Peter v. Prettyman
| Decision Date | 05 December 1884 |
| Citation | Peter v. Prettyman, 62 Md. 566 (Md. 1884) |
| Parties | GEORGE PETER v. ELIJAH B. PRETTYMAN, Clerk of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, and THE COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF MONTGOMERY COUNTY. |
| Court | Maryland Court of Appeals |
APPEAL from the Circuit Court for Montgomery County.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
The cause was argued before ALVEY, C.J., YELLOTT, MILLER, IRVING and BRYAN, J.
Edward C. Peter, and Francis Miller, for the appellant.
Charles W. Prettyman, and Thomas Anderson for the appellees.
IRVING J., delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal is from a decree of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County dismissing the appellant's bill which prayed an injunction against the appellees.The case was submitted upon bill, the answer of the county commissioners of Montgomery County, and the plea of the appellee Prettyman with his exhibits; and the only questions for us are questions of law.The bill alleges, that complainant is a tax payer in, and a citizen of, Montgomery County; and that he files his bill on his own behalf, and the behalf of all others similarly interested.It alleges, that the appellee Prettyman is the clerk of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, and has been continuously such clerk since the month of November 1863; and that among other duties appertaining to his office he was required by law to record all mortgages, deeds, bills of sale, &c., and to make an alphabetical index thereof in each liber of the records, and also to make a general alphabetical index of all these records in a separate volume, for which work he was entitled to charge and receive such fees as the law prescribed, from the individuals having the instruments recorded; and that he has just completed a general index of such records from the time of his becoming such clerk, which is the only general index he has ever made for his office; and notwithstanding the provisions of law regulating the charges for such service, he has presented a bill for six hundred dollars against the commissioners of the county for making such general index.This billthe complainant charges the county commissioners are not warranted by law in paying, and that they should not be allowed to pay.Alleging that they are about to pay it the bill prays for an injunction.
The clerk pleads, that the general index mentioned in the bill of complaint "was undertaken and made in obedience to the order of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, passed on the fourth day of June, eighteen hundred and seventy-seven," which order is in the following words, viz., This order was signed by two of the Judges of the Court.The plea further set out that the bill for such service would be paid by the county commissioners in pursuance of, and in obedience, to two other orders of the Court approving the work and recommending the payment of the charge made, viz., the $600.He further pleads that the complainant has full and complete remedy at law.The county commissioners answered the bill, and without admitting or denying the other allegations of the bill, admitted the presentation of the bill by the defendant Prettyman for making the general index mentioned in the bill, and that the same would be paid unless the order of Court respecting the same should be rescinded.
After hearing, the Circuit Court dismissed the bill; and from this decree refusing an injunction and dismissing the bill, this appeal was taken.
The plea to the jurisdiction of the Court can not be maintained.It is no longer an open question in this State whether a tax payer, having no other or special interest different from that of the public, may crave the interference of the Court of equity to prevent illegal taxation.The power and right of the Court of equity to interfere by injunction in such case is unequivocally asserted in Mayor andCity Council of Baltimore vs. Gill,31 Md., 393, and in no case since has that principle been questioned.The case of Kelly, Piet & Co. vs. Mayor andCity Council, &c., 53 Md., 134, relied on by appellees, recognizes the authority and propriety of Gill's Case in 31 Md., but rests upon an exception from the rule which the facts of that case presented.In that casethe complainants suffered especial damage other and different from the tax payers generally.In this casethe complainant occupies no such position, and if he has presented a case of clear violation of the law, and his and other tax payers' rights, should the claim of the defendant clerk be allowed and paid by the county commissioners, the injunction ought to have been granted.
The county commissioners are a body politic; a corporation charged with the administration of the county affairs, and can only do what their charter powers, by express language or necessary implication, permit.The fifth section of Article 28 of the Code of Public General Laws giving them their authority, directs that "they shall levy all needful taxes on the assessable property within the county liable to taxation, and provide for collecting the same, and they may make such levy in whole or in part by estimate; they shall provide for the support of the Courts, compensate jurors and county or State witnesses, levy for outpensions allowed by themselves or the trustees of the poor, and such sums as may be necessary to pay accounts allowed by them for the funeral expenses of paupers, and pay and discharge all claims on or against the county which have been expressly or impliedly authorized by law."
If there be any law requiring the clerk to do this work for which his claim is made, either expressly or impliedly, at public expense, it would be the duty of the commissioners to provide for its payment; but if the duty was upon the clerk to make this general index, and the intention of the law was that he should be paid his compensation in another way, then the claim is improperly preferred.If by any provision of the Constitution or laws of the State the Court was clothed with power to require this duty of the clerk at public expense, then by necessary implication the county commissioners were bound to pay for it; but not otherwise; notwithstanding the Court may have directed the work to be done, and the commissioners to pay for it.
By the 51st, 52nd and 53rd sections of Article 18 of the Code of Public General Laws it is made the duty of the clerk to make not only an...
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...court clerks conferred on "the Judges of their respective Courts" by Maryland Const., Art. IV, § 10, which was involved in Peter v. Prettyman, 62 Md. 566 (1884). That section also provides that "it shall be the duty of the Judges ... to make ... such rules and regulations as may be necessar......
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... ... right of action in Kelly v. Baltimore, 53 Md. 134, ... and stated to be no longer open to question in Peter v ... Prettyman, 62 Md. 566. In Garitee v. Baltimore, ... 53 Md. 422, 436, this Court, speaking through Judge Alvey, ... said 'In the ordinary ... ...
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