MacOn County v. Williams

224 S.W. 835 | Mo. | 1920

This action grew out of a difference of opinion concerning the maximum amount of fees which the probate judge in Macon County might legally retain for the years 1915, 1916, 1917 and 1918. The judgment is for $3309.33. Approximately one-third of this sum was held by the trial court to be due for each of the years 1916, 1917 and 1918. Nothing was found due for 1915. In 1916, 1917 and 1918, appellant collected, respectively, $3307, $3770.20 and $3941. The trial court credited appellant with salary at $2000 per annum and allowed him credits for clerk hire. Appellant's position is that he was entitled to credit on account of salary at the rate of $3200 per annum. If he is correct in this, the judgment is wrong. This is the sole question he briefs.

Macon County has a population of less than 150,000, and it and Shelby County constitute the Second Judicial Circuit of this State.

Prior to the Act of April 1, 1905 (Laws 1905, pp. 155, 157; Sec. 10695, R.S. 1909), the probate judge of Macon County was entitled to retain all fees collected. By the act mentioned this was changed. The amendment provided that:

"Provided further, that whenever, after deducting all reasonable and necessary expenses for clerk hire, the amount of fees collected in any one calendar year by or for any one probate judge in any county in this State during his term of office, and irrespective of the date of the accrual of such fees, shall exceed a sum equal *451 to the annual compensation provided by law for a judge of the circuit court having jurisdiction in such county, then it shall be the duty of such probate judge to pay such excess less ten per cent thereof . . . into the treasury of the county in which such probate judge holds office, for the benefit of the school fund of such county."

Appellant contends the "compensation" of the circuit judge having jurisdiction in Macon County was, in the years mentioned, $3200. Respondent contends, and the trial court held, it was $2000. The meaning of the word "compensation" as it appears in the statute is the key to this case.

Section 9697, Revised Statutes 1899, provided that: "The officers of State shall receive for their services, annually, the following sums: . . . third, the judges of the circuit courts, each, two thousand dollars; . . ."

Section 9701, Revised Statutes 1899, provided that:

"Every judge of a circuit court or of a criminal court in this State shall be allowed and paid all sums of money actually expended by him in necessary expenses while engaged in holding any regular, special or adjourned term of court at any place in his circuit other than the place of his residence therein, or while engaged in going to and from any such place for the purpose of holding such terms of court, and such sums of money for said expenses shall be paid out of the State Treasury in the same manner that the salaries of circuit judges are now paid by law; but no money shall be paid from the Treasury under the provisions of this section until such judge shall file an itemized account with the State Auditor, showing such actual expenses incurred by him."

This section (Sec. 9701, R.S. 1899) was separately enacted in 1895 (Laws 1895, p. 128) and the title of the act was: "An Act to provide for the payment of the expenses of the judges of the circuit courts of this State, while holding court in their circuits." *452

March 10, 1905 (Laws 1905, pp. 291, 292), Section 9701, Revised Statutes 1899, was amended. The amendatory act was entitled: "An Act to repeal Section 9701 of the Revised Statutes of Missouri of 1899, relating to the expenses of the judges of circuit courts and criminal courts, and to enact a new section in lieu thereof relating to the same subject and to be known as Section 9701." Section 1 of this Act of 1905 follows the title, and the new section enacted (now Section 10683, R.S. 1909) substituted a lump sum of $1200 per annum to cover the expenses provided for in the old section and the amended one.

This question, whether allowances to officers for expenses comes within the meaning of the word compensation, has arisen in several cases. In Wisconsin, under a constitutional provision somewhat analogous to ours, in so far as the question presented was concerned, it was held that a statute providing for a payment to each circuit judge of $400 per annum "as and for his necessary expenses while in discharge of his duties," did not constitute additional "compensation" in the constitutional sense. [Milwaukee County v. Halsey, 149 Wis. l.c. 87.] In McCoy v. Handlin, 35 S.D. l.c. 514 et seq., under a more comprehensive constitutional provision than ours, the Supreme Court of South Dakota held that an allowance of $600 per annum to the supreme judges "in consideration of expenses" was not in violation of the prohibition against increasing the compensation of judges. The court held that the salary provided could not be increased, but that the allowances of expenses, as such, did not have that effect. In considering a similar question with respect to a claim that a Federal judge, who occupied a house belonging to the Government in the Canal Zone, must account for the rent thereof, CLAYTON, J. (Smith v. Jackson, 241 Fed. l.c. 770), quotes from the opinion in the case of McCoy v. Handlin, as follows:

