Williams v. City of New Orleans

141 So. 460, 174 La. 785, 1932 La. LEXIS 1727
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 30, 1932
DocketNo. 31585.
StatusPublished

This text of 141 So. 460 (Williams v. City of New Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. City of New Orleans, 141 So. 460, 174 La. 785, 1932 La. LEXIS 1727 (La. 1932).

Opinion

LAND, J.

This is a mandamus proceeding brought by relator, criminal sheriff for the parish of Orleans, against the city of New Orleans, to compel it to pay a bill of $999.99 for the services of three extra guards employed by relator, on the order of the judges of the criminal district court for said parish.

In February of the present year, one Kingston was awaiting trial in the parish prison in the city of New Orleans for two penitentiary offenses. He was taken seriously ill at the time transfers were being made from the old to the new prison and normal conditions of safety did not prevail.

*787 Relator, as criminal sheriff for the parish of Orleans, reported these facts to the two judges of the criminal district court before whom Kingston would be tried and to the district attorney; and these judges, on the advice of the district attorney, ordered relator to place Kingston in the Charity Hospital in New Orleans, and to hire guards to watch him while he was there.

Relator had the bill for the services of these guards audited by the clerk of the criminal district court, and approved by these judges, and sent to the city commissioner of finance, who refused to pay the bill.

Relator contends that the city of New Orleans is responsible for this bill under section 1042 of the Revised Statutes, which provides that all expenses incurred “ * * * in the city of New Orleans, by the arrest, confinement, maintenance and prosecution of persons accused * * * and all expenses whatever attending criminal proceedings, shall be paid * * * by the City of New Orleans. * * * Such expenses shall _ be paid * * * by the City Treasurer * * * after an account thereof- shall be duly certified to be correct by the clerk of the court and the presiding judge thereof.”

The city of New Orleans admits in article XVII of its answer that, “ * * * By the terms of Section 1042 of the Revised Statutes of 1S70, all expenses incurred in the City of New Orleans by the arrests, confinement, maintenance, and prosecution of persons accused or convicted of crimes, their removal to prison, the pay of witnesses, jurors, and all expenses whatever attending criminal proceedings, shall be paid by the City of New Orleans.”

Therefore, unless the city of New Orleans can clearly show that section 1042 of the Revised Statutes has been amended or modified by later legislation, it is manifest that the terms of this section are amply sufficient to cover the bill for $999.99 for the three guards, employed by relator to watch Kingston during his confinement on account of illness in the Charity Hospital.

The city of New Orleans contends that the bill of relator shows upon its face that it is not within the law, “because under Act No. 108 of 1928, the Criminal Sheriff for the Parish of Orleans has been allowed to employ the services of some eighty-nine deputies, whose salaries and duties are fixed by said law; that said Act No. 108 of 1928 specifically declares that it repeals all laws or parts of laws in conflict with said Act, and * * * the said relator is limited in his expense for criminal deputy sheriffs to the number of deputies designated by said law, and consequently, the Criminal Sheriff cannot impose upon the City of New Orleans any liability for further or additional deputy sheriffs.” Answer, art. XVII.

The city of New Orleans further contends that “the said bill of the Criminal Sheriff for the salary of the extra deputies named does not show that they are among the number of deputies allowed him by Act No. 108 of 1928 and, therefore, the approval of the officers who have approved said bill cannot thereby convert said bill into a liability which must be assumed and paid by respondents, nor has the said relator the right by the extraordinary writ of mandamus to compel respondents to pay said bill.” Answer, art. XVII.

*789 As stated by the city of New Orleans in its answer, Act No. 108 of 1928 fixes the salary and defines the duty to be performed by each and every deputy criminal sheriff therein named.

For this very reason, the criminal sheriff for the parish of Orleans has no legal right to displace and compel any of these deputies to discharge other duties than those assigned to him by law. It must be assumed that the Legislature intended that each and' every deputy named in the act is needed for the performance of each and every duty to which he has been assigned.

The deputies whom the criminal sheriff for the parish of Orleans is authorized to name, under Act No. 108 of 1928, are regular criminal deputy sheriffs, and are daily engaged in the discharge of routine duties.

This act, unquestionably, denies to the criminal sheriff for the parish of Orleans the right to employ additional criminal deputy sheriffs to perform any of the duties defined therein.

But there is not a single word in this act that pretends to prohibit the criminal sheriff for the parish of Orleans from hiring deputy sheriffs in case of emergency, such as guarding a sick prisoner in a hospital, for which Act No. 108 of 1928 makes no provision at all. And the reason for such omission is that the Legislature was well aware that such deputies might be appointed and paid, as occasion required, under the broad provisions of section 1042 of the Revised Statutes of 1870.

• Not only does humanity dictate, but the actual necessity for guarding in a hospital a prisoner who is ill is as great as the necessity for having “day and night keepers and guards” at the parish prison, as provided in Act No. 10S of 1928, to watch over a well prisoner who may be incarcerated therein.

Our conclusion is that Act No. 108 of 1928 has not amended or modified section 1042 of the Revised Statutes of 1870, so as to prohibit the criminal sheriff for the parish of Orleans from employing additional deputies to guard a sick prisoner in a hospital, when the requirements of that section have been complied with, as in the present case.

2. The Court of Appeal for the parish of Orleans held that mandamus was the proper proceeding in the present case, citing Parker v. Robertson (1859) 14 La. Ann. 249; Shaw v. Howell (1866) 18 La. Ann. 195; New Orleans v. Patton (1875) 27 La. Ann. 168; Fitzpatrick v. City of New Orleans (1875) 27 La. Ann. 457; State ex rel. Houston v. City of New Orleans (1878) 30 La. Ann. 82; State ex rel. Guion v. Chauvin (1920) 147 La. 703, 85 So. 645.

In so holding our able brothers of the Court of Appeal overlooked entirely Act No. 5 of 1870, Extra Session.

In State v. Brown (1878) 30 La. Ann. 78 the court said: “In virtue of an act of the Legislature passed March 17, 1870, no creditor of the city of New Orleans, whether he be the holder of a liquidated, or an unliquidated claim, can compel by mandamus, any auditing officer of the city to issue, or deliver to him, a warrant for any amount due him; or compel any disbursing officer of. the 'city to pay him any sum which he may claim that the city owes him.” See section 1 of Act No. 5 of 1870, Extra Session.

*791 In State ex rel. Klein v. City of New Orleans (1883) 35 La. Ann.

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Related

State ex rel. Douglas v. Kennedy
46 So. 796 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1908)
State ex rel. Guion v. Chauvin
85 So. 645 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1920)
Parker v. Robertson
14 La. Ann. 249 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1859)
Shaw v. Howell
18 La. Ann. 195 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1866)
State ex rel. Strauss v. Brown
30 La. Ann. 78 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1878)
State ex rel. Houston v. City of New Orleans
30 La. Ann. 82 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1878)
State ex rel. Klein & Co. v. City of New Orleans
35 La. Ann. 781 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1883)

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Bluebook (online)
141 So. 460, 174 La. 785, 1932 La. LEXIS 1727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-city-of-new-orleans-la-1932.