Purifoy v. Godfrey

BRICKELL, C. J.

The act approved February 21st, 1893, entitled “An act to fix the amount of the pay of circuit court solicitors and other solicitors, who are paid *145by t-he State,” reads as follows : “Section 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Alabama, that all solicitors of any court, who are to be elected, or are elected at the present session of the General Assembly, and who are paid by the State, shall be paid the sum of two thous- and and four hundred dollars ($2,400) a year in monthly payments as required by law ; provided, that in addition to the above salary, each solicitor shall receive commissions as follows : 30 per cent, on the first thousand dollars or any .part thereof, earned in fees by him, over and above $2,400; 15 per cent, on the second thousand dollars, or any part thereof, so earned ; and 10 per cent, on all sums earned over and above the second thousand dollars ; said commissions to be paid as the salaries of solicitors are paid. In no case shall said commissions exceed the sum of $600 per annum.” — Pamph. Acts, 1892-93, p. 918. The general appropriation act passed at the same session of the General Assembly, makes an appropriation for the payment of each solicitor of an annual salary of twenty-four hundred dollars, the appropriation being followed by a proviso, expressed in the same words employed in the proviso to the act of February 21st, 1893. Pamph. Acts, 1892-93, p. 186.

The particular question presented for decision is, whether the commissions to which a solicitor may become entitled under the statute referred to, are payable from the State treasury, before the fees upon the amount of which they are to be computed, have been paid into the treasury; or are they payable when the solicitor has performed the duty of prosecuting defendants in criminal cases to conviction, fixing the amount of the fees and the duty of the proper officers to collect and pay them .into the treasury. The latter seems the plain interpretation and construction of the statutes, and especially so when they are read in the light of the history of the legislation touching the compensation of solicitors, and in connection with other statutes having relation to the same subject.

Prior to the act of February 28, 1887, (Pamph. Acts, 1886-87, p. 161), the compensation of solicitors w'as derived wholly from the fees to which the statute declared them entitled, and which'on conviction were taxable a.s costs against the defendant, and which, if he was insolvent, was paid from the fine§ and forfeitures in the *146county treasury. — Or. Code, § 4868. The constitution of 1868 substituted county solicitors for circuit solicitors, as they were known in the preceding constitutions and in the statutes, committing the election of them to the qualified voters of the county. The statutes in addition to the fees to which a circuit solicitor -was entitled, had given him an annual salary of .two hundred and fifty dollars payable from the treasury of the State. The constitution of 1875, restored the office of circuit solicitor, committing to the General Assembly the election to the office. At tire first session of the General Assembly after the adoption of the constitution, an act was passed regulating the duties and providing for the compensation of such solicitors, an express provision of which was that an annual salary should not be paid them. — Pamph. Acts, 1875-76, p. 213. There was no event in which the fees to which the solicitor was entitled under this legislation were, or could become, chargeable on the State treasury. The fees, like the fees payable to other officers for services rendered, were essentially the right and property of the solicitor; they were payable to him, and he could remit or release them, or take in satisfaction whatever he chose.

The purpose of the act of February 28, 1887, and its scope and effect are clearly expressed in the title : “ An act to pay salaries to solicitors instead of the fees which they now receive, and to require said fees to be paid into the State treasury.” The first section provides that instead of the fees solicitors were entitled to receive for convictions procured by them, each solicitor should receive an annual salary of three thousand dollars to be paid quarterly from the State treasury. The second section provides that all fees which may be by law taxed against defendants upon conviction as solicitors’ fees, when collected, should be paid into the State treasury, and the clerks of the courts were required to make to the Auditor quarterly reports of the fees collected in their respective counties. The third section provides, that all solicitors’ fees collected from convicts sentenced to hard labor for the county, when collected, should be paid into the State treasury.

The act works, and was intended to work, a radical change in the mode of compensating solicitors. The duties of the office remaijj as they, were defined by the *147pre-existing statute ; in no respect are they changed ; a solicitor is under the same obligation to prosecute all indictable offenses, which rested upon him when his compensation depended upon fees for conviction. While this is true, without regard to the number of convictions which may have been obtained, or the character or amount of the fees to which he would have become entitled, a fixed, annual recompense, payable quarterly from the State treasury, is prescribed. It is not payable of and from the fees which may have been paid into the treasury; there is no specific fund appropriated to its payment; it is payable as any other general charge, as the salary of any other officer, executive or judicial, from any moneys in the treasury not otherwise appropriated. The fees remain as fixed by law, and are denominated solicitors’ fees; they are taxable as costs against the defendant convicted, and to their payment he is compelled. They are converted into the right and property of the State, over which the solicitor has no control or power of disposition, and in reference to their collection he is without authority, and has no duty to perform.

The changes of the act of 1887 wrought by the acts of 1893, now under consideration, are, first, the reduction of the fixed salary from three thousand to twenty-four hundred dollars ; second, in the manner of its payment, rendering it payable monthly, as are the salaries of other officers, instead of quarterly. As the salary was reduced, the acts provide for the payment of commissions on fees earned by a solicitor, in addition to the salary, until such commissions equal six hundred dollars, the sum of the reduction of the salary, and these commissions are to be paid, in the words of the acts, “as the salaries of solicitors are paid.” The manifest'purpose is, compensation to the solicitor for the reduction of the fixed salary, if his services yielded fees payable into the treasury, of all right to which he had been divested, until the commissions equalled the reduction. The words of the acts are plain and unambiguous, and are well adapted to the carrying out of' this purpose. The commissions are payable as, or when, the fees are “earned.” When the fees were the right and property of the solicitor, compensation to him for specific services rendered, they were earned by him on convictions, *148Then he was entitled to demand and receive them. The payment of them could only succeed the earning, and was not his act or duty, but the act and duty of the defendant against whom they were taxed. The solicitor now renders the specific services for the payment of which the fees are taxable against defendants on conviction, and when the services are rendered, the fees are earned, not for himself, but for the State, and the State has the exclusive and unqualified right to demand and receive payment of them. There has not been, and there can not be any reason assigned for attaching to the word earned, as it is employed in the acts under consideration , a meaning different from that which would have been attached to it, if it had been employed in reference to the fees of solicitors, when the fees were the exclusive right and property of the solicitor. Commissions, the addition to the salary is termed. The word has no technical meaning. As to particular persons, when it is used to express compensation for services rendered, it denotes, as is suggested by the Attorne}'--General, a percentage on the amount of moneys paid out or received. This is especially true of agents, or of factors, receiving or paying out the moneys of a principal. In this sense, it was not employed in the acts, for the solicitor neither receives nor pays out the fees. The obvious .meaning of the word is an allowance of compensation to the solicitor for the rendition of service, the allowance being dependent wholly upon the rendition of the service, and not upon the receiving or payment of the fees.

Reading the words of the acts in their ordinary signification, in the light of the history of the legislation touching the compensation of solicitors, and in connection with the act of February 28, 3887, which remains of force except in the particulars to which we have adverted, we can not doubt, the commissions of a solicitor are payable when he has performed the duty of prosecuting defendants in criminal cases to conviction, fixing the amount of the fees the State is entitled to receive, and duty of the proper officer to collect and pay them into the State treasury. This was the view on which the court below proceeded, and the judgment must be affirmed.