"There it was said: `It is clear that the Legislature did not intend, in the enactment of such legislation, to *453 increase the salaries of the judges, or to grant them any perquisites or emoluments for the discharge of their duties, but only intended to assure them, in so far as possible, that for the performance of their official duties alone, and not for the performance of such duties and the payment of the expenses incident thereto, they should receive the salaries provided by law for the performance of such duties.' And again, the court said: `These men (the framers of the Constitution of South Dakota) must have known that Section 1, Article 2, of the Federal Constitution declared that the President should receive for his services a compensation "which shall neither be increased nor diminished during the period for which he shall have been elected, and he shall not receive within that period any other emolument from the United States or any of them." These men must have known that the word "emolument" was, as recognized by every authority, a term broad and comprehensive, one which includes within it "perquisites," "salary," "compensation," "pay," "wages," and "fees." These men must have known that, with the above provisions of the Federal Constitution in force, the Congress of the United States, a body of men which at all times during the history of this Government has had among its members many of the greatest constitutional lawyers of the day, had enacted legislation under which the President, for nearly a century prior to the framing of our Constitution, had been furnished a home, horses, carriages, servants, household equipment, and many other things incidental to and appropriate to his high office. These men must have known that such Federal legislation had never been questioned either as regards its propriety or its constitutionality. These men must have known that in practically every State of the Union (in many of which there were constitutional provisions similar to the one above referred to in the Federal Constitution and to the ones relied upon by defendant in this case) there had been legislative enactments making provisions for the several governors similar to those made by the Federal Congress for the *454 President, as well as innumerable measures appropriating money to be paid other officers to recompense them for expenses incurred in the discharge of their official duties. Is it possible for any one to presume that these men, with all these facts in mind, intended, by the words used in our Constitution, to prohibit allowances for expenses incident to the discharge of public duties? Further light has since been thrown upon the construction given to the provision of the Federal Constitution above referred to by the Act of June 23, 1906 (34 Stat. at L. 454, c. 3523; Comp. State. 1913, sec. 225), which provides: "That hereafter there may be expended for or on account of the traveling expenses of the President of the United States such sums as Congress may from time to time appropriate, not exceeding $25,000 per annum, such sum when appropriated to be expended in the discretion of the President and accounted for on his certificate solely." Under appropriations thereafter made by Congress, Presidents Roosevelt and Taft received, and today President Wilson is receiving, thousands of dollars each year. So far as we know, it has never been suggested that the money so allowed was an "emolument," and therefore unconstitutional. No one has ever seen fit to accuse these Presidents of being grafters. The judges of the Federal courts, whose salaries are fixed by a law, declaring that such salaries shall be the "compensation for their official services," draw from the United States Treasury a sum not exceeding $10 per day when absent from the places of their residence. [Act March 3, 1911, c. 231, sec. 259; 36 Stat. at L. 1161; Comp. Stat, 1913, sec. 1236.] This allowance is not given as an increase of salary but to cover the expenses incident to their being away from home in the discharge of their duties.'"

Of this opinion Judge CLAYTON says it "was well considered, instructive and illuminating." On error to the district court, the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit contented itself with saying: "The elaborate opinion of Judge CLAYTON covers the entire case and fully justifies the judgment rendered. We find none of *455 the assignments of error well taken." On error to the Supreme Court (Smith v. Jackson, 246 U.S. 388), in an opinion prepared by Mr. Chief Justice WHITE, the judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals was affirmed. The court referred to the opinion of Judge CLAYTON as "elaborate and careful, . . . making perfectly manifest the error of the Auditor and his wrong in refusing to observe the ruling of the Attorney-General in the premises," and characterized the action of the Auditor in prosecuting the writ of error as "a plain abuse . . . of his administrative discretion."

In Kirkwood v. Soto, 87 Cal. 394, a question similar to that in the McCoy case was decided in the same way. In State v. Sheldon,78 Neb. 552, it was held that a statute providing a residence for the Governor was not obnoxious to a constitutional provision which fixed his salary at a definite sum and prohibited him from "receiving . . . any perquisite of office or other compensation."

In addition, the Legislatures of 1895 and 1905 provided funds for paying the expenses of judges then in office, and the Auditor paid them under the acts of 1895 and 1905. This was violative of the Constitution if appellant is correct in his present contention. Contemporaneous practical construction is frequently relied upon by the courts in the solution of questions of this kind. [State v. Sheldon, supra; Cook County v. Healy,222 Ill. 310; State ex rel. v. Billheimer, 178 Ind. 83.]

From these authorities, the reasoning quoted, and the principle last mentioned, it follows that the provision for the payment of expenses of circuit judges did not provide additional "compensation" in the constitutional sense or in the sense of Section 10695, Revised Statutes 1909, and the trial court was right in holding that appellant could not lawfully retain, in addition to an amount equaling the circuit judge's salary, an additional sum equal to the amount allowed the circuit judge for expenses. *456

The allowance is made to the circuit judges expressly for expenses which the circuit judge must incur in the performance of duties for which there is no counterpart imposed upon probate judges. The judgment is affirmed. Walker, C.J., Williams,Woodson, Goode and Williamson, JJ., concur.

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