| N.Y. Sup. Ct. | May 15, 1857

E. Darwin Smith, Justice.

In the fee bill of the Revised Statutes, clerks of the supreme court, county clerks and other clerks of courts, were allowed for entering every cause *226on a calendar for the court, and making a copy thereof for the use of the bar, a fee of twelve and a half cents. This fee was chargeable to the attorney or party requesting the service. In the revised fee bill of 1840, this fee was increased to 25 cents, and so remained till the time of the Code. The Code gives the clerk a fee of one dollar on every trial; for filing a transcript, 6 cents, and entering a judgment 50 cents, and declares that “ he shall receive no other fee, for any service whatever, in a civil action, except for copies of papers, at the rate of five cents for every 100 words.” This is, undoubtedly, a substitute for the fee bill of 1840, and of the Revised Statutes so far as the latter was in force at the time of the Code, and taken in connection with section 468 of the Code, must be deemed to repeal those fee bills, so far as the same relate to the clerks of courts. This fee of $1, was obviously intended to pay the clerk for the ordinary miscellaneous services required of him, in the progress of the cause, as well as the services rendered in court on the trial, and must, I think, clearly embrace the service of putting the cause on the calendar, as prescribed by the old fee bill and the practice of the courts. The fee for putting a cause on the calendar was never a county charge; it was a service rendered in a civil action, and was always claimed and paid for as such. The Code imposes no new duty upon the clerk in this particular. But the ruled of this court (Rule 34) require the clerk to print the calendar for the general terms. This is an expense which is clearly a county charge. It is an expense incurred by a county officer in executing the duties of his office, in a case where no specific compensation for such service is provided by law, and comes within subdivision 9, of section 3, title 4, chapter 12, part 1st, of the Eevised Statutes. But this suit was not brought to enforce payment of this expense, nor does it ajDpear that the supervisors have refused to pay the same. There must, therefore, be Judgment on the demurrer in favor of the defendants, and the writ must be quashed with $10 costs, to abide the event.

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