Court Opinion

ID: 7889227
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 21:46:46.606113+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:31:51.301310
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Allen, J.:
A single question of law is presented for determination in this case, viz.: For what time may a county *307surveyor recover for keeping his office open, under § 13, page 158, of the Laws of 1891? This section reads as follows:
“For taking the variation of the magnetic needle and recording and making the report of the same, for making and recording all calculations of areas of land required by law, for the necessary attendance at the regular meetings of the board of county commissioners, when required by the board, and for keeping his office open for the convenience of the public for at least one day in each week for making plans, specifications, superintending or inspecting public work under this act, the county surveyor shall receive the same fees as allowed for making surveys, which fees shall be paid out of the county treasury quarterly, upon the order of the board of county commissioners.”
Before the passage of this act, the compensation of county surveyors was fixed by § 27 of chapter 39 of the General Statutes, which reads as follows:
“The county surveyor shall receive $4 per day for the time actually and necessarily employed in going to and making a survey and returning to his office. For copy of plat of land or certificate of survey, $2; making out complete report in all surveys made by authority for county or township, $2; for recording surveys, per folio, 20 cents.”
The defendant in error is county surveyor of Sumner county. He filed with the county clerk bills against Sumner county for the three first quarters of the year 1892, in which he charged the county for “keeping the office of the county surveyor of Sumner county, Kansas, open for the convenience of the public, as provided by law, the following days.” Then follows a list of dates in each month, amounting to 78 days in the first quarter, 68 in the second, and 76 in the third. The board of commissioners allowed one day each week, and disallowed the balance of the bill. Appeals were taken to the district court, and the three eases were tried and determined together. It is contended on the part of the plaintiff that he is entitled to compensation at the rate of $4 per day for such time as he may keep his office open for the convenience of the public; and while, in the argument in this court, counsel for the defendant in error seems inclined to admit that he can *308only recover for the time during which the office was actually and necessarily kept open, yet the record clearly shows that the case was tried in the district court on the theory that the plaintiff had the right to judge as to the necessity for keeping the office open, and might recover for such time as in his judgment such necessity existed.

*309
s' open^nfcessity i county surpensaron — " evidence.

*308On the other hand, plaintiff in error contends that the punctuation of the section requires that we shall construe it to mean ■that he may recover only for keeping his office open for the convenience of the public for at least one day in each week for making plans. On the trial, this construction of the statute seems to have been adhered to by counsel for the county. The language chosen by the legislature does not seem to be the most apt that could have been selected, and the meaning of the section first quoted is by no means clear. It will be observed that the act of 1891 does not fix the rate of compensation, but simply provides that the surveyor, for the services required to be performed by that act, shall receive the same fees as allowed for making surveys. In order to determine what those fees are, we must recur to § 27, chapter 39, of the General Statutes of 1889, fixing the surveyor’s compensation. From that section we perceive that he is entitled to $4 per day for the time actually and necessarily employed. Construing the two sections together, then, we think the rule sought to be expressed by the legislature would read as follows: “ The •county surveyor shall receive $4 per day for the time actually and necessarily employed in keeping his office open for the convenience of the .public, and this shall be at least one day in each week.” We do not perceive any force in the contention of counsel for the plaintiff in error, that it must be for the convenience of the public for making plans. We think the clearly-expressed sense of the section is, that he is entitled to pay for making plans, specifications, superintending and inspecting works under the act, at the same rate as allowed for making surveys. A mere matter of punctuation is never allowed to overturn the meaning of a law, when that meaning clearly appears from the context. The legislature undoubtedly *309intended that, the county surveyor should keep his office open at least one day in each week for the convenience of the public, and that he should receive $4 a day therefor. Did it intend that he might keep it open, by himself or deputy, as many more days as in his judgment the convenience of the public might require? It is contended that the convenience of the public in a large and populous county requires that the records in his office should be open for inspection most of the time. The public business of this state has gone on for more than 30' years without county surveyors having ever been required to keep their offices open for any particular length of time, and without any compensation whatever to them for the time they have in fact kept them open. Is it possible that the legislature intended to make so marked a change in the law, or that so great a necessity as the plaintiff’s bills in this case would indicate be considered existing in Sumner county, had been entirely overlooked by all preceding legislatures? The district court evidently went on the theory that the statements on the witness stand of the county surveyor and his deputy that it was necessary for the convenience of the public that the office should be kept open on any given day were sufficient evidence of that fact to uphold a finding in his favor. We do not think that the legislature intended that any such construction should be placed on this section, but we think it intended that he should keep the office open one day in each week, and be paid f 4 therefor, and that if he can show that it was actually necessary for the convenience of the public that the office should be kept open more than one day, and that he did so keep it open, he may recover therefor. The necessity for which the county surveyor may recover is not a necessity resulting merely from his own reasoning on the needs of the public to have access to his office, but it must be some definite, specific necessity, which he can show by evidence to exist, and he must show specifically what particular necessity occasioned his keeping his office open on any day in a given week in excess of the one day provided *310for by the statute, and that, in order to provide for that particular necessity, he did in fact keep his office open, before he can recover. Of the existence of this necessity the board of county commissioners must judge when it passes on his bill; and if an appeal from its decision be had, the necessity must be judicially determined to exist by the court or jury before a judgment can be entered in his favor therefor. Any other construction than this, it seems to us, would be practically equivalent to giving all county surveyors a salary of $4 per day.
On the trial, no definite necessity was shown by the plaintiff for his having kept his office open on any of the dates given in his bill, nor is there any showing that all of the business which was in fact transacted in his office during all of the time charged for could not have been done during one day of each week. We think the evidence wholly fails to sustain the finding of the trial court.
The judgment will be reversed, and a new trial ordered.
All the Justices concurring.