Wickersham v. Smith

7 Alaska 522
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedMay 28, 1927
DocketNo. 2735-A
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 7 Alaska 522 (Wickersham v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wickersham v. Smith, 7 Alaska 522 (D. Alaska 1927).

Opinion

REED, District Judge.

The plaintiff, James Wickersham, on May 6, 1927, filed his bill in equity, seeking an injunction to restrain the defendant Walstein G. Smith, as treasurer of the territory of Alaska, from paying out of the territorial treasury various sums of money appropriated by the Legislature of the territory and contained in the general appropriation act of 1927, on the ground that the appropriations were illegal and void. The specific appropriations objected to and claimed to be illegal by the plaintiff are, as follows:

For tbe office of tbe Governor:

Additional salary for the secretary to the Governor, $720 per annum $1,440

One clerk, at $2,100 per annum 4,200

One stenographer, at $1,800 per annum 3,600

Janitor, messenger, and other service at the house to supplement the federal appropriation, $600 per annum 1,200

Travel and contingent expenses of the Governor to supplement federal appropriations 2,000

Dissemination of information about Alaska, publication and circulation of pamphlets and booklets, under direction of Governor 2,000

For entertainment at the executive mansion of officers and representatives of the United. States, the states of the Union, or of foreign countries 2¡000

Repairs and improvements to the executive mansion 1,250

Total $17,690

[528]*528For office of secretary of the territory:

Salary of secretary of the territory for work carried on under territorial laws, $2,000 per annum 4,000

Salary of chief clerk, $2,640 per annum 5,280

Salary of assistant clerk, $2,100 per annum 4,200

For additional and necessary clerical help for the biennium 3,600

For office rent for biennium ■ 3,120

For contingent expenses, telephone, electric lights, secretary’s bond, etc., $750 per annum 1,500

Total $21,700

Special legislative expenses:

For compensation to Bartley Howard for supervision and preparation of Senate Journal subsequent -to the session of the Legislature, ten days at $15 a day 150

For compensation to Sumner S. Smith for supervising and preparing House Journal subsequent to the session of the Legislature, 10 days at $15 a day 150

For employment of extra clerical help, including overtime to the regular employees, Eighth session, also employment of special clerical help to compile, compare, and have printed Senate Journal; and other contingent expenses, to be expended under the direction of the Governor and certified by the President of the Senate, or so much thereof as may be necessary 1,500

For employment of extra clerical help, including overtime of regular employees, Eighth session, also employment of special clerical help to compile, compare, and have printed House Journal, and other contingent expenses, to be expended under the direction of the Governor and certified by the Speaker of the House, or so much thereof as may be necessary 1,500

Total $3,300

The plaintiff alleges that he is a taxpayer of the territory, and that the items complained of will be paid out of the territorial treasury by the defendant illegally and in violation of the laws of the United States, unless this court prevents defendant from so doing by its power of injunction; that the said sums will thereby be lost from the public funds and the possession of the defendant as territorial treasurer, and that [529]*529their illegal and wrongful payment for unlawful and unauthorized purposes will greatly increase the taxes which this plaintiff and other taxpayers of Alaska are obliged to pay to maintain the government, to their great loss and damage; and that the plaintiff has not, and the other taxpayers similarly situated in Alaska have not, any plain, speedy, or adequate remedy at law to prevent such unlawful and unauthorized expenditure.

At the time of presenting the complaint a motion was presented by the plaintiff for a temporary restraining order pendente lite. On reading the complaint, an order to show cause why an injunction pendente lite should not issue was granted, returnable on May 11, 1927, at 2 o’clock p. m. At the hour set for the return on the order to show cause, there appeared Hon. Karl Theile, secretary of the territory, by his counsel, Hellenthal & Hellenthal, and Hon. Geo. A. Parks, Governor of the territory, separately appeared by the same counsel and moved the court for leave to intervene as having an interest in the matter in litigation. Messrs. Hellenthal & Hellenthal, attorneys, also appeared with the Attorney General of the territory for the defendant Walstein G. Smith, the territorial treasurer, and thereupon the plaintiff objected to the court’s granting the motion of the secretary and the Governor of the territory to intervene, on the ground that Hellenthal & Hellenthal were not authorized to appear for the intervening parties. The plaintiff also objected to Hellenthal & Hellenthal’s appearing for the territory, on the ground that the Attorney General of the territory was alone authorized to appear on behalf of the territory, or for the treasurer of the territory, and moved that the said attorneys be required to show their authority to enter their appearance as attorneys for the defendant and for the interveners.

The motion was denied, for the reason that, as to the appearance for the interveners, it is to be presumed that their authority to appear for the interveners was authorized from the fact that the complaints in intervention were verified by the interveners under the signature of the above-mentioned attorneys, and, as to the defendant Smith, it appears that the Attorney General of the territory had joined with the attorneys named in entering an appearance, thus disclosing authority for the appearance of the attorneys in both instances. The objection of the plaintiff to the allowance of the intervention was [530]*530then overruled, and the complaints in intervention were ordered filed. The plaintiff then moved to strike the complaints in intervention separately, on the ground that the attorneys had no authority to appear on behalf of the United States or the territory in this proceeding. This motion was denied for the reason stated, and for the further reason that the complaints in intervention showed that in the case of the secretary of the territory, he was personally as well as publicly interested in the matter in litigation, and because in addition thereto, accompanying the complaint was a request from the Attorney General of the territory for him to appear and defend his interest. In the case of the Governor it appeared that items of the appropriations involving the due enforcement of the laws of the territory were attacked by the complaint, and his interest in the matter in litigation, as a public official, was shown by the complaint in intervention.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Alaska 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wickersham-v-smith-akd-1927.