State Ex Rel. Welling v. Third Judicial District Court Ex Rel. Salt Lake County

49 P.2d 950, 87 Utah 416, 1935 Utah LEXIS 57
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1935
DocketNo. 5711.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 49 P.2d 950 (State Ex Rel. Welling v. Third Judicial District Court Ex Rel. Salt Lake County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah 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. Welling v. Third Judicial District Court Ex Rel. Salt Lake County, 49 P.2d 950, 87 Utah 416, 1935 Utah LEXIS 57 (Utah 1935).

Opinion

WOLFE, Justice.

On the application of the relator, a temporary writ of prohibition was issued to the trial court enjoining the said court from proceeding further in the case of State V. Welling until we had opportunity to consider the question of whether the information accusing the defendant of a violation of section 7929, Comp. Laws Utah 1917, now carried as section 103-26-7, R. S. Utah 1933, stated an offense, and whether, if not, such failure was jurisdictional. That section reads as follows:

“Every person who, with intent to defraud, presents for allowance or for payment to any state board or officer, or to any county, city, town or district board or officer, authorized to allow or pay the same, if genuine, any false or fraudulent claim, bill, account, voucher or writing is guilty of a felony.”

Section 11 of the 1929 General Appropriations Act (chapter 100, Laws of Utah 1929) provides that:

“The board of examiners is hereby prohibited from allowing any claim payable out of appropriations made herein * * * until the *418 original claims and vouchers, properly itemized and sworn to by the claimants and approved * * * shall be presented,” etc.

The funds out of which payment for the services of a clerk in the office of the Secretary of State would be payable were part of the appropriation made by that bill.

It is unnecessary to quote the information at length. It charged the defendant with presenting a false claim, in that he had presented a claim for $100 for a month’s services purporting to have been performed by one Golda Eichards as clerk in his office of Secretary of State, when in fact, it is alleged, he knew she had not done so and was not entitled to any sum for services. The information shows that Welling and not Golda Eichards verified the claim and presented it for allowance. It is in this regard that relator claims the information does not show that a “claim” as meant by section 7929, was presented.

The position of the relator can be stated as follows: The word “claim,” as contained in section 7929, means not only a right to obtain payment for services rendered or materials furnished to or moneys expended on behalf of any of the respective political units named in said section, but means that the demand for such payment as the same is presented to the board or officer authorized to pay the same must be in such form as will permit the board or officer to pay the same; that the word “authorized” should be read not merely as pointing out the board or officer of a political unit which has the duty of auditing or paying a person who has rendered seiwices, furnished materials to, or expended money on behalf of such political unit, but should be read as denoting the conditions under which such board or officer is permitted to pay such claim when the same is presented. Stated another way, that the words “authorized to allow and pay the same” are invested with the meaning that the paper presented evidencing the demand must meet all the conditions required by law for such officer or board to allow the same; that is to say, it must be signed and verified by the person who has rendered the services, furnished *419 the materials, or expended the money; that a demand made in a form which will not permit the board or officer to pay it is not a “claim” within the meaning of said section, because the board or officer would not be “authorized to allow or pay the same, if genuine,” for the reason that it is not verified or presented by the claimant, but in this case by the relator who was not the claimant.

Relator seeks to invest the word “claim,” in section 7929, with the meaning that it is the formal paper evidencing the demand which must be verified by the demandant and not meaning only the right to receive payment or reimbursement in cases where services have been performed, materials furnished, or moneys expended on behalf of a political unit. The contention is unsound. The very section 11 of the act cited by the relator says: “The board of examiners is hereby prohibited from allowing any claim payable,” etc., thus itself recognizing that a claim meant that which was earned regardless of its manner or form of presentation. The prohibition directed to the auditing board or officer against allowing a claim when the form of presenting the evidence of its dueness is not in proper form does not affect the existence of the claim. The claim is born when one performs services or furnishes materials to or expends money on behalf of another for which he is entitled to be paid. A claim comes into being regardless of how it must be presented and regardless of the safeguards which the law demands shall accompany its presentation for audit and regardless óf a prohibition against its allowance when not properly evidenced or presented. Such is the meaning of the word “claim,” in section 7929, which a board or officer is authorized to allow if genuine. The crime is complete when a false claim is presented, knowing that it is false; it is complete when the paper purporting to represent or evidencing the claim which never was earned is passed through the window to the auditing body with knowledge by the presenter that it was never earned and never could be due. Restrictions on the auditing body or *420 officer on the other side of the window against allowance because not in proper form are restrictions on the action of that body or officer and have no bearing on what elements are necessary for the person on the first side of the window to commit the crime, which is complete when a false demand is presented knowing that it is false.

This court was evidently of that opinion in the case of Law v. Smith, 34 Utah 394, 98 P. 300. At page 412 of 34 Utah 394, 98 P. 300, 307, it is said:

“The term ‘genuine,’ as used in the statute, refers to a real claim as contradistinguished from a mere counterfeit. It does not mean that the claim referred to must he a counterfeit or an imitation of some valid claim to bring it within the statute. Neither does it mean, as respondent’s counsel contend, and as the trial court seemingly held, that the claim referred to in section 4083 must be one which upon its face must appear legal and payable by the officer to whom it is presented for allowance and payment in the sense that the law authorizes its allowance or payment by such officer. The statute is violated if the claim is one which upon its face purports to be a charge against the particular political division for which the officer or board mentioned in the statute acts in allowing or paying it.”

This court held that a “claim is one which upon its face puroports to be” such a charge as the county would be liable for. The language of the Ohio case of State v. Voute & Kinney, 68 Ohio St. 274, 67 N. E. 484, 485, that “the powers and duties of these officers [auditing officers] do not enter into the statutory definition of the crime,” is in point. The words “if genuine” in our statute must be read as denoting the type of claim for which a political unit is liable.

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Bluebook (online)
49 P.2d 950, 87 Utah 416, 1935 Utah LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-welling-v-third-judicial-district-court-ex-rel-salt-lake-utah-1935.