State ex rel. Knight v. Board of Chosen Freeholders

3 A. 344, 48 N.J.L. 70, 1886 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 80
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 A. 344 (State ex rel. Knight v. Board of Chosen Freeholders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Knight v. Board of Chosen Freeholders, 3 A. 344, 48 N.J.L. 70, 1886 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 80 (N.J. 1886).

Opinion

[71]*71The opinion of the court was delivered by

Van Syckel, J.

The relator is the official stenographer of Ocean county. At the request of the presiding judge of the Ocean Oyer and Terminer, he attended the trial of the indictment against Elson K. Rockwell and others for murder, and took notes and recorded verbatim all the evidence and proceedings.

After the trial he made out his bill, which was verified by him and approved by the presiding judge.

The bill included four classes of items, viz.:

1. Attendance at the trial.

2. Copy of evidence and charge, for the court.

3. Copy of evidence and proceedings, for the prosecutor of

the pleas.

4. Transcribing and assistance, for Mr. Lindabury, of counsel with the state, in preparing his argument.

The board of freeholders allowed and paid the relator a portion of his bill, which he received and credited on his account.

This proceeding is to compel the board to pay the balance of the relator’s claim.

The proceedings taken by the board upon Mr. Lindabury’s bill were likewise taken with respect to the bill of the relator.

For the reasons given by Mr. Justice Depue, in the case of Lindabury v. Freeholders of Ocean, 18 Vroom 417, it must be held that mandamus is the appropriate remedy for the relator in this case.

The questions to be disposed of in this case involve the construction and effect of sections 250 and 251 of the Practice act, (Red., p. 887,) and section 100 of the Criminal Procedure act. Rev., p. 286.

Section 250 of the Practice act authorizes the judge of the Circuit Court to appoint a stenographic reporter, whose duty it shall be to attend all trials in said Circuit Court, and in the Court of Oyer and Terminer, and exactly and truly take notes and record, verbatim, all the evidence and proceedings, under the direction of said judge, except the arguments of [72]*72counsel upon such trials, and, when requested, make and furnish true reports thereof to the judge and to each party in. such cause.”

Section 251 provides that “the compensation of such reporter shall not exceed $10 per day, which sum shall be paid by the board of chosen freeholders of said county, on certificate of said judge as to the number of days upon which he shall be employed, provided that the said reporter shall, for reports of evidence and other proceedings by him furnished, be paid by the party in such case requesting the same, at the rate not to exceed ten cents for one hundred words.”

The stenographer being an officer whose official duties are prescribed, and whose compensation for the performance of such duties is fixed by statute, he is subject to the rule of law established in Evans v. City of Trenton, 4 Zab. 764, that an officer who receives a fixed salary must, perform all the duties of his office for that salary, however inadequate, and cannot recover extra compensation for his services.

This rule was enforced in the State, Hoxsey, pros., v. City of Paterson, 11 Vroom 186.

In the first place it is contended, on the part of the defendants, that the judge’s certificate is conclusive only as to the number of days upon which the stenographer attended, and not as to the per diem allowance and the rate to be charged for the copies furnished, but that it is the province of the board of freeholders to fix the relator’s compensation within the limits prescribed by the statute.

The duty of fixing the rate of compensation for attendance and copies is one arising by implication. That authority is not, in express language, vested either in the freeholders or in the court.

The stenographer is an officer of the court.

At common law all fees allowed by act of parliament become established fees, and the several officers entitled to them may maintain actions of debt for them •, also such fees as have been allowed by the courts of justice to their officers for their labor and attendance are established fees, and parties cannot [73]*73be deprived of them without an act of parliament. 4 Bac. Abr. 166, tit. “Fees,” A.

In an action against an under-sheriff for taking ¿620 above his fees, contra forman statuti, the defendant gave in evidence that this sum was a bar fee assigned by the court by their discretion in consideration of the great charge which the sheriff had in keeping, bringing and carrying back the prisoners, and in keeping the number of servants to carry them, and in attendance for fear of escapes; and the clear opinion of the justices was that the ¿620 for a bar fee was out of the statute. 13 Vin. Abr. 145, tit. “Fees,” A.

Independent of this common law prerogative of courts of justice, the statute confers upon the judge of the Circuit Court, whenever in his discretion it shall seem proper, the power to employ a stenographic reporter. Authority to employ necessarily implies and carries with it the right to fix the compensation. If that right is withheld, the authority to employ cannot be exercised.

If the freeholders may fix the compensation of the stenographer, then, if they should consider a stenographer unnecessary, they may, by making the remuneration so small that a competent person cannot accept it, deprive the judge of the power which the statute gives him “ to employ a competent reporter whenever in his discretion it shall seem proper.”

Thus the authority could be exercised, not in the discretion of the judge, but only with the concurrence and approval of •the board of freeholders.

A principal who authorized an agent to employ men for his service could not reasonably 'expect him to execute his commission successfully without agreeing for the wages to be paid, and he would not be permitted to°repudiate the contract of his agent, made within reasonable limits, upon the ground that he had not expressly charged him to stijDulate for the amount of compensation.

It must be presumed that in employing the stenographer the terms of compensation were understood. It will be quite unreasonable to impute to the law-maker the idea that a sten[74]*74ographer would consent to serve for such compensation as the freeholders might afterwards choose to give him, with no minimum price fixed by law. If the freeholders have the right to fix the compensation, he would be bound to accept it, however inadequate.

Authority under an act of the legislature to a municipal corporation to employ a surveyor or engineer to lay out streets or establish grades, would undoubtedly carry with it, as incident to the power to employ, the right to contract for the service to be rendered and the price to be paid.

We are therefore of the opinion that by this statute authority is given to the judge of the Circuit Court to fix the per diem, allowance and also the rate per folio for copies, within the statutory limitations, to be paid to the stenographer, and that his certificate thereof is conclusive.

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3 A. 344, 48 N.J.L. 70, 1886 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-knight-v-board-of-chosen-freeholders-nj-1886.