Court Opinion

ID: 9309703
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-02 17:37:58.694577+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:14:05.523501
License: Public Domain

SWING, J.
Reading Secs. 845 and 1274 Rev. Stat., together, it seems clear that either the prosecuting attorney or legal counsel employed by the commissioners upon the request of the prosecuting attorney under Sec. 845, *413must prosecute and defend all suits and actions to which the commissioners are a party. No legal counsel having been employed by the commissioners under Sec. 845, the statute (See. 1274) says that these duties shall be performed by the prosecuting attorney. He cannot refuse to perform the duties imposed by this section, nor is it in the power of the commissioners to employ other counsel to supplant him in the performance of these duties without overruling the clearly expressed intention of the legislature.
Ireton and Schoenle were employed by the commissioners to defend the suit of Eberhardt v. Hamilton Co. (Comrs.), a suit pending in the court of common pleas.
Reading See. 1271 with Sees. 845 and 1274 Rev. Stat., it is manifest that the legislature intended in the first instance that the prosecuting attorney should be the legal, counsel of the commissioners, and perform the duties required to be performed by legal counsel under Sec. 845, and this is done in all the other counties of this circuit, and no doubt it is done in almost all the counties of the state, the prosecuting attorney being able himself to perform not only the primary duties pertaining to his office, which duties are of a criminal nature, but also to perform the duties of legal counsel for the commissioners, which duties are- of i civil nature.
Under the provisions of Sec. 1271 Rev. Stat., the prosecuting attorney may appoint such assistants as he shall deem necessary for the proper performance of the duties of his office. These duties primarily are to prosecute all complaints, suits and controversies on behalf of the state, but this provision does not contemplate that he is to appoint ^assistants to perform the duties of legal counsel for the commissioners. It is clear from See. 845 that if the prosecutor, himself, cannot perform the duties of legal counsel required by this section, he shall make this fact known to the commissioners and request them to employ legal counsel to act for them.
The reason for this is plain. The commissioners are the executive •officers of the county. They make all contracts and represent the county in all actions, and if the legal counsel, the prosecuting attorney elected by the people, cannot peform the duties, the expressed intention of the legislature is that the commissioners should choose whoever they may think best fitted to attend to the business pertaining to the "legal counsel” contemplated by the statute.
In this ease it does not appear from the record but what the prosecuting attorney is able and willing to perform the duties of legal *414counsel for the commissioners, nor does the record show that the prosecuting attorney has requested the county commissioners to appoint legal! counsel, and as the statute requires that all suits or actions for or against the commissioners shall be prosecuted by the prosecuting attorney or legal counsel employed by the commissioners as such, it follows that the employment of Ireton and Schoenle as counsel to defend the suit in question was not authorized by law, and the judgment must therefore be affirmed.
Giffen and Smith, JJ., concur.