130 Ky. 423 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1908
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
J. L. Rogers was the county attorney of Muhlenberg county. On October 10, 1900, the fiscal court of said county made the .following order: “Ordered that county attorney, J. L. Rogers, be and is hereby authorized to institute any legal proceedings he may deem proper to collect back taxes upon property not heretofore listed, certified or assessed for taxation, and that he be allowed a sum equal to 25 per cent, of the amount he may cause to be collected for the county by any motion, suit, proceeding or otherwise, heretofore or hereafter begun.” Under this authority he collected a large sum of money for the county, and for said services under his contract he was paid the sum of $4,801.22. Thereafter appellee, T. J. Slaton, a taxpayer, suing in his own behalf and in behalf of all other taxpayers of the county, filed suit against said county attorney and the members of the fiscal court-, in which he recited the fact that at the time this' contract was entered into the said Rogers was the regularly elected and qualified county attorney /or Muhlenberg county, and that during each year that he held the office he was paid an annual salary out of the general expense fund of said county^ and that the annual salary so paid to him was a reasonable salary for the services which he rendered, that he had no right to receive the additional compensation, and that the orders making the employment and paying
Questions similar to these have recently been before the court in the cases of Terrell v. Trimble County, 128 Ky. 519, 108 S. W. 848, 33 Ky. Law Rep. 364, and Spalding v. Thornbury, 128 Ky. 533. 108 S. W. 906, 33 Ky. Law Rep. 362. In these eases, after full consideration, it- was held that the county attorney was entitled to*no extra compen
On October 10th, when the contract under which this special service was rendered, was entered into, appellant was in office discharging the duties of county attorney, under a salary that had theretofore been fixed at $500 per annum. If any additional compensation whatever could be allowed him for this service, it would have to be under this contract of date October 10th. It cannot be said that in making this order the fiscal court of Muhlenberg county was attempting to fix the annual compensation of the county attorney who should thereafter be elected and inducted into office. On the contrary, it is plain that the attention of the members of the fiscal court having been called to the fact that certain corporations had not been paying to the county taxes to which she was entitled, they were willing to pay to the county attorney an additional compensation for his efforts to collect this tax, and this additional sum agreed upon.
He is permitted to take credit for the sums paid to associate counsel and incurred as expenses, not under the- contract, but because, as the representative of the county, he expended these sums in his efforts to collect the tax, and for this reason they should properly be allowed to him. As county attorney, he* owed to the county his best services in his efforts to- collect this- tax. but it was in no wise incumbent uppn him to
For the reasons indicated the judgment is reversed and cause remanded, for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.