90 Kan. 669 | Kan. | 1913
The opinion of the court was delivered by
At the time of the general election in November, 1906, the appellee, Lawrence, then holding the office of county treasurer of Finney county by a former election, was a candidate for reélection, and the appellant, Wheeler, was his opponent. On the canvass of the votes it was- determined that Wheeler had received
“Where the title to the office of county treasurer has been determined by the district court on proceedings in error from a contest court, and the execution of such judgment is not stayed, the state may, upon the relation of the county attorney, maintain mandamus to compel the delivery of the money, books and records of the office to the person so adjudged to be elected, although the defeated party in the contest is prosecuting-proceedings in error in this court from such judgment.”
Thereafter the appeal of Lawrence from the judgment of the district court in the contest case was heard in this court and the judgment of the district court was reversed. (Lawrence v. Wheeler, 77 Kan. 209, 93
The appellee cites Comm’rs of Saline Co. v. Anderson, 20 Kan. 298, Rule v. Tait, 38 Kan. 765, 18 Pac. 160, and Fenn v. Beeler, 64 Kan. 67, 67 Pac. 461, in support of his contention that he is entitled to the entire salary of the office during the entire time he was deprived thereof. This is undoubtedly the correct rule where one illegally usurps the office to which the one duly elected thereto is entitled. Wheeler, however, did not intrude himself into the office or receive the salary thereof without authority of law, but under and in accordance with the judgment of this court as well as the judgment of the district court of Finney county and the county contest board. - Had Lawrence, upon his appeal from the decision of the district court, stayed the operation of the judgment as provided by
In Rule v. Tait, supra, an officer was allowed to recover the' full amount of the salary, but there no question of any deduction was presented. Moreover, the defendant in that case was a mere intruder without color of right, and probably would not have been entitled to any reduction. By the weight of authority one who performs the duties of an office under a claim of right, made in .good faith and upon reasonable grounds, will be required to account to a successful claimant only for its net proceeds. The following are illustrative expressions approving this view:
“There is . . . strength in the contention that a trespasser may not set off the expense he incurred in executing the trespass. It. has been held, in a well-considered case, there can be no deduction for the personal services of the intruder. People v. Miller, 24 Michigan, 458. It was said in that case, however, that “There may be reason for deducting from any official earnings the actual cost of obtaining them which would have been entailed on any person who might have held the office.’ This may be said of the expenses in controversy in the case at bar. Mayfield v. Moore, 53 Illinois, 428, is the leading case which sustains the right to deduct such expenses. This case is followed by others in the same court and the same view has been announced by other courts. We think they express the' correct rule. It makes the measure of recovery the extent of the injury, and the injury, it is clear, is not the gross earnings of an office, but such earnings less, to*673 use the language of Mr. Chief Justice Campbell in People v. Miller, supra, ‘the actual cost of obtaining them which would have been entailed on any person who might have held the office’.” (Albright v. Sandoval, 216 U. S. 331, 341, 54 L. ed., 502, 509.)
“Nearly all the cases recognize that the de facto officer, acting in apparent right, when sued by a de jure officer for the fees and emoluments of the office, may retain the reasonable expenses incurred in earning them.” (Note, 54 U. S. Sup. Ct. Rep., L. ed., 502, 503.)
“A de jure officer who has been kept out of his office by an intruder may recover in an action on the case against such intruder all the profits of the office which he would have received had he exercised the office, less the necessary expenses of earning them.” (Note, 32 Am. St. Rep. 236.)
“Where a public officer is wrongfully excluded from his office, the measure of damages is the amount of his salary during the period of exclusion, deducting, however, if the defendant acted in apparent right and good faith, his reasonable expense in earning it.” (2 Sedgwick on Damages, 9th ed., § 569.)
It is sometimes said that a deduction for expenses may be made against fees, but not against salary. (Bier v. Gorrell, 30 W. Va. 95, 3 S. E. 30.) But the real distinction is that a deduction mdy be made for money necessarily paid out, but-not for the personal services of the de facto officer. Expenses will rarely be incurred in earning a salary, but often in earning fees. But if, in order to discharge the duties of an office, it is necessary to employ assistance, no reason is apparent why this should not be taken into account in determining the net returns of an office.
In Fenn v. Beeler, 64 Kan. 67, 67 Pac. 461, one who had wrongfully held an office and collected the salary attempted to show, when sued by the rightful claimant, the amount the plaintiff had received for his services elsewhere during the time he was deprived of the office.
The appellant, however, contended in the trial court that while he was holding the office under the judgment of the district court, he was the de jure as well of the de facto county treasurer. He could not consistently unite with this claim a claim for expense incurred in conducting the office. The law (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 3656) does not authorize the allowance by the board of county commissioners of any sum for clerk hire to county treasurers of counties of the then population of Finney county. If the county treasurer employed a clerk it devolved upon him to pay such assistant. That he claimed more than he is entitled to should not have debarred him from a just claim included therein.
In his appeal here the appellant acquiesces in the judgment that appellee is entitled to the salary pertaining to the office, but contends that the judgment should be only for the sum remaining after deducting therefrom the actual and necessary expenses incurred in conducting the business. As we have seen this is the true measure of damages, interest, being allowed on such balance.