Ward v. Board of Com'rs. of Johnson County

Decision Date11 June 1927
Docket Number1379
Citation36 Wyo. 460,256 P. 1039
PartiesWARD v. BOARD OF COM'RS. OF JOHNSON COUNTY [*]
CourtWyoming Supreme Court

APPEAL from District Court, Johnson County; HARRY P. ILSLEY, Judge.

Action by F. M. Ward against the Board of County Commissioners of the County of Johnson. Judgment for defendant, and plaintiff appeals.

Affirmed.

Bert Griggs, for appellant.

County Commissioners may provide office rooms for County Attorneys at public expense; 1458 C. S. The limitation, as to amount of expense, was removed by Chapter 88, Laws 1925; permissive words in statutes, concerning public interest, may be construed as mandatory; Mason v. Fearson, 9 Howard 248, 13 L.Ed. 125; Supervisors v. United States, 4 Wall 435; State v. Surety Co., 152 P. 189; Hayes v. County, 33 P. 766; State v. Kent, (N. D.) 62 N.W. 631; State v. Co., (Wash.) 103 P. 426; Phelps v. Lodge, (Kan.) 55 P. 840; Ware v. City (Mich.) 167 N.W. 891. All laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation; Art 1, Sec. 34, Const.; 22 R. C. L 537; Lukens v. Nye, 105 P. 593. The doctrine of estoppel does not apply; Tate v. Association, (Va.) 32 S.E 383.

Burton S. Hill, for respondent.

Any construction of 1458 C. S. should be in favor of the appellees; appellant waived any claim for office rental; the statute must state whether a particular claim is a legal claim; People v. Gilroy, 82 Hun. 500; Burnham Hotel v. Cheyenne, 30 Wyo. 458. The title of the act indicates its intention; Wemberly v. Ry. Co., 63 S.E. 29; 36 Cyc. 1017; 25 R. C. L. 847. The statute is too plain to require construction; Thompson v. Carroll, 22 How. 422; Minor v. Bank, 1 Pet. 46. Appellant waived his claim to allowance for office rental by long acquiescence in a denial of such allowance; 1 C. J. 905; 23 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law 402; Pray v. U. S. 106 U.S. 594; Galbreath v. City of Moberly, 80 Mo. 484; Town v. Collins, (Miss.) 18 S.W. 460; Thomas v. Supervisors, (Mich.) 8 N.E. 439; People v. Supervisors, (N. Y.) 11 N.E. 391; Coyne v. Rennie, (Cal.) 32 P. 578; McHaney v. County, 77 Ill. 488; People v. Board, (N. Y.) 12 Hun. 635; Kennedy v. Godman, 15 N.W. 834; Harding v. County, (Ia.) 7 N.W. 396; Bishop on Contracts, Sec. 792. Plaintiff's objection to the introduction of testimony was overruled; defendant's answer contained authorized defenses; Sec. 5660 C. S. Defendant's defenses are not contradictory; Ry. Co. v. Warren 3 Wyo. 135; 31 Cyc. 143. The judgment of the court below was sustained by the evidence.

BEFORE BLUME, Chief Justice, RINER and CROMER, District Judges. BLUME, Chief Justice, and RINER, District Judge, concur.

OPINION

CROMER, District Judge.

The parties to this action will be referred to herein as in the court below, as plaintiff and defendant.

This is an action brought by plaintiff against defendant to recover money paid by plaintiff, while County and Prosecuting Attorney of Johnson County, as rent for offices occupied by him as such county attorney, at the rate of $ 30 per month from September 29, 1919, until the first Monday in January, 1923, amounting to $ 1170. Plaintiff was appointed to this office by the board of county commissioners of Johnson County on September 25, 1919, to fill the unexpired term of George P. Wolcott, now deceased, and held the same under this appointment until the first Monday in January, 1921. In 1920, at the general election, plaintiff was elected to succeed himself and took office on the first Monday in January, 1921, and held the same during the years 1921 and 1922, this entire period amounting to 39 months, the period of time for which it is claimed the amount sued for is due.

In the general election of 1922, plaintiff was again elected to succeed himself, and held office during 1923 and 1924, until the first Monday in January 1925. This second elective term is not involved in this controversy, but it may be said in passing that pursuant to presentation of a claim by plaintiff the then board of county commissioners reimbursed plaintiff for the office rent he had paid during that two-year term, together with telephone rental for the same period. The payment of this claim is admitted, as is also the payment of the claim presented to this board of county commissioners in February, 1921, for fifteen months back pay of $ 33.33 per month, during the time from September 25, 1919 to the first Monday in January, 1923, during which time plaintiff was holding this office by virtue of appointment. It appears from the record that during this last named period plaintiff had been receiving salary at the rate of $ 100 per month, as had his predecessor, George P. Wolcott, and that the salary provided by statute in counties of the class of Johnson County was $ 133.33 per month. It is also admitted that neither of these claims covered the amount now sued for, and that the amount now sued for was not mentioned or presented as a claim at either of such times, and, in fact, was not claimed or demanded until April 8, 1925, approximately three months after the expiration of plaintiff's last term of office.

The plaintiff bases his right to recover upon Section 1458, Comp. Stat. of Wyoming 1920, which reads:

"The board of county commissioners of their respective counties may furnish at the expense of the county, suitable office rooms located at the county seat of the county, for the use of the county attorney, at an expense not to exceed the sum of $ 30 monthly. Said office shall be as near as practicable to court house." and asserts that the words "may furnish" is a mandatory expression and not a permissive one only. With this contention we cannot agree. The section above quoted was originally enacted by the legislature in 1915 in Chapter 141 of the session laws of that year, and was entitled "An Act authorizing Board of County Commissioners to furnish office rooms for County Attorney" (italics ours), and while the language of the title cannot overcome the plain intent manifested in the language used in the body of the act, yet where that language is of the same purport as the language used in the body of the act, it is corroborative of the legislative intent--in this instance, the intent to make the authority conferred a permissive one as distinguished from a mandatory one. The language of the title, read in connection with the language of the act, clearly discloses an intent upon the part of the legislature to leave the selection of, as well as the amount to be paid, within the limits of the statute, as rental for office rooms of the county attorney, to the discretion of the county commissioners. The ordinary meaning of the language employed by the legislature must be presumed, unless such presumption would defeat the evident object of the act. Thompson v. Carroll, 63 U.S. 422, 22 HOW 422; 16 L.Ed. 387; Minor v. Bank, 26 U.S. 46, 1 Pet. 46, 7 L.Ed. 47; and other cases cited by counsel for defendant.

In the absence of any statute upon this subject the county commissioners would not be obligated to furnish an office for the county attorney, and conversely, the county attorney would have no right to compel them so to do. As stated in 18 C. J., page 1327, paragraph...

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