59 P. 266 | Kan. | 1899
The opinion of the court was delivered by
A decision on the claims of error was made in this case January 8, 1898. The judgment of the court below was then affirmed. (Harrison v. Benefit Society, 59 Kan. 29, 51 Pac. 893.) The defendants in error have filed a motion to retax the costs made in the case by striking all the various items of costs from the appearance docket for the reason that none of said items was authorized by law, because there is no statutory authority for the taxation of costs against unsuccessful litigants in this court. Costs cannot be charged by courts, of course, without statutory authority, and the authority of this court to order the taxation of costs cannot be upheld, it must
In the examination of the question it will not be necessary to go further back in the history of legislation on the subject than 1862. In that year an act was passed entitled “An act fixing the fees of the clerk of the supreme court, district attorneys, county officers, justices of the peace, constables, witnesses, jurors, referees, appraisers, and notaries public.” This act was published as chapter 99, Compiled Laws of 1862. Section 21 read as follows: “The clerk of the supreme court shall receive such fees as shall from time to time be allowed him by said court.” This remained the law until 1868. In that year an act was passed entitled “An act relating to the supreme court.” (Gen. Stat. 1868, ch. 27.) Section 8 reads as follows :
“Before entering on the duties of his office, the clerk of the supreme court shall give bond to the state of Kansas, in the penal sum not less than $10,000, with sufficient sureties, to be approved by the court, conditioned for the faithful performance of the duties of his said office, and take and subscribe the oath of office ; and his fees shall be the same as the clerks of ■the district courts.”
In the following year, 1869, an act was passed entitled “An act to amend an act entitled ‘An act relating to the supreme court.’ ” This act reads as follows :
“That section 8 of said act be amended so as to read as follows : Sec. 8. Before entering on the duties of his office, the clerk of the supreme court shall give bond to the state of Kansas in the penal sum not less than $10,000, with sufficient securities, to be approved by the court, conditional for the faithful performance of the*duties of his said office, and take and subscribe the oath of office ; and the clerk shall receive, in addition to the fees already prescribed, such per diem dur
The above is the last expression of legislative will on the subject in question. It will be observed that the statute of 1869 is a reenactment of that of 1868, so far as it relates to the bond and oath of office of the clerk and the approval of the bond by the court. The last clause of the act of 1868, which read “and his fees shall be the same as the clerks of the district courts,” was omitted from the act of 1869, and in lieu thereof the latter statute was made to read, “ and the clerk shall receive, in addition to the fees already prescribed, such per diem during the term as may be allowed by said court.” The constitution, section 16, article 2, reads as follows: . . . “No law shall be revived or amended, unless the new act contain the entire act revived, or the section or sections amended, a,nd the section or sections so amended shall be repealed.” The act of 1869 contained no express declaration of repeal of the act of 1868. Whether it so far covered the entire subject-matter of the earlier act as impliedly to repeal it, within the doctrine of The State v. Countryman, 57 Kan. 815, 48 Pac. 137, we need not inquire. The earlier statute was repealed by force of the section of the constitution quoted. Thenceforth the provision in the act of 1868 that the fees of the clerk of this court should be the same as the clerks of the district courts ceased to exist as an act securing them to him by force of its own unaided terms.
It by no means follows, however, that the act of 1869 did not save to the clerk of this court the fees which theretofore had been allowed by the act of 1868. The act of 1869 declared: “The clerk'shall receive, in addition to the fees already prescribed, such per diem during the term as may be allowed by said court.”
Up to the enactment of the act of 1869 such fees as the clerks of the district courts were entitled to charge were likewise allowed to the clerk of this court. While the language of the earlier act is repealed, the right to the fees allowed by it is continued by declaring that the clerk of this court shall receive the fees “ already prescribed.” The definition of “ already” in the Standard Dictionary is “Previously to some specified time; beforehand." The statute of 1869, notwithstanding the repeal of that of 1868, means that the clerk of this court shall receive the fees which “beforehand," or “previously" to the enactment of the later statute, were allowed. The language of the act of 1869, “in addition to the fees already prescribed," must be allowed a meaning. These words cannot be expunged, as it were, from the statute. They have the effect to continue the right to charge the fees which had theretofore been prescribed by statute, although the statute which had theretofore prescribed them had been repealed. The statute of 1869 continues that of 1868 by reference to it.
It would have been within the power of the legisla
The fact that the fees of the clerks of the district courts of several of the counties have been fixed by special acts applying only to those counties, and that, therefore, the fees of those officers are not uniform throughout the state, can make no difference. All the special acts regulating the fees of officers have been passed since the act of 1869, and, even if such were not the case, the act of that year would be held to refer to the fees prescribed by the general law on the subject.
We are aided to the conclusion we have reached by the fact that the other coordinate branches of the state government have held to a similar view. For thirty years the several departments of the state government have recognized the right of the clerk of this court to
None of these appropriation or other acts which we have mentioned would have been passed had it not been the legislative judgment that the clerk was entitled to costs under the act of 1869. All of these acts were, of course, approved by the governor, and the drafts made by the clerk on the funds set apart by the. appropriation acts mentioned were honored by the auditor and treasurer. This, likewise, was only done because in the judgment of the executive department the clerk was entitled to the fees charged. The rule is well settled that “in all cases of ambiguity the contemporaneous construction not only of the courts but of the departments, and even of the officials whose duty it is to carry the law into effect, is controlling.” (Shell’s Executors v. Fauche, 138 U. S. 562, 11 Sup. Ct. 376, 34 L. Ed. 1040.)
While we wish that the statute on the subject had