Messenger v. Board of County Commissioners
Messenger v. Board of County Commissioners
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff, Charles Messenger, alleging that he was and had been since January 1, 1906, the sheriff of Converse county, commenced this action in the district court in that •county on April 7, 1908, to recover from the county certain fees amounting to $340.30 collected by him as provided by law for the inspection of horses; the said fees having been paid into the county treasury, as alleged in the petition, under an oral agreement with the county commissioners that the same should he held in a separate fund pending a judicial determination of the right of the plaintiff- and defendant respectively to the fees so collected. The petition was demurred to on the'specific ground that the fees belong to the county, and that it was the duty of the plaintiff to account for and pay the same into the county treasury. The demurrer was sustained, and the plaintiff elected to stand upon his petition, whereupon a judgment was rendered in favor of defendant for costs and dismissing the action.
It is provided in Section i -of Article XIV of the Constitution that all state, city, county, town and school officers shall be paid fixed and definite salaries, (excepting justices of the peace and constables in precincts having less than fifteen hundred population, and court commissioners, boards of arbitration and notaries public) ; and that the legislature shall, from time to time, fix the amount of such salaries as are not fixed by the constitution, the same to be in all cases in proportion to the value of the services rendered and the duty performed. Section 2 of the same article reads as follows:
“The legislature shall provide by law the fees which may be demanded by justices of the peace .and constables in precincts having less than fifteen hundred population, and of court commissioners, boards of arbitration and notaries public, which fees the said officers shall accept as their full compensation. But all other state, county, city, town and school officers shall be required by law to keep a true and correct account of all fees collected by them, and to pay the same into the proper treasury when collected, and the officer whose duty it is to collect such fees shall be held responsible, under his bond, for neglect to collect the same; provided, that in addition to the salary of sheriff they shall be entitled to receive from the party for whom the services are rendered in civil cases such.fees as may be prescribed by law.” It is provided in Section 3 that the salaries of county officers shall be fixed by law within stated maximum limits.
It was provided by statute at the time the services in question were performed that sheriffs should receive the following annual salaries: “In counties of the first class, eighteen hundred dollars; in counties of the second class, fifteen hundred dollars; in counties of the third class, fifteen hundred dollars; in counties of the fourth class, twelve
The fees in question were collected under a statute enacted in 1901-, providing for an inspection of horses about to be transported or driven out of the state. The statute declared it unlawful to ship, drive or in any manner remove beyond the boundaries of the state any herd, band or carload of horses until an inspection thereof, and made it the duty of'every person or persons, association or corporation, shipping or driving any horses out of the state to hold the same at some convenient place for inspection. (Laws 1901, Ch. 79, Sec. 1.) It was also declared unlawful for any railroad company to receive such horses for such transportation until they were inspected and the company was furnished with a certificate by a duly authorized inspector showing that the brands upon the horses had been duly inspected. A violation of such provisions by any railroad company, or any officer, agent or servant thereof, was made a misdemeanor punishable by fine. {Id., Sec. 2.) And it was made a felony for any person or persons to remove
“Sec. 3. The sheriff of each county shall be an inspector of horses under the provisions of this act and it is hereby made the duty of the sheriff of each county to perform the duties hereinafter provided as such live stock inspector, and he shall keep a record of all inspections made,, giving the name of the owner and shipper of any horses, the several brands, the number of the car and the destination of the shipment. He shall file with the board of county commissioners of his county on the first day of each month, a complete report of all inspections made during the month and shall also furnish a copy of such report to the official newspaper of the county, and such report shall be published at the expense of the county, and the ’ publisher of such paper shall forward a copy of his paper free of charge, containing such report to each of the sheriffs of the state.”
“Sec. 4.- Every person or persons, firm, association or. corporation or their or either of their agents, servants or employees, having charge of any horses, destined for transportation by rail, or to be driven beyond the limits of this state, shall make application to the sheriff of the county in which such stock is located, or to his duly authorized agent, to inspect the brand or brands of any such horses, stating in such application the time and place, when and where said horses will be ready for inspection; and it shall be the duty of such sheriff, or his deputy, so notified, to attend at the time and place designated in such application and inspect said horses,' make the necessary record, and give the necessary certificate required by the provisions of this act. Provided, that in all cases of horses transported out of this state by rail, the place of inspection shall be at some stock yard near the proposed point of shipment of said horses from this state, and, provided further, that if the owner or person in charge of said horses shall cause any*319 unreasonable delay or loss of time to such sheriff, or his deputy so notified to attend, such owner or person in charge of any such horses shall pay the expenses and salary of such inspector during such delay or loss of time, not to exceed five dollars per day.” (As amended by Raws 1903, Ch. 54.)
