Citation Numbers: 98 N.J.L. 301
Judges: Gummere
Filed Date: 4/3/1923
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 9/9/2022
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The purpose of the present proceeding is to compel the county clerk of Sussex county to account to the board of freeholders for certain fees received by him during his term of office. The charge contained in the alternative writ is that during his term as county clerk the respondent has made searches for various individuals and corporations, and has prepared abstracts of title of various properties located in the county from the records of his office; that in doing this work he claimed to have acted, not in his official capacitjr, but as an' individual; for a compensation less than that fixed by statute; that he did not certify these searches and abstracts of title as county clerk, but as an individual; that he appropriated the fees thus received to his own use, notwithstanding the obligation imposed upon him, as the relator claims, to turn over the same to the county treasurer, in compliance with the mandate of chapter 53 of the laws of 1906. Comp. Slat., p. 4643. The question presented for solution by the demurrer is whether a county clerk can avoid the obligation of the act of 1906 by assuming to perform in a non-official capacity duties which normally rest upon him as county clerk virlute officii.
Our act to regulate fees (Comp. Slat., p. 2277) provides that “the officers and persons in this act named shall be entitled to demand and receive for the services hereinafter mentioned the fees thereto respectively annexed, and no more;” and under this act county clerks are entitled to demand and receive the following fees for the following services rendered by them: “For recording every judgment and indexing the same, one dollar; for taxing every bill of costs, fifty cents; for searching the records of judgments against .each'individual, for each year, four cents; for searching the records of deeds, mortgages, wills or other records, for each name, each year, four cents; for drawing certificate and seal, twenty
If the theory of the respondent is sound, it is within the power of a county clerk to practically nullify the act of 1906, so far as the appropriation of fees is concerned, by assuming to perform as an individual, and not in his official capacity, most of the duties for which, prior to its enactment, he was compensated by receiving the fees provided in our fee bill: for, if he can by this method avoid accounting for fees received by him for searching the records in his office, no good reason can be perceived which would prevent him from taking the same course in taxing bills of costs and making copies or abstracts or deeds, mortgages, judgments and other records.
The purpose of the act of 1906 seems to us to be plain, and that is, to require the county clerk to pay into the county treasury all fees, costs and other perquisites which he receives for any official act performed, or service rendered hv him; and, in our opinion, the making of a search, for which, under our fee bill, the party ordering it is required to pay the fees fixed thereby, is an official service rendered by him within the meaning of the statute, without regard to whether he attaches his official seal thereto or contents himself with merely signing his name thereto without his official designation. Nor i« the mere fact that he performs these duties which the statute imposes upon him at times other than those during which his office is kept open for the ordinary transaction of public busi
To sum the whole matter up, a county official can no more escape responsibility for the performance of an act, which is required of him as such officer, by asserting that in performing it he had first laid aside his official character, than a judge can escape responsibility for a decision rendered by him by declaring that before announcing it he had taken off his judicial robe.
The relator is entitled to judgment on the demurrer.