95 Ill. 309 | Ill. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the Court:
Section 9 of article 10 of our present constitution relates to compensation of county officers in Cook county.
Section 10 says: “The county board, except as provided in section 9 of this article, shall fix the compensation of all county officers; with the amount of their necessary clerk hire, stationery, fuel, and other expenses, and in all cases where fees are provided for, said compensation shall be paid only out of, and shall in no instance exceed, the fees actually collected. * * * Provided, that the compensation of no officer shall be increased or diminished during his term of office. All fees or allowances by them received in excess of their said compensation shall be paid into the county treasury.”
Briscoe became county clerk of Clark county on the first Monday in December, 1873. At the September term of the county board next before his term began, that board fixed the compensation of the county clerk at $1200, that of deputy at $600, and for fuel and stationery $200 per annum. Until the September term of the county board in 1875, he, as county clerk, made his semi-annual reports, showing the amount of fees collected, and showing his necessary expenses for clerk hire, stationery, fuel, etc.; the amount of these expenses exceeding every year the amount fixed therefor as above. These accounts were audited and allowed.
At that term he made a bargain with the board by which he agreed to furnish, at his own expense, certain record books, blanks and stationery, and to charge to the county no fees in criminal cases, in certain cases, and also to transact pension business free of charge, and in consideration of which the board agreed to excuse him from reporting the amount of fees collected and allow him to retain the future earnings of the office, and to furnish fuel for the office.
Two years afterward, at the July term, 1877, the board, by resolution, repudiated the contract as invalid.
At the September term, 1877, he made some fruitless attempts to present and have audited certain bills for clerk hire, stationery and fuel, and also to present semi-annual reports of receipts and expenditures from 1875 to that time. All these the board refused to receive or consider. He thereupon brought an action against the county for that part of his current expenses for clerk hire, fuel and stationery which exceeded the residue of the fees collected during that time, after deducting therefrom the amount of his salary, at $1200 per annum.
The county pleaded the general issue and a plea of set-off, claiming the excess of the amount of fees actually collected, over the amount found by adding the clerk’s salary ($1200 a year) to the amounts fixed for deputy clerk and fuel, etc., by the order of 1873 ($800 a year).
There is no dispute about the facts. The case turned upon the construction of the 10th section of article 10, above stated.
The circuit court held that the action of the county board in September, 1873, fixing the allowances to be made for clerk hire and fuel and stationery, could not be changed during appellant’s term of office, and hence, no matter what might be the necessary expense of the office in that regard, the board could allow no more and the appellant could recover no more.
The Appellate Court adopted the same view. This, we think, is error. As we understand that clause, it is the salary of the county officer which the county board is to fix—the compensation for the personal discharge of official duty by him. It is that compensation which the board is forbidden to change during the term of office.
By the constitution the county board is to fix the compensation which each county officer is to receive, with (in addition to or besides) “the amount of their necessary * * * expenses.” The compensation or salary was to be fixed in advance. The expenses were to be determined by the necessity which the business of the office should develop. We have already decided, where the board had fixed an amount in advance as that to be allowed for these expenses, that the officer can not claim that amount unless expenses to that amount were actually incurred.
The contract of September, 1875, was a vicious contract, so plainly against the policy of the constitution that it was not binding as a contract, and was invalid in so far as it undertook to relieve appellant from his duty to make regular reports of his receipts, and from his duty to pay into the county treasury the excess of such receipts over his fixed salary,—but it was effective in doing away with the work of the county board in 1873, in so far as that action undertook the extra-constitutional work of fixing in advance the amount to be allowed for necessary expenses. It follows, that the accounts of this officer with the county should be adjusted, by charging him with all the fees actually collected and crediting him with his salary, ($1200 a year,) and also with all moneys actually paid out by him as expenses for necessary fuel, stationery and clerk hire.
The judgment of the Appellate Court must be reversed, and the cause remanded for proceedings in conformity with the views here expressed.
Judgment reversed.
Scholfield, J., did not participate in the consideration of this case.