157 Ind. 446 | Ind. | 1901
Appellant was. elected treasurer of Monroe county at the November election, 1892, entered upon his office September 7, 1893, and continued therein to September 7, 1895. The fee and salary act of 1891 (Acts 1891, p. 434), fixed the salary of the treasurer of Monroe county at $1,800 per annum. The acts of 1879 (Acts 1879, p. 141), fixed the same at $800 and certain commissions. Eor the official year ending September 7, 1894, appellant presented to' the board of commissioners of the county, each quarter, his verified account for salary as treasurer as follows: December 7, 1893, $450; March 7, 1894, $450; June 8, 1894, $450; September 8, 1894, $450, which was allowed and paid. Subsequently he presented and at the times noted was allowed and paid for official services the following sums: May 8, 1895, to commission on taxes, from beginning of term to January 1, 1895, 1 per cent, and 6 per cent., $1,749; to commission on taxes collected from January 1, 1895, to May, 1895, $859; to salary for the first year, $800; to salary from September (December), 1894, to March 5, 1895, $400; total, $3,808. Credit by amount: received from the county to' date, $2,200. Balance due, $1,608, which balance was allowed and paid. June 3, 1895, to' three months’ salary, $200; to' commissions for collecting $1,354, delinquent taxes since May settlement, 6 per cent., $81.25. And
It is worthy of note that for the first year’s services as treasurer appellant claimed and was allowed his salary under the act of 1891. On May 8, 1895, he receded from his claim and- settlement for the first year, and then presented and was allowed his claim for all services rendered previous to that date, under the act of 1879. Erom June-, 1895, to September, 1895 (the end pf his term), he again claimed and was paid his compensation under the act of 1891.
This suit was instituted by appellee to recover from appellant the sums allowed him in excess of the amount to which he was entitled under the provisions of the act of 1891. The complaint is in two- paragraphs. Appellant’s demurrer to the second paragraph was overruled. Answer in five paragraphs. The first is a general denial. Appellee’s separate demurrer to each the second, third, fourth, and fifth paragraphs was sustained. Trial by the court. Special finding of facts, the substance of which is set forth above. Eluding and judgment for appellee. Appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled. Error is assigned upon all adverse rulings.
The complaint proceeds upon the theory that appellant was entitled to such compensation only as was provided by the act of 1891, and that the sum received in excess of that amount is recoverable under §6549 Burns 1901. Appellant vigorously assails the act of 1891, and the amendatory act of Eebruary 25, 1893 (Acts 1893, p. 142), as being in contravention of §22, article 4, of the State Constitution, which forbids local and special legislation for the regulation of county officers’ compensation. His objections, however, have all been fully considered in the previous decisions of this court, and the views heretofore announced must now be
It is also argued that, conceding the act of February 25, 1893, amending §93 of the act of 1891, rendering the latter act constitutional and valid as to county treasurers, from and after the taking effect of the amendment (as held in the Walsh case), it does not affect appellant, for the reason that he was elected to his office before the act of 1891 became a valid law as to county treasurers, and that by the terms of §136 the same does not apply to him. This question becomes of importance because of the peculiar’ language of §136 of the act of 1891, viz.: “Where any clerk, auditor, recorder, treasurer, or sheriff has been elected by the people of his county before the taking effect of this act, such officer so elected during the time that he holds such term shall not be subject to the provisions of this act. He shall hold such term of office and perform the duties thereof and receive the compensation prescribed by the law the same as if this act had not passed.” There being no emergency clause in the act of 1891, and none in the amendatory act of 1893, this court knows judicially that the former act went into force June 3, 1891, and the latter May 18, 1893. 1 Burns 1901, p. 96.
Appellant was elected in November, 1892, took his office in September, 1893, and left it in September, 1895. It may be well to observe that appellant was elected after the session laws of 1891, of which the particular act in question was a part, had taken effect, and that the amendment of February, 1893, was also in full force when he entered into his office.
