Johnson County v. Bunch

63 Ark. 315 | Ark. | 1896

Bunn, C. J.

The appellee in this case was county clerk of Johnson county for two consecutive terms, and until the 30th.October, 1894, and during these four years was present and performed the duties of such clerk at every settlement made with the county court by the county treasurer, who is and.was by law required to make settlement at least once a year. In these settlements, the treasurer, as he was required to do, presented for examination, comparison, notation on the register, and indorsement as redeemed, 5,200 county treasury warrants.

The appellee here, and plaintiff in the court below, presented his claim to the Johnson county court for $520, alleging that, as -such county clerk, he was present at each settlement of the treasurer, etc., and that he received, examined, and compared each of these warrants, as they were presented by the treasurer in such settlement, with the record of warrants issued under the orders of the county court, and noted their number, amount, the names in which they were drawn; and upon this they were indorsed by the county judge, and then noted upon the proper register by himself, and afterwards he safely preserved them, as the law requires, and that for this service he was entitled to 10 cents each, and that he was allowed this fee by the twenty-fourth item in section 3309, Sand. & EL Dig. That item reads as follows, to-wit: “For making settlement of each account with the county, 10 cents;” The only question in this case is, is the item in the fee-bill above quoted applicable to each one of the warrants presented in settlement by the treasurer? In other words, is each one of these warants an account with the county, and its presentation and disposition, as stated, a settlement of the same, in contemplation of the law regulating fees for the clerk in respect to settlement of accounts with the county? We think not. We do not think a warrant or order drawn by the county’s authority, which has been paid and is returned for cancellation, is an account to be settled. There is no statute expressly allowing the clerk, as against the county, for such services, the fees claimed, and therefore allowance of the same was erroneous. This case was appealed by Bunch from an order of dis-allowance by the county court to the circuit court, in which the claim was allowed, and the county appealed to this court.

For the reasons stated above, the judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and judgment will be entered here for appellant county.

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