Veltman v. Slater

217 S.W. 378, 110 Tex. 198, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 120
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1919
DocketNo. 3261.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 217 S.W. 378 (Veltman v. Slater) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Veltman v. Slater, 217 S.W. 378, 110 Tex. 198, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 120 (Tex. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice PHILLIPS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The certificate of the honorable Court of Civil Appeals for the Fourth District presents this state of facts—a sufficient summary for the decision of the questions certified.

The Commissioners Court of Kinney County, one member opposing, on December 11, 1916, entered an order raising the compensation of the County Attorney for ex officio services to $720 per annum, payable monthly; and, on December 28, 1917, an order fixing tlie compensation of the Sheriff for ex officio services at $1620 per annum payable monthly.

The compensation provided for the County Attorney was not for any special legal services, but contemplated only the performance of such ex officio duties as devolve upon county attorneys under the statutes.

The compensation provided for the Sheriff was likewise merely for ex officio services. In that order it was recited that the total fees received by the Sheriff would not exceed $300 per annum, whereas the expenses of his office in the proper discharge of its duties would exceed $1600 per annum; and the compensation fixed was in the opinion of the court therefore necessary for the good of the public.

At the time of the orders, the population of Kinney County was 4,000.

The questions certified are as to the authority of the Commissioners Court under Article 3893 as amended by Chapter 121 of the Acts of the Thirty-third Legislature, to make these ex officio allowances and direct their payment out of the county’s funds.

Article 3866 of the Revised Statutes—a codification of the Act of 1905 (Chapter 65, Laws of 1905)—limits to $500 the amount of compensation for ex officio services that the sheriff may receive an7 nually in counties of 25,000 population or less, and to $800 the amount he may receive annually for such services in counties exceeding that population. It is in these words:

“For summoning jurors in district and county courts, serving all election notices, notices to overseers of roads and doing all other public business not otherwise provided for, the sheriff may receive annually not exceeding five hundred dollars, to be fixed by the commissioners court at the same time other ex officio salaries are fixed;' provided, that, in counties exceeding twenty-five thousand. *201 population at last decennial census, sheriffs may receive an additional amount not exceeding fifty dollars for each five thousand population in excess of twenty-five thousand up to fifty thousand population, to be paid out of the general funds of the county on the order of the commissioners’ court. Provided, that the total amount of compensation which may be paid annually under the provisions of this a'et shall not exceed the sum of eight hundred dollars.”

Article 3893 in the Revised Statutes was originally Section 15 of the Act of 1897 (Chapter 5, Acts of the Special Session). Its language as an article in the Revision of 1911 is the same as that of Section 15 of the Act of 1897, except that the word “chapter” instead of “act” is used in the opening and concluding lines.

Section 15 of the Act of 1897 read:

“It is not intended by this act that the commissioners court shall be debarred from allowing compensation for ex officio services to county officials not to be included in estimating the maximum provided for in this act, when in their judgment such compensation is necessary; provided, such compensation for ex officio services shall not exceed the amounts now allowed under the law for ex officio services; provided, further, the fees allowed by law to district and county clerks, county attorneys and tax collectors in suits to collect taxes shall be in addition to the maximum salaries fixed by this act.”

The purpose of the section—exclusive of the last proviso which is not material here—was to warrant, when necessary in the judgment of the Commissioners Court, the allowance to county officials of compensation for ex officio services to the extent of the amounts then fixed by law for such services; and to exclude such allowance, where made, from the estimation of the general maximum of compensation provided in the act.

The purpose of the Act of the Thirty-third Legislature (Chapter 121, Laws of 1913), in its amendment of Article 3893, was still to authorize the allowance of compensation for such services when necessary in the judgment' of the Commissioners Court, but only where the compensation of the particular official and the excess fees permitted to be retained by him, as fixed in other parts of the act, did not reach the maximum also provided by the act; and then, only in such an amount as with his other compensation and the excess fees allowed to be retained would not exceed that maximum. By the amendment the article was made to read as follows:

“The commissioners’ court is hereby debarred from allowing compensation for ex officio services to county officials when the compensation and excess fees which they are allowed to retain shall reach the maximum provided for in this Chapter. In cases where the compensation and excess fees, which the officers are allowed to retain shall not reach the maximum provided for in this

*202 Chapter, the commissioners court shall allow compensation for ex officio services when, in their judgment, such compensation is necessary; provided, such compensation for ex officio services allowed shall not increase the compensation of the official beyond the maximum amount of compensation and excess fees allowed to be retained by him under this Chapter.”

The Act of 1905 was plainly a limitation upon the power of the Commissioners’ Courts to allow ex officio compensation to sheriffs under Section 15 of the Act of 1897. It was the later act, and clearly intended to control the exercise of the authority to make such allowances as conferred by the older act.

There has been no express repeal of the Act of 1905. As Article 3866 in the Revision of 1911, it stood as a part of the statute law of the State when the order of the Commissioners’ Court involved in this case was made. So far as affected by any express action of the Legislature in its regard, it still stands as an article of the statutes.

Unless, therefore, the necessary effect of the Act of 1913 in its amendment of Section 15 of the Act of 1897 appearing as Article 3893 in the Revision of 1911, was to abrogate it,—which is the contention made in behalf of the Commissioners Court’s order—-it- Is still a limitation upon the power of the Commissioners Courts to allow ex officio compensation to sheriffs under the amendment.

The power of the Commissioners Courts to allow ex officio compensation was granted by the amendment in terms no more broad than those found in the original section.

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Bluebook (online)
217 S.W. 378, 110 Tex. 198, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/veltman-v-slater-tex-1919.