The solution of the question must turn upon the meaning of the words “before the taking effect of this act.” If these words mean that the act of 1891 shall not affect any clerk, auditor, treasurer, etc., who was elected at any time before
It will not do to say that within the meaning of the Constitution an act may go into effect by piecemeal. There is no warrant for more than a single distribution and publication by authority, and m other means, in the absence of an emergency, to give effect to legislation. Under the Constitution, “except in emergency cases, a law takes effect from the time of its distribution by authority in all counties of the State.” State, ex rel., v. Bailey, 16 Ind. 46, 79 Am. Dec. 405; Dowdell v. State, 58 Ind. 333, 336; State, ex rel., v. Board of Pharmacy, 155 Ind. 414, 416.
The publication of an act in the constitutional mode, and
It can not be doubted that the legislature intended to make the act of 1891 affect all county officers named, and to make §136 apply impartially to such clerks, auditors, recorders, treasurers, and sheriffs as had, at the time of the passage of the act, been elected by the people, counting upon the emoluments as fixed by law at the time of their election. There is manifest equity in providing, as was done, that those who had been induced to become candidates for office, and who had inciirred the labor and expense of a campaign, relying upon the compensation fixed by existing laws, should not be subjected to a change in the law which was supposed materially to reduce that compensation. This consideration, however, could only relate to those who stood elected at the time the law was changed, or supposed to be changed; surely not to those who became candidates and were elected after the change was attempted, but who from inadvertence or misprision were not brought within the provisions of the new law for two years afterwards. This latter class could not have been in the mind of the lawmakers when §136 was framed. It must therefore be held that the words “before the taking effect of this act” as employed in §136 of the act of 1891 were used in théir technical sense, and had reference to the time when the particular act, as enacted, should be distributed by authority to the several counties of the State. This we have seen was on June 3, 1891, and §136, in legal effect, is the same as if it read: Where any * * * treasurer * * * has been elected by the people of his county before June 3, 1891, such officer shall not be subject to the provisions of this act.
When appellant entered into his office, the amendment of February, 1893, had taken effect, and at that time the act
(2) It is also claimed that the complaint is insufficient for the additional reason that it shows that appellant’s claim, upon due presentation to the board of commissioners, was, upon consideration, allowed, and that such allowance being unchallenged by a taxpayer’s appeal, the same is res adjudicata, and for the further reason, if the allowance was in fact erroneous, it was free from fraud and was a voluntary payment under a mistake,of law.
In certain instances, not necessary to mention, boards of commissioners have such judicial powers as that their judgments are reviewable upon appeal only, and can not be collaterally attacked, but in respect to claims against a county, since the legislation of 1885 (Acts 1885, p. 80) it has been uniformly held that such boards act in an administrative capacity, in the nature of an auditing committee, with power only to state the amount of legal claims chargeable against the county, and whose finding is but prima facie evidence of the correctness of the claim. Board, etc., v. Heaston, 144 Ind. 583, 55 Am. St. 192; Bass Foundry, etc., Works v. Board, etc., 115 Ind. 234; Board, etc., v. Nichols, 12 Ind. App. 315, 54 Am. St. 528; Board, etc., v. Stock, 11 Ind. App. 167.
It is an essential condition precedent to the jurisdiction of circuit courts, that claims of every character against a county be first filed with the county auditor and presented to the board of commissioners; and if the claim is disallowed, in whole, or in part, the claimant has his option to appeal, or bring an original action in the circuit court against the county. §§7845, 7846, 7847, 7856 Burns 1901; Myers v. Gibson, 152 Ind. 500, and cases cited.
It follows from this that a claimant, who has failed before the board of commissioners, and brings his action in the circuit court for the same matters, cannot be defeated by setting up against him the conclusion of the commissioners,
The allowance of appellant’s claim was not a voluntary payment under a mistake of law in the sense underlying the authorities cited by appellant. In fact it was not a payment at all by the county. The board of commissioners as agents of the county had no authority to permit appellant to retain as his own, or to allow him from the county treasury, moneys to which he was not legally entitled. Such boards may only do on behalf of the county such things as are expressly authorized by statute, and such as become essential to the performance of declared duties, which alone may arise by implication. Board, etc., v. Heaston, 144 Ind. 583; Myers v. Gibson, supra, at p. 505.
