Wright v. County of Shelby

68 Tenn. 145
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1877
StatusPublished

This text of 68 Tenn. 145 (Wright v. County of Shelby) 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
Wright v. County of Shelby, 68 Tenn. 145 (Tenn. 1877).

Opinion

Freeman, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff, as attorney-general, moved for judgment against Boyle, clerk of the second circuit court of Shelby county, in the city of Memphis, for the failure to enroll cases determined in his court, in which he [146]*146had collected enrolling fees. There were upwards of ■nineteen hundred cases in which such failure had occurred. Judgments were had in all the cases in favor of the county trustee, for the use of the county against said clerk. These motions were made by order of the court, upon report of the fact of delinquency on the part of the clerk, made by the attorney-general. The motions were made under Section 3228 of the Code, which is as follows:- “Each district attorney of this State shall examine the offices of the clerks of his district at any time of the court, whether enrollments have been properly made or fees charged for enrollments not made, and shall proceed against the •clerk guilty of official delinquency, and move for the fees illegally charged, and shall receive a tax fee of five dollars for each case.” The judgment rendered against the clerk amounted to upwards of five thousand dollars, and a tax fee was ordered in favor of the .attorney-general of five dollars in each case, together with other costs, for which an execution was awarded. The execution was returned by the sheriff nulla bona, and thereupon the attorney-general, in January, 1876, moved the court for judgment over against the county •of Shelby, based on said return, for the amount of his fees, to-wit, five dollars in each case, as adjudged in the original judgment against Boyle, and asked the court to certify the same to the chairman of the county court for payment. The court refused the motion, holding the county not liable foi.' such fees by law, and taxed the attorney-general with the costs of his mííion. A bill of exceptions was tendered, and the [147]*147case brought by appeal in the nature of a writ of error to this court.

The question is, as to the correctness of this ruling of the court below.

Boyle was elected clerk in March, 1870, and went out of office 1st of September, 1874. Wright was elected attorney-general in 1870. The motions were made against Boyle in May, 1875, and judgment rendered in July of that year. The cases in which Boyle was delinquent had been accumulating for each year of his official term, only one hundred and eighty-seven of them being for 1874, the last year in which he was clerk. It is perhaps proper to state, that Boyle himself was known by the attorney-general to be insolvent at the time the motions were made, but that one or more perhaps of his sureties on his official bond was understood to be good and solvent.

The ruling of the judge below in this case is sought to be maintained in argument here on several grounds, which we proceed to notice, so far as we deem material to the decision of the question before us.

It is insisted the motions could only be made at each term of the court after it occurred, the statute allowing the clerks six months after determination of cases in which to perform this duty, and the section 3228 requiring the attorney-general to make his examination of the offices of clerks at any term of the court. The examination is to be made by the district attorney at each term of the court, and the proceeding is expected by the statute to follow, as a matter of course, the ascertainment of the offense; but it does [148]*148not follow that if for any cause the attorney-general’ has failed to ascertain the delinquency at the first term, or even failed to make the motion when he had ascertained it, therefore it could not be made at all. Time was not intended to be essential to the right in this case — in fact the Legislature did not intend to fix the first term after the offense, as the only one at which the motion should be made, but only provided it should be done after ascertainment of the liability— as a matter of course the motion would be subject to the bar of the proper statute of limitation. We think there is nothing in the objection. Nor do we think there is any objection to the fact of making a motion in each case where the clerk has been delinquent. The statute by its language evidently contemplates a motion in each case of failure and gives the attorney-general a tax fee of five dollars for each.” In the case of Alston, before us some years since, motions were made in each case, and judgments rendered on the cases before us separately, although this objection seems not to have been urged by the learned counsel who argued that case.

The main question in this case, and the one on which it must turn is, whether the county is liable under the Code to pay the fees taxed in favor of the attorney-general at all. This being a question depending entirely on statutory provisions, we proceed to examine what is the law on this question.

In addition to the provision in 3228, giving a tax fee of five dollars in each case, Section 4542, sub-sec. 15, gives the fee of five dollars for proceeding against [149]*149•clerk for delinquency in enrolling cause. Section 4543 provides that the fees in the foregoing section are to be taxed in the bill of costs and collected from the •defendant whenever prosecutions or proceedings have been successful. The next section provides, where the prosecutions and proceedings have been unsuccessful, -or the money cannot be collected from the defendants, or the prosecution is charged with the costs, the fees of the attorney-general are paid out of the State or county treasury as other costs in criminal cases.

It is somewhat ingeniously argued that according to section 4544 there must “be prosecutions and proceedings,” and that as this is held to be a civil proceeding, the two elements were not combined in the •case that authorize the payment of costs by the county. The language is somewhat inartificial, but does not admit in fairness of this construction. The reference is evidently to the short fee bill given in the 18th ■ sub-section of section 4542, which provides for certain fees in various cases; some of prosecutions, as for “each prosecution where the grand jury finds a true bill, but the case is terminated without a trial, $3.00; for successfully prosecuting vendors of lottery tickets, $25.00,” and in other sections, for various proceedings against delinquents, among others, proceedings against clerks for failure to enroll cause. It did not intend that there should necessarily be both a prosecution, that is, a criminal proceeding, and also other proceedings in the same case, in order to entitle the attorney-general to his costs, but only uses the word proceedings in reference to the proceedings referred to, as [150]*150contradistinguished from prosecutions, used in the section, thus providing for both cases.

The question in this case really must turn on the proper construction of the provisions of the Code we have just been commenting on, and if a proceeding like this, or this proceeding is one of the proceedings contemplated in sec. 4544, then the question, on a fair construction of its language and purpose, in connection with the other sections in same chapter, as well as general rules on this subject, is, shall the county or State pay the tax fee of the attorney-general?'

The chapter commences in first section by giving salary of attorney-general of the State, and then on to the end of the chapter is devoted to fees of district attorneys.

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68 Tenn. 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-county-of-shelby-tenn-1877.