State v. Spurgeon

47 S.W. 235, 99 Tenn. 659
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 47 S.W. 235 (State v. Spurgeon) 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 v. Spurgeon, 47 S.W. 235, 99 Tenn. 659 (Tenn. 1897).

Opinion

Beard, J.

The defendant, John R. Spurgeon, was a surety on the official bond of one Branscomb, a Tax Collector of Washington County, who defaulted in 1874 for a large amount of revenue due the State. The bill in this case was filed in 1893, charging that, in view of his liability on the bond of the .defaulting officer, and in order to escape it, Spurgeon, soon after discovering the amount of this default, made a trust deed of all his property, consisting of valuable real estate lying in Washington and Sullivan Counties, with the purpose, shared in by the beneficiary of the conveyance, of hindering, delaying, and defrauding the State in the collection of its claim; and the prayer of the bill was that this deed might be set aside as void and the property covered by it be subjected to the payment of the State’s demand. Other matters or questions became involved in the controversy, brought into the cause by an intervening petition, which it is not necessary to set out. It is sufficient for our present purpose to say, that at this term an opinion has been delivered affirming the decree of the Court of Chancery Appeals, adjudging this trust deed to be fraudulent and void, and ordering the property conveyed by it to be sold and its proceeds to be applied to the payment of the claim of the complainant. Since this opinion was handed down a [661]*661decree has been presented to us embodying the conclusions and directions of this Court, but reserving a lien on the recovery in favor of a number of solicitors for services rendered in this cause, and a motion has been made that the same be entered. These gentlemen make this claim upón their employment by the Comptroller of the' State, and the question for determination is, has. that officer power to bind the State by entering into such a contract, and, if he has such power, then as to boundaries of it? It is beyond doubt, until within recent years, that the duty of attending to all litigation in which the State was interested was devolved upon the District Attorneys of the several Circuit Courts and upon the Attorney-general of the State.

In 1865 the first departure from a long established system was made by the passage of an Act providing for the employment of additional counsel to the Attorney-general or District Attorney, when in the judgment of the Governor and Attorney-general, the interests of the State required it, and for the compensation of such attorneys. This was an emergency statute, possibly made necessary in the liquidation of the Bank of Tennessee with its various branches, though in its second section it was couched in general terms. In 1879 the Legislature made a more radical departure by the passage of an Act, which, with Act amendatory thereof, will be noticed hereafter. While the office of Attorney for the Courts of the State having criminal jurisdiction was [662]*662recognized by Secs. 5 and 6 of Art. 6, of the Constitution of 1831, that of Attorney-general for the State was not, but was, as it at present substantially exists, created by Ch. 51 of the Acts of 1835. The Constitution of 1870, Sec. 5, Art. 6, makes provision for both offices; the latter becoming for the first time what the former had been since 1830, a constitutional office. This section, however, while providing for the appointment of the Attorney-general and Reporter' by this Court, and for the election of the attorneys of the State for the various districts or circuits, does not prescribe their duties.

But the powers conferred and the duties imposed upon the incumbents of these offices had been long defined by general laws and were at that time thoroughly understood. As to the office of Attorney-general the Act of 1835 creating it had first fixed its powers and duties; these were afterwards supplemented by other Acts. Among these duties so imposed was that of attending to ‘ ‘ all business of the State, both civil and criminal, in the Supreme Court.” These statutes were brought with but slight changes of phraseologj'-, into the Code of 1858, at Sec. 3952, and were in existence at the time the Constitution of 1870 was promulgated. The question has been raised in argument as to how far the Legislature can go in stripping these constitutional officers of the functions attached to their respective offices, at the time the Constitution of 1870 was [663]*663adopted and conferring them on others, whether they be appointees of the Comptroller or are otherwise chosen, but we are not called upon on this record to answer it. While it is not necessary in . this case for us to intimate an opinion on this very important question, yet in this application for the reservation of a lien it does become essential to examine the legislation of the State to ascertain the limits of the Comptroller’s power in the employment of attorneys in suits like the present.

In 1879 the Legislature passed the Act above referred to, entitled “An Act to facilitate the collection of State revenue. ’ ’ By this Act' the Comptroller was authorized to employ an attorney or attorneys, and send him or them into' any county in the State, with full power to investigate the records and books of any officer charged with the duty of collecting revenue, and the attorney or attorneys so employed had, under the Act, ‘ ‘ full power and authority to bring, in the name of the State, by motion or otherwise, any and all suits necessary to enforce the collection of any revenue due the State, and to compromise and settle all suits for or on account of such uncollected revenue,” etc. Ch. 218, Acts 1879. The Legislature of 1891 passed an Act (Ch. 60) amend-atory of the one just mentioned, entitled “An Act to amend Chapter 218, page 262, of the Acts of 1879, entitled ‘An Act to facilitate the collection of State revenue. ’ ’ ’ This amendatory statute,' in effect a reinactment of the original Act, so far as that [664]*664had conferred the right of appointment upon the Comptroller of an attorney or attorneys to be sent by him through the State to look after its officers engaged in the collection of revenue, in important particulars materially increased the powers of those so appointed. As it was upon the authority of these two Acts the employment in question was made, it is not necessary for us to consider Sec. 88, Ch. 1, of the Session Acts of 1897, by which the District Attorneys and the Attorney-general of the State are reduced to the position of mere assistants of the revenue agents selected by the Comptroller in such suits as they institute within the limits of that section.

Upon an examination of the Act of 1879, and the amendatory Act of 1891, it will be found that the attorney or attorneys commissioned by the Comptroller under these Acts, while authorized to institute, among others, all suits necessary to enforce the collection of revenue from defaulting officers, yet there was no provision made in them, even if it could constitutionally have been done, for these attorneys representing in this Court such of these suits as might be appealed to it. In the absence of an express statute, it will not be presumed that the Legislature intended that these appointees should follow litigation so instituted by them into this Court. On the contrary, it must be assumed that its purpose was, after the suits reached here, to leave the duty of attention to them where it was placed by the [665]*665Act of 1835, and where it has since continued, by unbroken statutory provisions (unless it be that the Act of 1897 makes a change), to rest — that is, upon the Attorney-general of the State.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 S.W. 235, 99 Tenn. 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-spurgeon-tenn-1897.