State ex. rel. Knight v. McCann

72 Tenn. 1
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 72 Tenn. 1 (State ex. rel. Knight v. McCann) 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. Knight v. McCann, 72 Tenn. 1 (Tenn. 1879).

Opinion

FREeman, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a petition for mandamus, filed in the Circuit Court of Davidson County by Knight, as Trustee, representing the County of Davidson, to compel the payment into the County Treasury of the sum of upwards of five hundred dollars, reported by McCann, as Clerk of the County Court, as having been received by him from fees of office from 1st of February to 1st of July, 1879.

This sum is reported as being the excess over and above the amount allowed by an Act of the General Assembly passed 29th January, 1879.

The Clerk, after making his report as required, declined to pay over this sum, hence this suit.

We take it, the case really stands before us as a case intended- to test the constitutionality of the enactment referred to, and as such an unusual time has been allowed for its argument, that all parties might be fully represented and heard.

Both sides have been represented by counsel of the first standing and ability, from whose arguments we have had, probably, all the aid possible to be given in the solution of the ' questions presented.

We now proceed to give the results of our investigation, and the judgment of the Court on these questions.

[3]*3The following is the- Act, so far as is necessary to quote it, for this discussion. It is entitled “An Act to regulate and equalize the salaries of certain public officers.” It commences with the following preamble, expressive of the reasons for its enactment :

“ Whereas, in some counties of the State Clerks of Courts and other officers are receiving from the fees of office as allowed by law, and from business incident to their office, by means of which they secure appointments the gift of . courts and other appointing powers, sums greatly in excess of that allowed the Governor, or any of the Judges of the State; therefore,

Sec. 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State ' of Tennessee, That no Clerk of the Supreme Court, Clerk and Master of the Chancery Court, Clerk of the Circuit Court, Clerk of the Criminal Court, Clerk of the County Court, Trustee or Collector of Revenue, Register of Deeds, District Attorney for the State, or Secretary of State, shall receive, directly or indirectly, from fees, emoluments or perquisites of his office, nor as Commissioner, Trustee or Receiver, or from any position or place of trust or employment to which he may be appointed by any Court or Judge, any sum greater than two thousand dollars- per annum.

Sec. 2. Be it further enacted, That every clerk or other officer enumerated in the first section of this Act, shall be required to make, under oath, and file with the Comptroller, if a State officer, [4]*4and with the County Judge ’ or Chairman, if a County officer, on .the first ■ Mondays of January and July of each year, a true exhibit of all fees, emoluments and perquisites of office, trust or employment of office, received by him for services performed as such officer for the previous half year, and shall pay over to the .State Comptroller, if a State officer, and to the County Trustee, if a County officer, any amount so in excess of said sum, two thousand dollars, no matter whether said sum arises from fees, emoluments or perquisites, or order or direction of said Court as allowed by law, or for pay for services as Special Commissioner, Trustee, Receiver or otherwise.

Sec. 3. Be it further enacted, That any officer who shall directly or indirectly evade the spirit of this Act by connivance with any person or persons, or otherwise in any manner, shape or form, evade the same by making out an incorrect report, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and for such offense, upon conviction, shall be fined not less than five hundred nor more than one thousand dollars, which shall go to common schools in this State, and the office be declared vacant.”

Then follows three other sections — the fourth authorizing, the Comptroller■ of the State to employ a clerk .at a salary of one thousand dollars; the fifth giving the Judges >of the Courts, and Chairmen of County Courts, the right to authorize their clerks to appoint deputies, fixing the fees for such deputies, with certain other limitations, regulations [5]*5and restrictions not necessary to be referred to at present.

Sec. 6 gives like power to Judges or Chairmen of the County Courts, to authorize the Trustee or Collector of Revenue, under certain contingencies, to appoint one or more deputies to be paid out of the surplus of such office.

Sec. 7 gives like authority to Judges of Courts having exclusive criminal jurisdiction, when the business of their Courts shall require such an officer, to allow the Attorney-Gen eral to appoint an assistant Attorney-General, who shall he paid a salary not to exceed one hundred dollars per month, to be paid out of the surplus fees of the, office of Atto rney-Gen eral.

The Act took effect, it is provided, from and after its passage. We are called upon to decide the question whether this is a law or not. This is the real question in all cases, where the point of the conformity of an enactment of the Legislature to the Constitution of the State, or the Federal Constitution, is presented. The decision of this question by our American system has been imposed upon the Judiciary department of the Government. That duty is to be performed precisely as all other judicial duties should be performed, after careful and thorough examination, aided by argument of counsel, guided by authority, and in the exercise of the “ clear, dry light of legal reason,” uninfluenced by passion, prejudice, or the fear of consequences. "We can as a Court neither [6]*6desire that the result shall be tlie one way or the other. Perfect deference for all that is the law of the land should be felt by all, but, if possible, this feeling should be deeper and more controlling in the Judge than in all others. This feeling of devotion, however, can legitimately only find its proper exercise when applied to what is law, and not to everything that is enacted.

In proportion as we reverence law, and ihe law, should we feel it our duty to strike down whatever ■ proposes or is piroposed to take its place, when found not entitled, to or able to make good that claim. If this enactment is a law, then its mandates sare imperative, before which all must bend, and which all Courts must promptly enforce. If not, it is to be obeyed by none. Coming with all the accredited forms of an enactment of the Legislature, it is prima facie the law until the contrary shall be made to appear, clearly and satisfactorily.

The definitions of the term law, as found in our older text-books, and in the English writers, fail to express the American meaning of. that term. Blackstone defines it to be “ a rule of action prescribed by the supreme power in a State commanding what is right, and forbidding what is wrong.” Without criticising the redundancy of this definition in the last clause, as well as soine inaccuracy pointed out by writers, we may say that this gives no proper definition of a law in what may well be termed the American sense.

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72 Tenn. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-knight-v-mccann-tenn-1879.