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City and County of Sacramento v. Bird, Treasurer

Supreme Court of California
Apr 1, 1860
15 Cal. 294 (Cal. 1860)

Summary

In Sacramento v. Bird (15 Cal. 294) the Consolidation Act of the City and County of Sacramento was held by the Supreme Court of this State to be a revision of the laws relative to the government of said city and county, and the compensation of the officers thereof.

Summary of this case from Chapman v. Buckman

Opinion

Rehearing denied 15 Cal. 295 at 296.

Appeal from the Sixth District.

Plaintiff had judgment. Defendant appeals.

Judgment affirmed.

COUNSEL

Monson & Sunderland, for Appellant.

C. Cole, District Attorney, for Respondent.


JUDGES: Cope, J., delivered the opinion of the Court. Baldwin, J., concurring. Field, C. J., dissenting.

OPINION

COPE, Judge

This case comes up on an agreed statement. The suit is brought to recover of the defendant a sum of money in his hands, claimed to belong to the plaintiff, and which the defendant received from the State Treasury, as a compensation allowed by the general law to the Treasurers of the counties, for paying money in their hands into the State Treasury. It is claimed by the plaintiff that this sum, under the twenty-eighth section of the act to incorporate the city and county of Sacramento, (Acts of 1858, 277,) belongs to the corporation.

We think the plaintiff entitled to recover. The twenty-fourth section of the Act of 1858 provides that the Treasurer of the city and county shall receive the sum of $ 3000 per annum, as a compensation for his services, and the twenty-eighth section of the same act provides that " every officer, or other person, having the control, collection, or custody of any money collected for taxes, licenses, water rents, fees of office, or for any other account not otherwise herein provided, shall pay the same into the Treasury," etc. This statute evidently intended that the Treasurer should only receive for his official services the compensation of $ 3000 therein provided. The fact that the percentage, which he claims the right to retain, came from the State for money paid by him into the State Treasury, makes no difference. He received this money and paid it in, as an officer of the city and county, and this constituted a part of the services for which his salary was paid.

Judgment affirmed.

DISSENT:

FIELD

Field, C. J. I dissent. I am of the opinion that the County Treasurer is entitled to retain the percentage.


Summaries of

City and County of Sacramento v. Bird, Treasurer

Supreme Court of California
Apr 1, 1860
15 Cal. 294 (Cal. 1860)

In Sacramento v. Bird (15 Cal. 294) the Consolidation Act of the City and County of Sacramento was held by the Supreme Court of this State to be a revision of the laws relative to the government of said city and county, and the compensation of the officers thereof.

Summary of this case from Chapman v. Buckman
Case details for

City and County of Sacramento v. Bird, Treasurer

Case Details

Full title:CITY AND COUNTY OF SACRAMENTO v. BIRD, Treasurer

Court:Supreme Court of California

Date published: Apr 1, 1860

Citations

15 Cal. 294 (Cal. 1860)

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