72 P. 697 | Or. | 1903
delivered the opinion.
This is a motion by respondent to dismiss the appeal because (1) the transcript was not filed in this court within
But a filing may depend upon the terms of the statute authorizing it, and will not become operative until the requisites are first complied with, at least in substance; and, if a fee is made a necessary prerequisite thereto, no filing is accomplished or effected without the payment of such fee. To illustrate: Under an Indiana statute the Secretary of State was required to exact certain fees for filing and recording an agreement of railroad companies to consolidate, which provided that he should neither file nor record any of such articles unless all the fees for filing were first paid; and it was held, in State v. Chicago & E.I. Ry. Co. 145 Ind. 229 (43 N. E. 226), that the payment of such fees was a condition precedent to the filing — in other words, that the filing could not be effected without the prior payment of the requisite fees — the court saying: “The rule may be asserted that where the statute provides that the filing fee shall be paid in advance of the filing of thé document, and where the money therefor does not, under the law, go to the officer with whom the same is required to be filed, as his own remuneration, but goes into the public treasury for the benefit of the state, as it does in accordance with the requirements of the statute in question, the officer must be considered (at least in discharge of the duty enjoined upon him to collect the fee in advance for the services rendered by the state through him) as the agent of the latter; and, as such, he
Dismissed.