‘'Sec. 5. It shall be the duty of the sheriff or his deputy to demand proof of ownership from the person, persons or corporations presenting horses and mules for inspection by brand record, bill of sale or the voucher of at least two responsible persons residing in the state, and- said proof of ownership must be to the satisfaction of the inspecting sheriff or his deputies. ” (As amended by Raws 1905, Ch. 8.)
“Sec. 6. Any sheriff or his deputy who shall knowingly make any false certificate under the provisions of this act, and who shall knowingly swear falsely as to the truth of any report made by him to the board of county commissioners, or who shall accépt any bribe or compensation for the performance or failure to perform the duties prescribed by this act, shall upon conviction thereof be guilty of a felony, and be fined in a sum not exceeding one thousand dollars or imprisoned in the state penitentiary not exceeding five years, or both, at the discretion of the co.urt.”
An inspection fee was provided for in Section 8 as follows : “A fee of fifteen cents per head shall be charged on all horses inspected under the provisions' of this act, and such fee or charge shall be a lien upon the horses inspected uñtil the same shall be paid. Said fees shall be in full compensation for all services rendered in making such inspection.” By that section also the sheriff was authorized to sell all unclaimed horses coming into his possession while discharging his duties as such inspector, and was required to pay the net proceeds of the sale into the county treasury to the credit of the general fund of the county; and provision was made whereby the owner of such estrays could receive such proceeds from the county.
A new statute on the subject was enacted in .1909 expressly requiring the inspection fees to be paid into the county treasury to the credit of the general fund of the county, and repealing the former acts, but with the proviso
We do not think that the omission of the provision for making the inspection free of charge to the shipper or railroad company by the amendment of 1903 throws any light upon the question here presented, or discloses the intention of the legislature one way or the other as to the ownership of the inspection fees. It merely made it certain that an inspection fee was to be charged, and left the statute as before without an express provision for the disposal of the money when collected. Nor do we think that the provision of the act of 1909, requiring the inspection fees to be paid into the county treasury to the credit of the general fund of the county, has any effect upon the construction to be given the former statute in that respect, for,, if it was permissible to either allow the sheriff to retain the fees or require him to pay them into the county treasury, the legislature might at one time provide for allowing the fees to the officer and at another for their payment into the county treasury; and therefore the fact that the latter provision is made by the later statute does not justify the presumption that it was so intended by the former statute, nor can it be regarded as a legislative construction of the former statute in that particular. But it is expressly stated in the act of 1909 that the repeal of the previous acts shall not affect the status of any action or proceeding pending in the courts relative to fees incident to previous inspections, indicating, we think, a purpose not only to preserve rights acquired under the statute repealed, 'but to preclude a consideration of the act as in any way affecting such rights or the construction of the former statute; the legislature no doubt well knowing at the time that the ownership of fees previously collected had become a matter of much controversy!
While counsel differ as to the meaning and effect of the act of 1901, amended as aforesaid, with reference to the
It must be conceded that the term “civil cases,” as found, in the constitutional provision aforesaid, is used in contradistinction to “criminal cases.” But that does not dispose of the question, for it is necessary to consider what is meant by the word “cases” in that connection. The distinguishing words are “civil” and “criminal.” As opposed to “criminal” the word “civil” is defined in Bouvier’s Law Dictionary as indicating the private rights and remedies of men, as members of the community, in contrast to those which are public and relate to the government; “thus we speak of civil process and criminal process, civil jurisdiction and criminal jurisdiction.” In Anderson’s Law Dictionary the word is thus defined: “Concerning the rights of and wrongs to individuals considered as private persons, in contradistinction to criminal or that which concerns the whole political society, the community, state, government; as, civil action, case, code, court, damage, injury, * * * proceeding, procedure, process, remedy * * (Hockey
In ordinary phraseology the word “case” means “event,” “happening,” “instance,” “condition,” and the like, but in a legal sense it means “cause,” “suit,” “action”; “a contested question before a court of justice.” (Bouvier’s Law Dictionary; Calderwood v. Peyser, 42 Cal. 115; U. S. v. Dolla, 177 Fed. 101; In re. Dist. Atty., 23 Fed. 26; U. S. v. Volz, 28 Fed. Cas. 384; Dickey v. Smith, 42 W. Va. 805; Kundorf v. Thalheimer, 12 N. Y. 593; Gold v. R. R. Co., 19 Vt. 478; Crum v. Johnson (Neb.), 92 N. W. 105.) “The words 'case’ and 'cause’ are constantly used as synonyms in statutes and judicial decisions, each meaning a proceeding in court, a suit or action.” (Blyew v. U. S., 13 Wall. 581; Erwin v. U. S., 37 Fed. 470.) The different meanings of the word “case” is well illustrated in Dickey v. Smith, supra. A section of the statute was under consideration which provided that on certain stated grounds and conditions a justice might set aside a verdict “and award a new trial in the case,” and that “in such case he shall appoint a time for a new trial” and that no more than one new trial should be granted by the justice “in any case.” The court said that the word “case” was used three times in the section — “’the first time to denote the suit, the second time to denote the event”; and in determining its meaning as used the third time, the court gave to the word its phraseological, combined with its technical meaning, and held that the section allowed one new trial only to either party, that is to say, that each party had the right to make one application for a new trial.
