Smith v. State , 10 Tex. Ct. App. 413 ( 1881 )


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  • Hurt, J.

    The appellant was indicted, convicted and fined one hundred dollars for a violation of art. 240 of the Penal Code. Said article reads as follows: “If any officer authorized by law to demand or receive fees of office, or any person employed by such officer, shall wilfully demand or receive higher fees than are allowed by law, he shall be iranished by fine not exceeding one hundred dollars for each offense. ” The indictment charges that the defendant received higher fees. than was authorized by law, but it also sets but facts showing beyond all question that the fees demanded or received were not authorized by law. There was a motion to quash, which was overruled, the ruling of the court was excepted to, and the action of the court is here assigned as error.

    By reference to the above article (240) it will be found that to constitute the offense therein sought to be punished, these facts must exist: The person sought to be convicted must be an officer or a person employed by an officer. The officer or person so employed must be authorized by law to demand or receive fees of office. The law must have allowed fees for the service rendered, and for which the fees were demanded or received. The fees demanded or received must have been higher than those allowed by law. The defendant must have demanded or received these higher fees. There is no law in this State punishing the demanding or receiving of fees not allowed by law, by officers authorized by law to demand or receive *416fees. The offense (the other elements attending) consists in demanding or receiving higher fees for services than are allowed by law for these services. If this indictment had omitted the allegation that the fees demanded or received were higher than allowed by law, it would have been clearly defective. This allegation being imperatively demanded to make the indictment good, evidence showing that defendant demanded or received pay as fees not allowed by law would not have supported the indictment. We therefore conclude that if the indictment state facts from which it appears that the fees were not higher but were unauthorized by law, it is bad, and should have been quashed.

    Article 3830 of Paschal’s Digest provided that “if any officer herein named shall demand or receive any other or higher fees,” etc. Under this article the indictment charged that the defendant demanded fees greater than were allowed by law; and, in specifying, alleged that the fees charged were for certain orders for whic¿i no fees were' in fact allowed by law. It was held by the Supreme Court that the indictment should have been quashed. State v. Smythe, 33 Texas, 546. In Hays v. Stewart, 8 Texas, 359, Judge Lipscomb holds that, under an act which provides, “ That if any of the officers herein named shall demand and receive any other or higher fees than are prescribed in the act for any services therein mentioned he shall be liable to the party aggrieved for four-fold the fees so unlawfully demanded and received, to be recovered in any court of competent jurisdiction,” that an action by the party aggrieved for the penalty under this act could not be sustained, unless the officer was entitled to charge fees. The act allowed the surveyor three dollars for each English lineal mile actually run. The surveyor charged for lines not actually run by him. There was no dispute as to the rate of fees, nor was there any evidence of an attempt to collect higher fees than the law allowed. The dispute in that case was about the surveyor’s right to col*417lect the fees for two lines at all. Under this state of case, the learned judge says: “It is a well established rule of law that in a suit to recover a penalty imposed by statute, the charge should be specifically made and fully proven. The statute imposing a four-fold, penalty to be paid to the party aggrieved, besides a liability to be fined and removed from office, is highly penal in its character, and was doubtless intended to punish a wilful violation of law, and not a mistake that might honestly be made.”

    The principle above enunciated applies directly and with great force to the case before us. Under the present act, as we have seen, the crime consists in demanding or receiving higher fees than are allowed by law. The amount of the fees being first fixed by law for specified services, higher fees cannot be demanded without the party demanding the same being guilty of an offense such as should be denounced and punished by our law. But on the other hand it frequently occurs that officers have reasonable grounds for believing and do believe that they are entitled to fees, when in fact they are not. Hence our Code denounces the officer who demands or receives higher fees than are allowed by law, and not fees unauthorized by law.

    As the indictment shows upon its face that the fees demanded and received were for services for which no fees were allowed by law, we are of the opinion that it was fatally defective, and should have been quashed. There were other items for services for which the law allowed fees, but the amount demanded for these was that which the law allowed, and no more.

    For the error in overruling the motion to quash, the judgment is reversed and the cause dismissed.

    Reversed and dismissed.

    Winkler, J.,

    does not concur in this opinion.

Document Info

Citation Numbers: 10 Tex. Ct. App. 413

Judges: Hurt, Winkler

Filed Date: 7/1/1881

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/3/2021