68 P. 324 | Cal. | 1902
Lead Opinion
This was an agreed case, submitted to the court below without action, pursuant to section
The stipulated facts are, briefly, as follows: Humboldt County had a claim against the state for the support of abandoned orphans, half-orphans, foundlings, and aged indigents, under an act approved March 25, 1880, (Stats. 1880, p. 13,) and acts amendatory thereof in 1883 (Stats. 1883, pp. 57-380). The amount of the claim was about ten thousand dollars. The board of supervisors, being desirous of collecting it, solicited the opinion of the district attorney as to whether the labor of collecting the data for preparing the claim and securing its payment rested upon any one of the county officers, and he rendered an opinion that it did not. The defendant was then, and during all the times covered by this transaction, county clerk and ex officio clerk of the board of supervisors of said county, and was not an attorney at law. It is recited that the necessary data to be collected were scattered through the minutes of the board of supervisors, and part was to be obtained from inquiries outside of the minutes; that the board knew no one other than the defendant who was competent to do the work, and the individual members of the board spoke to defendant to assist the county in collecting the said claim. The defendant was reluctant to undertake it, inasmuch as he was required to perform his regular duties as county clerk, and was afraid also that he might not get his pay. He was assured, however, by the individual members of the board of supervisors that they would see that he was paid. Thereupon defendant collected and prepared the data upon blanks furnished by the state for that purpose, and the county obtained its money thereon. No formal contract was made between the defendant and the board of supervisors, but the defendant presented to the board his bill in due form for $486.50, and it was allowed and paid, and it is agreed that the services rendered by the defendant were reasonably worth that sum, and that there was no collusion between the defendant and the board, but that all parties acted in the utmost good faith; and that one of the supervisors, before the bill was allowed, presented it to the grand jury, and that body indorsed the same and recommended it be paid. The proceeding is to recover back what was so paid to defendant. *65
Upon the agreed state of facts the court below rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendant appeals.
The contention of the appellant is, that the services so rendered were no part of his official duties, and that formerly attorneys were employed to make these collections (citing LassenCo. v. Shinn,
In County of Kern v. Fay,
The judgment is affirmed.
Harrison, J., Temple, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.
Beatty, C.J., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
The majority opinion declares: "In the County Government Act of 1897, applicable to this case, Humboldt County is in the eleventh class (sec. 168), and it is provided therein that the countyclerk, and his deputy, shall be paid stated salaries. . . . And in a general provision contained in said act it is declared: `The salaries and fees provided in this act shall be in full compensation for all services of every kind and description rendered by the officers therein named, either as officers or exofficio officers, their deputies and assistants, unless in this act otherwise provided.'" The opinion then proceeds: "This provision is a legislative declaration that the officers shall not receive any compensation from the county other than the salaries therein named for any services they may render it, either in the line of their official duty or otherwise. Its effect is to render the officer incompetent to enter into a contract for compensation for any services he may render the county, and to render such contract void." I do not believe this to be the effect of the aforesaid legislative declaration. As I read, it simply means that the sum fixed shall be in full compensation for all services rendered as officers or ex officioofficers. By this enactment the legislature was only dealing with the question of compensation for the performance of official duty. It was not the intention of the legislature by this provision to prohibit a county clerk or sheriff from shoeing a horse for the county. That would be work done outside of official duty, and I do not know of any express provision of law forbidding a recovery for such work. If it be against public policy for courts to judicially recognize contracts of that character, that is a different question — a question not raised in this case by counsel.
If the performance of the work done by defendant for which he here seeks to recover was work done outside of his *69 official duty, then I think he is entitled to recover. Under such circumstances, the fact that he was a county officer at the time the board of supervisors employed him to do the work is a foreign quantity in the case. As to the work done, the finding of fact is "defendant did collect and prepare the requisite data in blanks furnished by the state." This data was taken in part from the minutes of the board of supervisors, and in part was obtained from outside sources. As I view it, the performance of this character of work was no part of the duties demanded of the county clerk in his capacity as such, nor was it any part of his duty in his capacity as clerk of the board of supervisors. Plaintiff relies upon subdivision 11 of section 20 of the County Government Act for authority to support a contrary conclusion. That provision reads: "The clerk of the board must perform all other duties required by law or any rule or order of the board." If the service here performed by defendant was not an official duty within some express provision of the law, or within some rule or order of the board of supervisors, then it was not an official duty at all. Yet the clerk was not required to perform this work by any express law to which our attention bas been directed; neither was he required to perform it by any rule or order of the board. No rule of the board has been produced which could possibly apply to this case; and it is conceded the board made no order for defendant to do the work. Indeed, it appears defendant accepted the employment as a favor to the board, and at its special request.
For the foregoing reasons I conclude that defendant should recover the amount of money which it is conceded his services were reasonably worth. The judgment should be reversed.
McFarland, J., concurred in the dissenting opinion. *70