139 Ala. 417 | Ala. | 1903
The plaintiff, who ivas the deputy sheriff under the defendant J. S. Moore, who was the sheriff, sues said Moore for three hundred dollars for work and labor done and services performed by him as deputy sheriff, for his principal, the defendant.
The plaintiff testified that he was the deputy of tlié defendant, who sent him a regular commission by mail, appointing him as deputy sheriff; that he served papers for him from the time he was appointed, up to the time this suit was commenced; that there was no contract between him and defendant of any kind; that defendant first sent him his commission, and he went to work for him serving papers. He further offered to prove, that as deputy for defendant, he served several hundred legal papers; the length of time and the amount of trouble it took to serve them, and what would be reasonable compensation to plaintiff for the labor he had done for, and the services he had as deputy rendered to, defendant.. The court stated to counsel: “That the court held, that before the plaintiff can recover in this case, he must show that he has not only done the work, but that defendant has received the compensation allowed therefor, fixed by law, and that when this is shown, plaintiff will be entitled to recover from the defendant the fees fixed - by law to the sheriff, regardless of what his services are worth”; that it made “no difference how much official work the plaintiff has done for the defendant, he is not entitled to recover anything for the doing of said work, unless the defendant has received compensation there-
Upon this ruling, the plaintiff declined to introduce further evidence, and the defendant offered none. The court, at the request of the defendant, gave the general charge in his favor.
The statute provides, that the sheriff, “must have one deputy, and may have as many as he thinks proper.” — ■ Code, § 3738. It specifies the fees to which the sheriff is entitled.' — §§1377, 1356. No fees are allowed for a deputy sheriff.
In the case of Nlate v. Breicer, 59 Ala. 134, it was correctly held, that those who accept public offices, wliigh. require them to render sendees to the State, must take the office cum on ere, — the rendition of such services gratuitously, unless by express statutory provision compensation is fixed, and an express liability for its payment imposed on the State. This decision is referred to by counsel as being opposed to the right of plaintiff to recover. A sufficient reply to that suggestion is, that the deputy there, was, unlike the one here, seeking compensation for his services out of the State or county. But, he is making no such claim here. He is seeking compensation for sendees from defendant, who employed him to render them. It seems to be right in principle and on authority, that where the law gives no compensation for deputies, they must be paid by the officer, who employs them, and for which he has a remedy against his principal on a quantum meruit. — 9 Am. & Eng. Encv. Law, (2d ed.), 384.
In McWilliams v. Richland County, 16 Ill. App (Bradwell), in which State, as here, by statute, the sheriff alone is authorized to appoint his deputies, it is said: “The matter of compensation of the deputy and the mode of its payment, is wholly a matter of contract and arrangement between the sheriff and the deputy; the law has not assumed to regulate it. If the sheriff sees fit to give his entire compensation and allowances,
In the case of the State v. Holman, 123 Ind., which was a case where a deputy surveyor sought to hold the county liable for services rendered his principal, it was held that the county, there being no statute to authorize it, could not be made liable. The court added: “It is believed to be the universal rule, that when the law fixes no compensation for deputies, they must be paid by the officer who employed them.” In the District of Columbia, as to their appointment, duties and compensation, the same regulations apply between deputy marshals and their principals, as govern between sheriffs and their deputies in this State.
In Douglass v. Wallace, 161 U. S. 349, the Supreme Court said, as to deputy marshals: “Although deputies are. recognized by law as necessary to the proper administration of the marshal’s office they receive from the government neither salaries nor fees, and the government has no dealings directly with them. The accounts are rendered by the marshal, who charges not only for his services, but for those of each of his deputies, who are appointed by the marshal personally and are accountable to him alone. * i:' The marshal makes his own bargains with the deputies and is unrestricted in the amount he shall pay them, which may be either a salary or a proportion of the fees earned, by them. * * * Their claims for services against the marshal, stand upon the same footing as those of an ordinary employe against an employer, and are not ever contingent upon the marshal collecting his own accounts against the United States.”
It follows that the court erred in the refusal to allow the plaintiff to introduce the evidence proposed.
Reversed and remanded.