The commissioners of Monroe county had no authority to allow appellant a claim not “chargeable against the county.” §7830 Burns 1894. Their doing so did not bind the county. It was no allowance or payment by the county. In legal effect the transaction was a withholding of the county’s money by the appellant, with the connivance of the men composing the board of commissioners. The complaint is sufficient.
(3) The second paragraph of answer sets up the allowance by the commissioners as an estoppel against the county. The third charges that by the terms of §136, acts 1891, the provisions of said act do not apply to him, and that he charged and received only the compensation allowed by the act of 1879. The questions arising upon the second and third paragraphs are ruled by what has been above decided with respect to the sufficiency of the complaint.
In the fourth and fifth paragraphs of answer, which are in substance the same, it is alleged that appellant paid all fees collected into the treasurer’s fund, and made quarterly
Upon these answers it is argued that it was the duty of the commissioners to abide the decision of the Supreme Oourt, and as appellant’s claim was allowed by the board in accordance with the interpretation of the act of 1891, given in the Boice case, it was a valid adjudication and settling of his rights with respect to compensation, accruing prior, and before the Boice case was overthrown; and that the contrary interpretation subsequently made in the Walsh case did not affect his rights vested under the former decision. In support of this contention appellant cites Myers v. Boyd, 144 Ind. 496, and Stephenson v. Boody, 139 Ind. 60. The rule declared in these cases and many others that might be added is perhaps nowhere denied, but it is. not applicable here because of the absence of the principle upon which it rests. The rule as approved in these cases is “that, ‘after a statute has been settled by judicial construction, the construction becomes, so far as contract rights acquired under
The distinction between a contract and a public office is marked. If the former is not fully executed, the delinquent is liable and must respond in damages; while in the latter, the officer may lay aside his office, by resignation, at pleasure, and with it all further liability. For fifty-five years it has been held in this State that a county officer accepts his office subject to whatever regulations the legislature may afterwards make respecting it. New duties may be imposed upon an incumbent without additional compensation, and his compensation as fixed by law when elected may be either increased or decreased. It is settled that public office is accepted cum onere. Gilbert v. Board, etc., 8 Blackf. 81; Turpen v. Board, etc., 7 Ind. 172; Walker v. Dunham, 17 Ind. 483.
These answers do not count upon the public necessity order, for it is not claimed that any allowance was made appellant thereunder and it is expressly averred that the commissioners, believing him so entitled, paid him under the provisions of the act of 1879. If the act of 1879 authorized and measured his compensation, it is clear that there was no ground for a public necessity payment. §7853 Burns 1901, §5766 E. S. 1881 and Horner 1897.
We are not called upon to decide, and we do not decide, the effect upon an unchallenged allowance to a county treasurer, made upon final settlement of his accounts with the county, in the period intervening between the decisions in the Boice and Walsh cases, and which was according to the law as construed by the Supreme Court at the time of settlement, for in the special finding before us it is shown that the appellant remained in office for more than two months
In the latter case it is said: “The obligation upon county treasurers to pay over all public moneys in their hands is thus made a continuous obligation, and no previous fraudulent or mistaken settlement with the commissioners can -be made effective as a discharge from that obligation.”
In September, 1895, appellant had already received $325.30 more than he was entitled to for his full term, but was then in the final settlement allowed and paid $613.95 additional. This last allowance was not due or owing from the county and the commissioners had no- authority to make it. §6548 Burns 1901.
The demurrers to the several answers were properly sustained and the exceptions to the conclusions of law properly overruled.
(4) Numerous reasons for a new trial are assigned relating to the admission and exclusion of evidence, and the insufficiency of the evidence to- sustain the finding; the chief insistence, and in fact the only point urged, being the total absence of evidence in support of the finding of an allowance of $200, on December 6, 1894; and that the total receipts of appellant for his full term were but $4,502, instead of $4,702, as found by the court..