State ex rel. McNulty v. Ellison

210 S.W. 881, 278 Mo. 42, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 69
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 7, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 210 S.W. 881 (State ex rel. McNulty v. Ellison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. McNulty v. Ellison, 210 S.W. 881, 278 Mo. 42, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 69 (Mo. 1919).

Opinion

BLAIR, J.

case! °f I. (a) Counsel contends that the statement of facts in the opinion of the Court of Appeals is out of accord with the record in that case, and urges that an examination of that record will establish this. In State ex rel. v. Ellison, 273 Mo. 218, this court adopted the doctrine that it would “not go beyond the opinion to ascertain the facts.” It thus appears that harmony of written opinions, not harmony of decisions, is the thing which this court bolds was intended by the framers of the Constitution. As the writer of this, has done, so must counsel in this case do — submit to the application of this rule as announced in the ease cited.

Rehearing! (b) It is urged that we must accept the facts stated in the motion for rehearing as true, else there is no use for our requiring such motion to be filed before our writ will issue. Such a motion does n°t Prove itself and, can be proved only by the record. The record we do not examine, as •pointed out, supra. The point must be ruled against relator.

from^acts. II. Secondly, counsel contends the facts stated in the opinion of the Court of Appeals do not justify the conclusion reached and that the decision con-Slots with decisions of this court. 'This question requires that we set out the facts as stated by the Court of Appeals. They are as follows:

“When city taxes on real estate in Kansas City become delinquent, payment thereof is enforced by a [48]*48sale of each, delinquent tract to a purchaser who pays to the city the unpaid tax, with interest, penaltiés and costs, and receives from the city treasurer a certificate of purchase acknowledged by him before one of the clerks in his office who holds a notary public’s commission for this purpose. For this acknowledgment the sum of fifty cents is included in the amount paid to the city by the purchaser, that being the fee allowed by statute to a notary for taking and certifying to an acknowledgment. These delinquent sales, and the consequent execution of the certificate of purchase, cover a period of about two weeks in November or December of each year; and at the close of said sales many certificates are acknowledged.
“Plaintiff was a clerk in the treasurer’s office from and including the year 1904 down to June, 1910, and was the notary before whom the treasurer acknowledged the certificates of purchase at the end of the two weeks 'of delinquent sales in each year, and also the tax deeds to such tracts as were never redeemed. On August 12, 1912, he brought this suit to recover from the city the sum of $2,850.50 as due him for acknowledgments taken, as above indicated, during the years 1908 and 1909. He recovered judgment in the trial court for the full amount sued for, and the city has appealed.
“It is admitted that the above sum represents the total amount of notary fees for such acknowledgments taken by plaintiff while in the treasurer’s office during those two years, and that the same were collected by the treasurer and paid into the general fund of the'city treasury. It is the contention of the city that plaintiff waived the right to receive payment of these fees and that he is now estopped from claiming them.
“In 1885 the Supreme- Court of this State held, in Leach v. Hannibal & St. Joseph Ry. Co., 86 Mo. 27, 56 Am. Rep. 408, that a notary public in the service of a railway company could waive his right to compensation for notarial services; that having entered into a contract of service to the railway company for a fixed sala[49]*49ry, lie prima-faeie agreed to give the latter his entire time, and the notarial work having been done in that time, then, in the absence of any ‘agreement, or understanding, or line of conduct between the parties’ showing that such employee was to receive the statutory f,ees for the notarial service rendered his employer in addition to his stipulated salary, he could not recover of his employer for such notarial service, and in the absence of any such showing he would be deemed to have waived the right to claim such fees.
“Following this rule thus laid down, the city, in' February, 1892, passed an ordinance known as Ordinance No. 3910 which provided that one of the clerks in the treasurer’s office should be a notary public; that the salary paid by the city to him as a clerk should be payment in full for all services rendered by him, including those of a notarial character, and that all fees paid for such notarial work should be turned into the city treasurer.
“Under this ordinance, in April, 1892,' one Wood became a clerk in the treasurer’s office and was the notary who took acknowledgments during Ms stay therein, which was until February, 1893. He sued for his fees, and in Wood v. Kansas City, 162 Mo. 303, the Supreme Court held the above-mentioned ordinance void, and that since it was void it,was the same as if it had never existed, and Wood was not estopped from recovering his fees by reason of having accepted his salary for his services as clerk, for the reason that the ordinance was nothing, and he had done nothing to waive his fees or to create an estoppel. In the Wood case, 162 Mo. 1. c. 310, the court says:
“ ‘It is not claimed that he entered into any express contract, aside from the ordinance, by which Ms fees as notary were to be received and retained by defendant, and the ordinance being void there was no express contract at all with respect thereto, hence nothing to estop plaintiff from claiming them by reason of said ordinance.’
[50]*50“And on page 311 the court, in distinguishing the Wood case from the Leach case, says that Leach may have ‘entered into a contract, express or implied, by which, in consideration of his employment at a fixed salary, he was to have no fee for such services. And, after having thus rendered the services, he could not of course recover the fees allowed him by law therefor. In the case at bar [the Wood case] there was no such 'contract.’
“In other words,'the Supreme Court held that in the Wood case there was no agreement or line of conduct on Wood’s part by which he consented that he would allow the city to have the notary fees- and accept in full of his services the fixed salary paid him, and hence he could not be denied his fees,, but was entitled to them in addition to his salary.
“ (1) We are of the opinion that the case we are now called upon to decide differs in this respect from the Wood case. In the case at bar not only did plaintiff make an express agreement to waive his notary fees and accept a stipulated salary in full for all his services, including those of a notarial character, but he thereafter continued on in the service of the city without change of terms, and under circumstances that necessarily imply that he waived the right to the notarial fees and accepted in lieu thereof a certain fiixed monthly sum paid to him as salary in full of all his services, including those of a notarial character.

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Bluebook (online)
210 S.W. 881, 278 Mo. 42, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-mcnulty-v-ellison-mo-1919.