The term is' employed in the provision we' are considering to describe a certain class of■ cases for the purpose of regulating the "compensation of'the sheriff, and in that
This was not the first use of the term “civil cases” with reference to the fees of sheriffs. It had been so employed from the time of the organization of Wyoming as a territory. (Laws 1869, Ch.. 33, Sec. 3.) By an act approved March 9, 1882, it was provided that sheriffs should receive an annual stated salary and that in addition to such salary “they shall he entitled to receive from the.party for whom the services are rendered in civil cases” certain stated fees. (Laws 1882, Ch. 45.) That was the statute'regulating the
The fees prescribed by the statute in connection with the provision aforesaid were for the service and return of process; mileage in serving the same; serving order of attachment, order of arrest, for delivery of property, injunction order; executing writ of possession; levying execution; commission on money collected on execution or other final process; advertising property for sale; for executing deed when necessary to be made by sheriff; for summoning jurors; executing writ of habeas corpus and order of commitment. All these services, with the possible exception of executing a deed under some circumstances, relate to suits or proceedings in court, and as the principal duties of a sheriff are connected with the business of the courts, it is clear at least that the term “civil cases” was used in the statute, and in the constitution by adopting the statutory form of expression, as referring generally to a class of legal proceedings invoked for the protection of private interests. But in the decision of this case we are not inclined nor do we think it necessary to restrict its meaning to a proceeding in court. The statute is not to be regarded as having prescribed all the fees that could properly be prescribed under the head' of civil cases, but, so far as the' question before us is concerned, as merely indicating generally the sense in which the term “civil cases”
The fees were collected in the exercise' of a duty imposed upon the sheriff by a law passed for the protection of the public against fraud or crime in relation to a class of property that may more or less easily, according to circumstances, be wrongfully appropriated. and removed beyond the state without detection; and the statute requiring an inspection of the property before its removal tends to render such fraudulent or criminal practices more difficult, and by preserving and publishing a record of the inspections assists in identifying the owner, and discovering the wrongful or unlawful act if any has been committed. (Territory ex rel. v. D. & R. G. R. Co., (N. M.) 78 Pac. 74, affirmed in McLean v. D. & R. G. R. Co., 203 U. S. 53.) In the case cited the Supreme Court of the United States say with reference to a similar statute of New Mexico providing for an inspection of hides: “The purpose of these provisions is apparent, and it is to prevent the criminal or
As generally stated, the object of inspection laws is to protect the community so far as they apply to domestic sales, from frauds and impositions; and in relation to articles designed for exportation to, preserve the character and reputation of the state in foreign markets. (22 Cyc. 1364.) “Inspection is the examination of certain articles made by law subject to such examination, so that they may be declared fit for commerce; an examination of an article to determine its fitne.ss for a given purpose.” (16 Am. & Eng. Ency. R. 808.) While the object of the statute under consideration may differ materially from that
Now it is held to be proper for a state, as an incident to its power to enact valid inspection laws, to impose a rea.-sonable charge for the purpose of defraying the expenses of the inspection. (17 Am. & Eng. Ency. L. 81; McLean v. D. & R. G. R. Co., supra; Wadhams Oil Co. v. Tracy, 114 Wis. 150; 22 Cyc. 1368.) Thé charges or fees are justified only on the ground that they are regulation ex-, penses, and as imposed for the purpose of laying the burden of executing the law upon the property involved. (Authorities above cited.) Though the fees are paid by the party whose duty it is to have the property inspected, the-services of the .inspecting officer are rendered distinctively for and in the interest of the public. The duty of the sheriff is not confined to merely inspecting the’ animals and giving the certificate showing inspection. He is required
We therefore conclude that the acts of the plaintiff in error, as sheriff and inspector of horses, were not services rendered in civil cases within the meaning of the constitutional provision showing the sheriff to receive fees for services in such cases. The demurrer to the petition was properly sustained, and the judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
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