delivered the opinion of the court.
On February 27, 1956, L. N. Hilton caused a writ of fieri facias to be issued against B.. Hobert Amburgey on the above mentioned judgment for $1579.23, subject to a credit of $174.21, and served -upon the Commonwealth of Virginia and the County of Dickenson. S. C. Day, Comptroller for the Commonwealth, in answer to the summons, stated that the Commonwealth was indebted to Amburr gey in the sum of $311.51. Glyn R. Phillips, Commonwealth’s Attorney of Dickenson County, in an answer for the County, stated that the County was indebted to Amburgey in the sum of $i87.56.
. At the hearing the trial court sustained Amburgey’s motion to dismiss the garnishment proceedings' on the ground that the sums in controversy were not subject to garnishment because they were part of the salary of $5200.00 due him for the current year as Sheriff of Dickenson County, one-third of which was an obligation of Dickenson County, and the other two-thirds was an obligation of the Commonwealth. It was agreed that Amburgey was the duly elected Sheriff of Dickenson County, and on January 1, 1956, had qualified as such officer for a term of four years. L. N. Hilton prosecutes this appeal -from the . judgment dismissing the garnishment proceedings.
The only assignment of error stated in the petition for this writ of error and the only question decided by the lower court is whether the salary of a sheriff is subject to garnishment or attachment.
Appellant contends that a sheriff is a county officer and that his salary is subject to garnishment under the provisions of Code § 8-449.2, which reads as follows:
“Unless otherwise exempt, the wages and salaries of all officials, clerks and employees of any city, town or county shall be subject to garnishment or execution upon any judgment rendered against them.”
In one sense the sheriff may be regarded as a county officer. However, Code § 8-449.3 limits the application of the above quoted section to the salaries of officers whose offices are created by the General Assembly or by a county or municipality, in the following language:
“All officers, clerks and employees who hold their office by virtue of authority from the General Assembly or by virtue of city, town or county authority, whether by election or appointment, and who receive compensation for their services from the moneys of such city, town or county shall, for the purposes of garnishment, be deemed to be, and are, officers, clerks or employees of such city, town or county.”
Sheriffs, clerks of court, treasurers, commonwealth’s attorneys and commissioners of revenue do not hold their offices by virtue of authority of the General Assembly or by virtue of authority of a municipality or county. The sheriff and the other officers named hold their offices by virtue of § 110 of the constitution, which provides that all the officers named shall be elected by the qualified voters of the county and that their duties and compensation shall be prescribed by general law. In
Narrows Grocery Co.
v.
Bailey,
. In the absence of any relevant statute, the general rule is that the compensation of a public officer is not subject to the demands of creditors through a process of garnishment. See 4 Am. Jur., Attachment and Garnishment, 141, p. 640, 38 C. J. S. 244, Ann. 56 A. L. R. 602 and cases therein cited.
The facts in
Blair, Attorney-General
v.
Marye, Auditor,
“The public service is protected by protecting those engaged in performing public duties; and this, not only on the ground of private interest, but upon the necessity of securing efficiency in the public service, by seeing to it that the compensation provided for its performance, shall be received by those who are to perform the work; but the withholding the salaries and emoluments of constitutional public officers, would prove hurtful and even disastrous to the public service.”
* * * * * * * *
“......The services and salary of a public officer are founded in constitutional grant, and not in contract; and they have none of the affinities or liabilities under the law of contract. The salary of the attorney-general is of constitutional grant and of public official right; and the doctrine of offset cannot be applied to-it, as the auditor asserts a right to do in this case. It is not liable to attachment, nor to be garnisheed; nor to assignment in bankruptcy, and, upon principles of public policy, it has absolute immunity from detention for debt or counter-claim.”
The appellant in effect contends that the public policy as declared in the above case has been changed by statute adopted since 1885, when the above decision was announced.
This contention is based upon the provisions of Code § 8-449.1, the pertinent part of which is: “Unless otherwise exempted the wages and salaries of all employees of the State, other than State officers, shall be subject to garnishment or execution upon any judgment rendered against them.......”
This statute was first adopted in 1900 (Acts of 1899-1900, 546) without the four words italicized. The 1919 Code Revisors amended the statute by adding the words “other than State officers”, 1919
The facts in
Board of Supervisors
v.
Coons,
“The principle applied in the case just cited (Blair v. Marye) is the same as that which is involved in the undertaking by a board of supervisors to withhold any action fixing the amount of, or (what is the same thing in effect) the undertaking by such board to place a condition or conditions upon the payment of the salary or compensation allowed by law to an officer whose office or position is not created by the board of supervisors but by law. Such an office or position is not the creature of the board of supervisors but of the law. By the law, therefore, and not by the board of supervisors, except as they may act in accordance with the law, must the salary or compensation of such office or position be fixed.....” See Fleming v. Anderson,187 Va. 788 ,48 S. E. 2d 269 .
The question whether the salary of a commonwealth’s attorney is subject to garnishment was raised in Kentucky Wholesale Co. v. R. E. Chase (judgment debtor), Dickenson County and the Commonwealth, garnishees. It was conceded that Kentucky Wholesale Company held a valid judgment against R. E. Chase, the duly appointed and acting commonwealth’s attorney for Dickenson County, and that the money sought to be attached was an obligation due him as such officer both by the county and the Commonwealth. The same trial judge who presided in the case now under consideration held in that case that the commonwealth’s attorney of Dickenson County was a constitutional officer and that his salary was not subject to garnishment. This Court on October 15, 1947, approved the judgment of the trial court and refused to grant the petition for a writ of error. Writs of Error Refused, Record No. 2792. The same constitutional section (110) that makes the attorney for the Commonwealth a constitutional officer makes the sheriff such an officer.
Applying the doctrine of
stare decisis,
we affirm the judgment of
Affirmed and remanded.
