State Ex Rel. Johnson v. Robinson

251 S.E.2d 505, 162 W. Va. 579, 1979 W. Va. LEXIS 337
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1979
Docket14266
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 251 S.E.2d 505 (State Ex Rel. Johnson v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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. Johnson v. Robinson, 251 S.E.2d 505, 162 W. Va. 579, 1979 W. Va. LEXIS 337 (W. Va. 1979).

Opinion

McGraw, Justice:

This is an original proceeding in prohibition wherein petitioners Johnson and Adams seek to prohibit the enforcement of an order of the respondent judge adjudging them to be in wilful civil contempt of court and committing them to the custody of the Sheriff of Cabell County to be incarcerated until such time as they comply with the terms of certain previous orders of the court. Execution of the order adjudging them in contempt has been stayed pending a decision in this Court.

*580 The underlying issue presented is whether the provisions of W.Va. Code, 7-7-8 [1972], governing the appointment of special prosecutors, vests discretion in a county commission to pay only what it determines to be reasonable compensation for the legal services rendered by a special prosecutor, or whether it requires a county commission to expend from the county treasury such amount of compensation for attorneys fees as are ordered by the circuit court. We hold that W.Va. Code, 7-7-8 grants a county commission the authority to ascertain and establish a reasonable compensation for the legal services rendered by a prosecutor.

The facts giving rise to this controversy and the procedural history of the case can be briefly outlined. Dale C. McCoy was indicted by a Cabell County Grand Jury on a charge of first degree murder. The first trial resulted in a jury verdict of guilty, but a new trial was ordered. The Cabell County prosecuting attorney and his assistants were disqualified from prosecuting the retrial. Pursuant to W.Va. Code, 7-7-8, respondent appointed attorneys Edward V. Lee and Ray L. Hampton, II as special prosecutors, and their prosecution resulted in a guilty verdict. Following the completion of their services, the special prosecutors informed the court of the amount of time they had expended in the prosecution of the matter and moved the court to allow them a total fee of $7,212.97 based upon a rate of sixty dollars per hour for in-court work and fifty dollars per hour for out-of-court work. Orders were entered awarding fees in this amount, directing the circuit clerk to certify these amounts to the county commission, and directing the commission to pay the sums to the special prosecutors. Purchase requisitions were attached to the aforesaid orders and, in the latter part of July of 1978 they were presented to the county commission.

As of the first week of September the amounts were unpaid. On September 8th, Lee and Hampton, by counsel, moved the court to issue a rule directing Roy Adams, Bill Dunfee and Ted W. Johnson, collectively the county commission, to show cause why they should not *581 be held in contempt of court for their failure to comply with the court’s orders directing payment of the special prosecutors’ fees. The motion was granted and a show cause hearing was set for September 15th. During the hearing, Dunfee was dismissed on the motion of counsel for the special prosecutors after it was determined that he had been in favor of payment of the fees in the amounts ordered by the court. Counsel for the special prosecutors presented testimony intended to show that the fees charged were reasonable. It was their contention that if the fees were reasonable, the commission did not possess the discretionary power to lower them. The theory of the defense was that under W.Va. Code, 7-7-8 the county commission could exercise the discretionary power to pay the fee in an amount that they deemed reasonable and, accordingly, could lower the fee from the amount recommended by the circuit judge. The testimony of commission members, Johnson and Adams, indicated that they found the fee as ordered unreasonable, and it was upon this ground that they declined to order payment.

The pertinent portions of W.Va. Code, 7-7-8 are contained in the second paragraph: “The court shall certify to the county court the performance of that service when completed and recommended [sic] to the county court a reasonable compensation for the attorney for his service, and the compensation, when allowed by the county court, shall be paid out of the county treasury.” 1

*582 If the county commission possesses the authority asserted by the relators such authority is to be found in the words of this sentence. The use of “recommended” in the past tense is a codification mistake and the phrase correctly reads “and recommend to the county court a reasonable compensation ...” The primary meaning of ‘recommend’ as well as its clear connotation indicates that the Legislature intended for the circuit court to act in an advisory role. Neither the word ‘recommend’ nor its context here implies that the circuit court’s action in recommending fees is binding on the commission. This conclusion is further buttressed when we examine the phrase “the compensation, when allowed by the county court ...” We are urged by the respondents to interpret the word ‘when’ as an adverb with the meaning “at that time”, thereby giving the phrase a function of merely expressing the sequence or chronology of the procedure for payment. We find this interpretation to be without merit. An analysis of the whole sentence leads inescapably to the conclusion that if the word ‘when’ were used in this sense it would be redundant, superflous and without meaning.

It is a well known rule of statutory construction that the Legislature is presumed to intend that every word used in a statute has a specific purpose and meaning. To interpret the word ‘when’ as an adverb in this instance would be to render it meaningless. On the contrary, we find that the word ‘when’ is, in this instance, used as a conjunction with the meaning “in the event that, or if.” Used in this sense it strongly suggests that the county commission may choose not to allow the compensation as recommended. The use of the word ‘recommend’ and the use of ‘when’ as a conjunction clearly indicate a legislative intent to vest discretion in the county commission with respect to the payment of special prosecutor fees. When intent of the Legislature clearly appears from a reading of the statute, it is unnecessary for a reviewing court to attempt construction. We believe that this statute plainly expresses a legislative intent and, consequently, it is unnecessary to search for a meaning *583 beyond the plain words. In this instance there is nothing to construe. This is a rule of statutory construction so well established and often cited that we find it unproductive to cite authority here.

Accordingly, we hold the respondent exceeded his legitimate powers in holding the relators herein in contempt for questioning the reasonableness of the special prosecutors’ fees and award the writ.

The relators also raise the issue of whether W.Va. Code, 7-7-8 authorizes the circuit court to appoint more than one special prosecutor per case as was done here. The controlling portion of the statute, written in the singular, reads: “[T]he court shall appoint some competent practicing attorney to act in that case.” In enacting W.Va. Code, 2-2-10(a), 2

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Bluebook (online)
251 S.E.2d 505, 162 W. Va. 579, 1979 W. Va. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-johnson-v-robinson-wva-1979.