Marion County v. Lear

108 Ill. 343 | Ill. | 1884

Mr. Justice Scholeield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Appellee presented a claim to the board of supervisors of Marion county for balance due him. for compensation f.or services as sheriff, and for clerk hire, stationery, fuel, etc., to be paid by the county out of certain fees earned by him in criminal eases, where the defendant was acquitted or otherwise legally discharged without the payment of costs. The board of supervisors disallowed his claim, and he appealed from their decision to the circuit court of that county, and that court rendered judgment thereupon in his favor. This appeal is from that judgment, and it is prosecuted directly to this court upon the ground that the validity of a statute is involved in the decision of the ease.

The statute in question is so much of section 19, chapter 53, of the Revised Statutes of 1874, entitled “Fees and Salaries, as provides as follows: “In all criminal cases where the defendant shall be acquitted, or otherwise legally discharged, without payment of costs, the* sheriff shall be' paid such fees from the county treasury: Provided, that no such fees shall be paid to the sheriff from the county treasury when the fees collected by him during such year shall equal the compensation or salary allowed him by the county board; And, provided, further, that no more of such fees shall in any case be paid from the county treasury than shall be sufficient, with the fees collected, to make the salary or compensation of said sheriff.” The claimed invalidity is because of its repugnance to that part of section 10, article 10, of the constitution of 1870, which is in these words: “The county board * * * shall fix the compensation of all county officers, with the amount of their necessary clerk hire, stationery, fuel and other expenses; and in all cases where fees are provided for, said compensation shall be paid only out 'of, and shall in no instance exceed, the fees actually collected.”

The contention of appellant is, the language, “shall be paid only out of, and shall in no instance exceed, the fees actually collected,” amounts to a positive prohibition that the compensation shall, in any instance, be paid out of the county treasury,—that the words “actually collected” can have application only to cases where the sheriff shall collect the fees otherwise than pursuant to appropriation out of the county treasury. This is .plausible, but, in our opinion, nothing more. In a case where the duty of the county to pay fees is conceded, there could surely be no question, after it had paid and the sheriff had received such fees, but that he had “actually collected” them from the county, for the mode of enforcing- or effecting a collection, when it shall have been successful, can by no possibility affect the fact that money has been “actually collected. ” To illustrate: Suppose the county were liable t’o pay costs in suits in which it is an unsuccessful party, and that it is defeated in a suit, and judgment rendered against it for costs. The sheriff makes proper demand for the payment of the judgment, and through the proper process, and by the proper officer, payment of the judgment and costs is made to the sheriff. It is impossible to discriminate between this and other cases where the sheriff has collected a judgment, as to the fact that he has “actually collected” the judgment and costs. But it must follow that if, when costs are thus paid to the sheriff, they are literally “actually collected” by him, within the letter and spirit of the constitution, the county can not, by refusing to discharge its duty in the payment of costs, thus preventing the sheriff from actually collecting them, interpose -such failure as a reason'why it is not liable to pay them. The true theory of the application, in eases like the present, is not to have the county pay a salary to the sheriff, but to pay him certain costs which it owes, and which it is its duty to pay to him, in the given contingency, and then, when they are paid, he applies them, as well as other costs “actually collected,” to the payment of his salary, and, gives the county credit on account thereof in his settlement with it. It follows, of necessity, that in such attempt to enforce collection of costs it is competent for the county to show, in defence, that the contingency in which they are collectible does not exist. The purpose of the use of the words, “actually collected, ” in the connection in which they here occur, instead of being, as counsel contend, to discriminate between costs payable by an individual and private corporation and those payable by the county, was to prevent the legislature from empowering the county to take fees due, as so much revenue, and compensating the officers by appropriations out of the general revenues of the county actually in the treasury.

