provided.”

This statute, as it now exists, was passed on the nth day of March, 1898, and so only the ten per cent, clause of the statute need be considered here, as the time is already past in which'twenty per cent, is allowed.

• The petition sets out that during the month of December, 1900, certain persons were tried and convicted of felonies in the court of common pleas of this county, and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary of the state and to pay the [58]*58costs of prosecution; that execution was issued against the property of the persons thus convicted, for such costs; that nothing was realized upon said executions, and that the persons, so convicted, were thereafter conveyed to the penitentiary and delivered to the warden, together with certified cost bills in each case, which cost bills were allowed by the warden who certified such allowances; that the auditor of the state drew his warrant in favor of the sheriff, upon the state treasurer; that such warrants were paid to the sheriff; that the money, so paid to the sheriff, included the sum of $45.42 as fees lawfully taxed in the relator’s favor as{ such clerk, for official services rendered in said causes, and was turned over by the sheriff to the relator and by the relator paid into the county treasury to the credit of the f¿9 fund of said county and accounted for to the defendants. That, during the months of September, October, November and December, 1900, there accrued to the relator for official services performed for and in connection with the grand and petit juries of the county, the sum of $502.23;. that this sum was .paid to the relator by the treasurer of) said county., out of the general fund in the treasury, and the same was paid by the relator into the county treasury, to the credit of the fee fund of said county and was duly accounted ior to the defendants. That, between the 6th of October, 1900, and the 1st of January, 1901, there accrued to the relator a sum largely in excess of $300, in criminal cases pending in the court of common pleas of said county,, wherein the state failed to collect or pay costs due after diligent effort made therefor, and that, on account of the fee* m said cases, there was paid to him as clerk, out of the general tund of the county treasury, the sum of $300 which; was paid by him into the county treasury to the credit of the fee fund, and duly accounted for by him to the com*missioners.

That during the- months of December, 1900, and January and February, 1901, certain persons were tried and convicted of misdemeanors in the court of common pleas of said county and sentenced to pay certain fines and costs and, upon failure to pay such fines and costs, were committed to the workhouse of the city ■ of Cleveland; that costs in such [59]*59cases had been lawfully taxed for official services of the relator, amounting in ihe aggregate to $49.86, which sum was paid to the relator by the treasurer of the county out of the /general fund thereof and py ihe 'relator paid into the county treasury to the credit of the fee fund and duly accounted for to the defendants.

After having made all the collections hereinbefore named, the relator presented his claim for ten per cent, of the same to the commissioners, and demanded that it be allowed, which was refused by them.

To this petition the defendants filed a general demurrer. And so the question is raised as to whether the clerk is entitled to the allowance of the ten per cent, provided for in the statute, upon the money paid to him out as fees out of the general fund of the county treasury, and by him paid into the fee fund of the county treasury, and upon moneys paid to him as fees out of the state treasury and by him paid into the fee fund of the county treasury.

Prior to the passage of the statute under consideration and that to which this is an amendment, the compensation of the Clerk was entirely made up of fees.

The design of the statute, without doubt, was to reduce that compensation which had grown to be excessive, and so it was provided that the clerk should have a fixed salary of four thousand dollars, and, by the same statute, a salary was fixed for each of the other county officers. It being important, however, that the clerk should collect all fees from parties against whom they were taxed, which could possibly be collected, the provision for paying a percentage upon such fees was added. A similar provision is made for the sheriff. No such provision is made for the other officers; doubtless, for rhe reason that most of the fees paid tO' such other officers, are paid at the time the work is done, which is not generally true as to the clerk and the sheriff.

The money received by the clerk, which came from the state treasury, was paid to him under section 7336 of the Revised Statutes and the section immediately preceding.

The other moneys upon which the clerk claims the percentage, were paid to him under sections 1261, 1262 and 2107-v, which several sections provide for the payment of [60]*60costs in criminal cases out of the county treasury and for the payment of fees to the clerk for services rendered to the grand jury out of the county treasury. .

In support of the demurrer it is urged that these fees paid to the clerk from the state and county treasuries and by him paid to the county treasurer into the fee fund] are not, in any proper sense, included in the words “fees actually collected by him and paid by said clerk into the fee fund,” as found in the statute.

It is said that to take money from the county treasurer and immediately pay it to that, same treasurer, is, in no sense, “an actual collection,” although the payment to the treasurer by the, clerk is that it may be placed in a fund separate from the general fund from which it was taken, when paid to him. ■ And'it is said that the purpose of allowing this ten per cent, commission to the clerk was clearly to stimulate him to collect all the costs which could be collected from parties to litigation in courts, against whom the costs are assessed, and that this purpose does not exist as to These payments to be made out of the state and county treasuries.

It must not be be forgotten, however, that the statute providing for the compensation of the clerk by a salary,; does not, in any wise, affect the duty imposed upon him of collecting costs and fees. All such costs and fees are to be collected by him under the present statute, as were required to be collected before the e'nactment of this statute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Ohio C.C. 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-coates-v-board-of-county-commissioners-ohiocirct-1901.