Board of Supervisors v. Jones

The current of legislation intended to change the compensation of county treasurers began with the act of 1877 (Chap. 436). It found those officers, under the operation of existing laws, receiving for their services fees and commissions charged upon the taxpayers or payable out of the fund. The compensation thus obtained was very unequal in the different counties, and in many of them largely in excess of the real value of the services rendered. To remedy this defect the act of 1877 was passed, which changed the *Page 342 compensation from fees and commissions to an annual salary to be fixed by the board of supervisors at least six months before the officer's election, and which should not be increased or diminished during his term of office. (§ 5.) What was meant by the expression "as compensation" was put beyond any doubt or question by a negative provision, that he should "not receive to his use any interest, fees, or other compensation for his services except in proceedings for the sale of lands for unpaid taxes." The phrase "as compensation for his services," therefore, meant full and complete and entire compensation for all services beyond those specifically excepted. Two counties, Monroe and Seneca, by section 10, were withdrawn from the operation of the act. In 1880 (chap. 233) an amendment was passed further indicating the legislative intent. It provided that the fees and commissions allowed by law before the act of 1877 might still be collected by the county treasurer, but for the use of the county which paid him his salary and not for his own use and benefit. Whatever he received from such services was to go to the county, and his entire compensation come from the county in the form of an annual salary. In that same year (chap. 580) a long list of counties was added to the two originally exempted from the operation of the act, and among these was the county of Erie. Apparently that exemption produced dissatisfaction, for in 1881 (chap. 441), the section which granted the exemption was amended by striking out the county of Erie, with an obvious intent to leave it under the operation of the act of 1877 as it was before by the amendment of 1880, its exemption had been secured. Very likely these changes were the outcome of a struggle between the officials and the taxpayers, in which first one and then the other prevailed. But the act of 1881 had two defects. By its terms it was to take effect January 1, 1882, and it made no provision for an emergency which was approaching. A new treasurer was to be elected in November of 1881, and six months did not remain preceding that election, so that the salary of the new official could be fixed the requisite length of time before his election, as provided by *Page 343 the act of 1877; and the amendment of 1881, not becoming effective until after the election of that year, might not apply to the new officer and so postpone the legislative purpose until the end of his term. To remedy these defects chapter 557 of the laws of 1881 was passed. It was enacted at the same session of the legislature which restored Erie to the list of counties whose treasurers were made salaried officers, and within about a month later than the previous act. It became a law in June, taking effect immediately. It provided that, "Every county treasurer hereafter elected or appointed in the county of Erie shall receive as compensation for his services an annual salary of not less than five thousand dollars, to be fixed by the board of supervisors before he shall enter upon the duties of his office;" and its second section added: "This act shall take effect immediately." By these provisions the six months limitation of the act of 1877 was made inapplicable, and it became lawful for the board of supervisors to fix the next treasurer's salary at any time before his election. The further difficulty in the act of 1881, arising from the postponement of its effective operation to the first day of the next year, was also obviated by making the last act take effect at once.

At the November election following the passage of this act the defendant was chosen county treasurer, the board of supervisors having previously fixed his salary. Notwithstanding, he has withheld the fees collected by him, claiming that they are rightfully his and refusing to pay them over to the county. Judgment for their amount has gone against him, which has been affirmed by the General Term.

The chief ground of his contention is that the act of June, 1881, does not in express terms forbid the receipt of fees by the county treasurer or repeal by implication the laws under which, before 1877, the county treasurers were entitled to receive them. But I think that is a very narrow interpretation and more nice than wise. If the statute of June, 1881, stood alone it would, by the force of its own terms, substitute an annual salary for fees. When it declares that the county treasurer shall receive, "as compensation for his services," an *Page 344 annual salary, it very plainly implies that such salary is to be his sole and only reward. "For his services" means for all his services, for the entire and complete performance of his official duties, and a specific compensation awarded for those services implies the full and entire compensation to which he is entitled. But this natural interpretation of the language becomes conclusive when the statute is read in connection with the legislation on the same subject. The act of 1877 defined the phrase "as compensation for his services" so fully and explicitly as to leave no possible room for doubt. The later legislation on the same subject repeats the phrase, which must retain the meaning attached and not bear a new and different one. The inference from the statutes read together, and in the light of the evil they were intended to remedy, becomes irresistible.

The judgment was right, and should be affirmed with costs.

All concur.

Judgment affirmed.