Throckmorton County v. Thompson

96 S.W.2d 826, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 841
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 19, 1936
DocketNo. 1564.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 96 S.W.2d 826 (Throckmorton County v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Throckmorton County v. Thompson, 96 S.W.2d 826, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 841 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

FUNDERBURK, Justice.

Mrs. Lola Thompson was the county treasurer of Throckmorton county from 1929 to 1934, inclusive. She gave a number of official bonds with different sureties. She was paid commissions on receipts and disbursements by way of compensation for her services for the years, and in the amounts as follows: 1929, $1,-703.37; 1930, $1,805.63; 1931, $2,236.66 ($342.34 of said sum was paid on February 12, 1931, as commissions for the year 1930) ; 1932, $1,720.56; 1933, $1,518.42; 1934, $1,-346.59.

On January 14, 1929, the commissioners’ court “ordered that the County Treasurer’s salary be and is hereby set at 2½% commission for receipts and 2½% for disbursements, and not to exceed $1600 for the year.” On January 12, 1931, a new order was made purporting to cover the time from January 1, 1931, to December 31, 1932, inclusive, which, in its material parts, provided that the treasurer’s commission should “be such commission of the amount of funds he may receive and disburse as *828 when added to the commissions he receives on the school funds and the commission he has already received on other funds as will aggregate him a total of $1,600 per annum and in no event shall his commission from all sources amount to more than $1,600 per annum.” On January 2, 1933, another order was made which, so far as material, provided that the county treasurer “be allowed and paid lawful commissions on receipts and disbursements for the ensuing year .not to exceed the total amount of $1200 . per annum until otherwise ordered by the court.” Said order further provided: “It is further ordered that said commissions be paid from time to time on claims against the county and that be ( ?) paid and allowed for issuance and payment of proper warrants as other claims are now paid and allowed.” On January 8, 1934, another order was adopted identical with the next preceding, except that it specified a maximum of $1,260 instead of $1,200.

This suit was brought by Throckmorton county against Mrs. Thompson and the several sureties on her .different 'bonds, seeking to recover the amount of commissions paid for said years in excess of the said several maximum amounts specified in said orders. The defendants, among other things, pleaded as a special defense res ádjudicata consisting of allegations to the effect that the county treasurer had during all of said time made quarterly reports to the commissioners’ court as provided by law, showing therein the receipt by her upon warrants drawn by her of the commissions, aforesaid, and the approval of said reports by the commissioners’ court. Pleas of the two and four year statutes of limitation were also interposed. The suit was filed January 28, 1935.

Upon a non jury trial the court gave judgment for the defendants, from which the plaintiff has appealed.

The trial court upon due request filed conclusions of fact and law showing that the judgment was based upon his sustaining the pleas of four-year limitation and res adjudicata. As to the commissions averred to have been overpaid for the years 1931 and 1932, the court concluded, as an additional basis for the judgment in part, that the order of January 12, 1931, was void, by reason whereof the treasurer was entitled to recover a commission of 2½ per cent, on receipts and disbursements of funds, other than school funds, not to exceed the statutory maximum of $2,000. The trial judge also found that, of the $2,236.66 paid during the year 1931, $342.34 of said amount paid February 12, 1931, was commissions for the year 1930. In other words, it was found, in effect, that less than $2,000 was paid as commissions for the year 1931 and more than $2,000 for the year 1930.

We are not authorized to review upon the record presented the action of the court in overruling exceptions to the defendant’s answer. Such action is not shown by the judgment. It is attempted to be shown by bills of exception. Where the action of the trial court in sustaining or overruling exceptions to pleadings is sought to be reviewed upon appeal, the judgment must show the action complained of, and it cannot be shown by bills of exception. Court Rul.es 53 and 65 (142 S.W. xxi, xxii). This proposition is supported by numerous-decisions which may be found listed in. Southwestern Digest under the subject Appeal and Error ^713 (3).

We concur in the conclusion of the trial' judge that the order of the commissioners’’ court dated January 12, 1931, and purporting to fix the compensation of the county treasurer from January 1, 1931, to December 31, 1932, inclusive, is void. The question arises upon statutory provisions, as follows :

R.S.1925, art. 3941: “The county treasurer shall receive commissions on the-moneys received and paid out by him, said commissions to be fixed by order of the-commissioners court as follows: For receiving all moneys, other than school funds,, for the county, not exceeding two and one-half per cent, and not exceeding two and one-half per cent for paying out the same;, provided, that he shall receive no commissions for receiving money from his predecessor nor for paying over money to his-successor in office.”

R.S.1925, art. 3942: “The treasurers of-the several counties shall be allowed for receiving and disbursing the school funds one-half of one per cent for receiving, and one-half of one per cent for disbursing,, said commissions to be paid out of the available school fund of the county.”

R.S.1925, art. 3943: “The commissions allowed to any county treasurer shall not exceed two thousand dollars annually; provided, that in all counties in which the assessed value of the property of such counties shall be one hundred million dollars or more as shown by the preceding assessment *829 roll, the treasurers thereof shall receive as their commissions a sum not exceeding two thousand seven hundred dollars annually.”

The power thus granted by the Legislature to commissioners’ courts is a delegated, discretionary, legislative power. Searcy v. Wood County (Tex.Civ.App.) 275 S.W. 719; Collingsworth County v. Myers (Tex.Civ.App.) 35 S.W. 414; Staples v. Llano County, 9 Tex.Civ.App. 201, 28 S.W. 569. Being discretionary, the absence of its exercise, or invalid attempt to exercise it, by a commissioners’ court, will not deprive a county treasurer of compensation, but in any such case the compensation will be the maximum rate of commissions provided by law, subject to the maximum limit of $2,000. Greer v. Hunt County (Tex. Com.App.) 249 S.W. 831; Bastrop County v. Hearn, 70 Tex. 563, 8 S.W. 302; Smith v. Wise County (Tex.Civ.App.) 187 S.W. 705; Montgomery County v. Talley (Tex. Civ.App.) 169 S.W. 1141.

We. shall assume, without deciding, since it is unnecessary to do so, that the power vested in the commissioners’ court by said statutory provisions includes, not only the power to fix the rate or per cent, of commissions, on other than school funds, at a rate or per cent, within (less than) 2½ per cent, on receipts and disbursements, but also to fix a maximum limit less than the statutory limit of $2,000 upon the total of such commissions at the rate so fixed by the commissioners’ court. It has been so held in Wood County v. Leath (Tex.Civ. App.) 204 S.W. 454; Kaufman County v. Gaston (Tex.Civ.App.) 273 S.W. 894, and recognized and impliedly approved in Greer v. Hunt County (Tex.Com.App.) 249 S.W. 831, and Shaw v. Smith County (Tex.Com. App.) 29 S.W. (2d) 1000, 70 A.L.R. 1046.

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96 S.W.2d 826, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/throckmorton-county-v-thompson-texapp-1936.