If we are thus far correct, it only remains, on this point, to inquire whether, apart from the language quoted from section 10, article 10, of the constitution of 1870, it was competent for the General Assembly to impose upon counties the duty of paying costs in the cases specified in the statute. We assume that no one would question the power of the General Assembly to impose such a duty upon the State. It would be a mere question of policy with reference to the enforcement of the Criminal Code,—an undoubted exercise of the police power. Whether the burden of enforcing police regulations, in the absence of express constitutional restriction,—and none such is here claimed,—shall be borne by the State at large, or be devolved upon the local municipalities, is a mere question of public policy, upon which the determination of the General Assembly is conclusive.

A county is a public corporation, which exists only for public purposes connected with the administration of the State government, and it and its revenues are alike, where no express constitutional restriction is found to the contrary, subject to legislative control. (County of Richland v. County of Lawrence, 12 Ill. 1; County of Pike v. State, 11 id. 202; Dennis v. Maynard, 15 id. 477.) And accordingly it was said, in People ex rel. City of Springfield v. Power, County Judge, 25 Ill. 191: “The revenues of a county are not the property of the county, in the sense in which the revenue of a private person or corporation is regarded. The whole State has an interest in the revenue of a county, and, for the public good, the legislature must have the power to direct its application. The power conferred upon a county to raise a revenue by -taxation is a political power, and its application, when collected, must necessarily be within the control of the legislature for political puiqioses.” And see, also, to like effect, Sangamon County v. City of Springfield, 63 Ill. 66; Logan County v. City of Lincoln, 81 id. 156.

Analogous instances of the undoubtedly rightful imposition of police burdens upon counties exist in the familiar cases of the paying grand and petit jurors for their services in enforcing the Criminal Code; the paying of salaries to State’s attorneys ; the paying of rewards for the capture, etc., of different classes of criminals; the paying of witness’ fees in criminal cases, in certain contingencies-; the providing and payment for support of paupers; the building of jails, and the paying for dieting, clothing, etc., of prisoners. Many other instances might be added, but it is surely unnecessary. We do not believe that any clearer power of legislation for police purposes exists under the constitution than that exercised in the enactment under consideration. We think it is, in all respects, consistent Avith the constitution, and therefore a valid statute. It is true the incumbent of an office takes it with its burdens, but he.no less takes it Avith its benefits, and the benefits of this enactment were a part of the inducement held out to him to accept 'the office at the salary or compensation fixed by the board of supervisors, and there is no more reason Avhy he should be deprived of this than of any other guaranty of compensation under which he accepted the office.

It was shown in proof, upon the trial, that appellee was sheriff of Marion county for tAvo years; that his salary or compensation was fixed at $1000 per annum, and he was, by a separate order, allowed $800 per annum for deputy hire, expenses, etc. He collected from fees earned as sheriff, before making the present application, $2560.28, which is, of course, in excess of his salary or personal compensation as sheriff, and appellant insists, on this state of facts, even conceding the statute to be constitutional, he is not entitled to collect the fees in the criminal cases from the county. We entirely concur in this view. The word “salary,” as used in the statute, clearly applies to the personal compensation provided to be paid to the sheriff for his own services. We have held that this personal compensation must be paid as fixed by the board of supervisors, and when fixed separately from the alloAvance made for deputy hire and other expenses, he can receive no more on the latter account than he shall actually pay out, not exceeding the sum fixed by the board. Jennings v. Fayette County, 97 Ill. 419; Daggett v. Ford County, 99 id. 334; Cullom v. Dolloff, 94 id. 330; Briscoe v. Clark County, 95 id. 309.

We are aware of no instance in our law where the word “salary” is used merely to express the idea of a payment for expenses actually incurred, and since it is to the statute alone to which appellee must look for authority to demand the payment of these fees by the county, he must show a deficiency in the payment of his “salaiw,”—i. e., personal compensation,—after applying to the payment thereof all the fees collected by him from other sources, before he can require the county to pay these fees in criminal cases, and then it can only be required to do so to the extent of such deficiency. For an elaborate and forcible presentation of the reasons applicable to this view we refer to Crawford County v. Lindsay, 11 Bradw. 261.

The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.

Judgment reversed.