The opinion of the court was delivered by
The fees which are the subject-matter of this rule are those which were formerly payable to the law or presiding judge of the Hudson County Orphans’ Court. How these fees accrued, and how they now happen to be in the •hands of the surrogate, will appear from a statement of the following -legislation:
The law judgeship in Hudson county was created by the act of 1868. Pamph. L., p. 363. He was to receive a--salary and no fees. By a supplement (Pamph. L., 1870, p. ”280) it was provided that the president judge should receive for every trial in the Orphans’ Court where there were adverse parties, the sum of $2, and for every decree upon settle-ment of an account, the sum of $4. _
By an act {Pamph. L. 1879, p. 332) a salary was fixed in ■lieu of all fees, per diem or other remuneration.. It was provided that “all fees to which such judges are now entitled ■shall be paid into the treasury of said counties respectively.” By acts {Pamph. L. 1886, p. 352; Pamph. L. 1891, p. 133; Pamph. L.. 1893, p. 433) the salary was increased, but was still to be in lieu of all fees.
By an act {Pamph. L. 1881, p. 59) it is provided that all fees due to any judge shall be paid to the clerk of the court, to be paid over by him to such judge; and it is further provided that if any of the judges of said court shall be in receipt -of a fixed salary allowed by law in lieu of all fees, it shall be
Under the act, the surrogate, as clerk of the Orphans’ Court, received during the year ending April, 1893, the sum of $1,200 as fees for services performed by the president or law judge of the Orphans’ Court. By the terms of the act he is directed to pay this sum, which he still retains to await the result of this proceeding, over to the county collector.
The relator claims that this sum of $1,200 should be equally divided between him and the other lay judge of the said court. He grounds his claim upon the provisions of an act of 1889.. JPamph. L., p. 90.
This act, in its first section, enacts that “ hereafter all such fees as are authorized by law to be paid into court for the services of the Common Pleas judges, in counties where there-are law or president judges receiving salaries in lieu of fees, shall be equitably divided between the lay judges, except in counties where the lay judges also receive stipulated salaries-in lieu of fees.”
The question of statutory construction is whether the fees-now in the hands of the surrogate are such fees as the act requires to be divided among the lay judges.
I am of the opinion that they are not. The fees mentioned in the act are those paid in for the services of the Common Pleas judges. The fees held by the surrogate are not received for services of the Common Pleas judges, but for the special services of the president judge alone. They are not court-fees receivable under the general fee-bill, and which by the-act {Rev., p. 467) were to be divided between the judges who-were in attendance when the services were rendered.
They are lees paid under a special act, for the services of one who was treated as occupying, by reason of his legal' learning, a position of exceptional value and responsibility, and for whom a special fee-bill was enacted.
I think that the act would apply more appropriately to-
- For this reason, I think the writ should not go. This view renders it unnecessary to discuss the constitutionality of the-act, which would raise the question whether counties in which the act operates form a class, and whether an act which increases the perquisites of county judges according to a fee-bill contained in a special act applicable to one county, is general legislation.
Rule discharged.
