62 P. 375 | Or. | 1900
delivered the opinion.
J. W. Henry, while acting as Sheriff of Yamhill County, Oregon, brought this action to recover the salary of his deputy, and, a demurrer to his complaint having been sustained, judgment was rendered against him, dismissing the action, from which he appeals. The controversy involves a construction of the amendatory act of February 25, 1895 (Laws, 1895, p. 77), regulating the compensation and mode of payment of sheriffs and other county officers. Section 4 provides that “the sheriffs of the several counties in this state shall receive an annual salary, as follows: Baker, $2,000; Baker (first deputy), $1,200 ; Baker (second deputy), $900 ; Benton, $2,000; * * * Yamhill, $2,000; Yamhill (deputy), $600. * * * The Sheriff of Multnomah County may appoint as many deputies as the county court of said county shall by Order authorize, one of which deputies shall be paid at the rate of $1,800 per year, and the others at such rate as said county court shall by order direct, not exceeding $1,200 per year.” Section 5 provides that “the salaries herein provided for in favor of the said county clerks * * * and sheriffs, shall be audited and paid by the several counties to the respective parties entitled thereto, in monthly payments, and in the same manner that other county charges are paid, and no one of such officials shall be entitled to receive any fees or other compensation for his services than as above provided and except as hereinafter provided.” And section 11, that “whenever any county clerk, recorder of conveyances, clerk of the circuit court or county court herein referred to, or sheriff, appoints a deputy, it shall be the duty of such official to report the same to the county court of his county, which court shall enter in its minutes the said report, and if the said court'is of the opinion that