State v. Lewis

22 Ohio C.C. 618
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJune 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ohio C.C. 618 (State v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Lewis, 22 Ohio C.C. 618 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

PoMERENE, J.

In the case of the State of Ohio against D. P. Lewis and others, and in the case of the same plaintiff against John J. Ramage, the object of the petitions in the court below was for the purpose of recovering back from Lewis, the auditor, and Ramage, the auditor, and their bondsmen the amount of money that was claimed to be illegally taken from the treasury of Delaware county.

There are nine different causes of action in the petition, that is, in the case of Lewis, it being held that the same questions arise in the case against Ramage, and the decision in one would be conclusive in the other.

The petition avers. that Lewis was duly elected county auditor of Delaware county in 1892, and as such auditor qualified and gave bond in accordance to law, entered upon the duty of his office in 1893, and continued and is still in office. The first cause of action set out in the petition reads (I will not read any others, they are in similar language), “On September 4, 1894, said Lyman P. Lewis, as such auditor aforesaid, unlawfully' received on an account duly presented and allowed by the commissioners of said Delaware county for alleged services rendered said county as auditor as aforesaid, for correcting auditor’s books after the board of equalization of said county met and for the year 1894 the sum of $27, which said sum was paid the said Lyman P. Lewis out of the county funds in the treasury of said county as compensation Lor said services.

“There is, second, for services for assessing railroads, $30.00; the third count is for services attending joint ditch meeting, $12.00; fourth, for making special- ditch duplicate, $635.71; fifth, for making special road duplicate, $35.00; for work on commissioners’ journal of said county, $21.69; for work on sheep claims and soldier’s relief funds, .$100; for making commissioners’ annual report, $50.00; and for platting county ditches from September xi, 1893, to September 1, 1895, $112.50; making a total of $1,066.90.”

The petition further says that on July 8, 1895, a committee was appointed by the common pleas court of Delaware county, [620]*620Ohio, to examine the books and pagers belonging to the office of county auditor and 'treasurer, in pursuance to section 1131, Revised Statutes, and on September 24, said committee made ’ their report of their proceedings and the result of the examination to said court, and it being shown upon the presentation of said report that a breach of the bond of Lyman P. Lewis, as such auditor as aforesaid, had been made as hereinbefore stated; wherefore the plaintiff prays judgment for these several amounts.

•Section 1131, Revised Statutes, under which the court of common pleas of this county appointed three persons to make the examination of the books of the auditor and of the treasurer reads this way:

“On the written application of at least twenty taxpayers of any county, to the court of common pleas, the court shall appoint a committee of three persons, to examine the books and papers belonging to the offices of the county auditor and county treasurer, and make report of their proceedings and the result of their examination. Before such committee is appointed, one or more of said taxpayers shall enter into bond to the state, in a sum and with sureties to the satisfaction of the court conditioned that the obligors will pay all the costs and expenses of such 'examination, if the court does not, on the coming in of such report, certify that there was reasonable ground for the application; and, before entering upon their duties, the members of said committee shall, respectively, take an oath to perform the same faithfully, and in the discharge of their duties, they shall have all the powers given in the preceding section to examiners of the county treasury.”

Section 1132, Revised Statutes, reads: “Each member of ■such committee shall be entitled to be paid three dollars for every day occupied in the discharge of his duties, which, with all the other costs and expenses of such examination, shall be paid out of the county treasury after being approved by said court.”

Section 1133, Revised Statutes, reads: “On the presentation of 'the report, if a breach of the bond of either of said officers is shown, the prosecuting attorney shall forthwith commence an action on the bond of the delinquent officer; and if no such [621]*621breach is reported, he shall commence an action on the bond of the applicants, unless they forthwith pay to the county said costs and expenses, or the court certifies that there was reasonable ground for the application.”

This report shows, as set out here in this petition, there is a breach of the bond' of the auditor. The auditor’s bond is made payable to the state of Ohio and is for the faithful discharge of his duty as auditor. To the facts set out in this petition the defendant Lewis filed a demurrer, a general demurrer and a special demurrer. The general demurrer, first is that there are not facts stated in the petition sufficient to' constitute a cause of action against the defendant; second, that the plaintiff has no legal capacity to sue.

This suit, as it appears from the petition, was brought about by the operation of sections 1131 and 1133, Revised Statutes. Section 1133, on the presentation of report of the breach of the bond of auditor or treasurer, provides that the prosecutor shall forthwith commence action on the bond.

The case of State v. Kelly, 32 Ohio St., 421, was an action against the treasurer, and was a suit on the bond. The state of Ohio was made plaintiff, which in such actions was properly brought in the name of the state of Ohio, the obligee of the treasurer’s bond. The syllabus, paragraph 1, of this case is:

“A county treasurer who receives out of the county treasury any allowance or compensation other than that specially provided by law, is liable, under the statute, to an action upon his bond, together with his sureties, for double the amount so received.”

The second syllabus is this: “Having received such allowance while acting as treasurer, or having received it in his capacity as treasurer, he can not defend against the action, when brought, by claiming that in so receiving he was acting merely as a private individual, and not as an official.”

In all these different causes of action this language is used, that this auditor “unlawfully received on an account duly presented and allowed by the commissioners for services rendered Delaware county for correcting books,” etc. It is made out as auditor for services as auditor, and as auditor it was presented to the commissioners for allowance. It was allowed, [622]*622and upon that allowance, he then, as auditor, draws his warrant upon the treasurer for that amount, and is paid.

The object of this suit is to recover back these sums for the reason that they were illegally paid. It is claimed that there is no authority in law by which these claims are allowed. For, all these services therein mentioned the salary allowed an auditor of this county covers; that is the claim. It has long since been settled in Ohio that an officer whose fees are regulated by statute can charge fees only for -those services for which compensation is fixed by law. Fees are hot allowed by implication. There are no constructive fees. The fees given are mentioned or they are not allowed. That will be found in Debolt v. Trustees, 7 Ohio St., 227; Anderson v. Commissioners, 25 Ohio St., 13.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ohio C.C. 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lewis-ohiocirct-1896.