
    Case 55 —MOTION
    Jan. 11.
    Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v. Commonwealth.
    APPEAL PROM BOYD CIRCUIT COURT.
    1. Statutes — Repeal by Implication — Costs.—The provision, in section 117 of the Kentucky Statutes that the Attorney-General shall be paid a salary for his services, instead of fees as formerly, does not relate to the taxation of costs, and does not by implication repeal a former statute which required that in all cases in the Court of Appeals to which the Commonwealth is a party there should be taxed for. the benefit of the Commonwealth an attorney’s fee of twenty dollars.
    WADSWORTH & COCHRAN por appellant.
    1. The object in taxing the $20.00 attorney’s fee under the old statute, for the benefit of the Commonwealth was to reimburse the State for the $20.00 it had to pay to the Attorney-General in each case. The reason for this ceased when it was provided by section 117, • Kentucky Statutes, that the Attorney-General should be paid a stipulated salary, and the provisions of the old act stand repealed.
    W. S. TAYLOR por appellee.
    1. The reason for the taxation of the attorney’s fee still exists. The State pays the salary of the Attorney-General, just as it formerly ■paid his fees.
   JUDGE PAYNTER

delivered the opinion oe the court:

Tbe act approved March 2,1882, provides that, in all cases in tbe Court of Appeals in which it is made the duty of the attorney-general to represent the State, he shall for his services, in each case be paid out of the treasury of the State the sum of $20. At the time this act was passed the fees which were taxed in cases to which the Commonwealth was a party were for the benefit of the attorney-general, not for the Commonwealth. The act of March 2d, supra, contained this proviso, to-wit: “That in all cases in which an attorney’s fee is now by law taxed against the unsuccessful party the same shall be for the benefit of the Commonwealth and paid into the public treasury.”

In other words the fees that were then taxed for the benefit of the attorney-general were taxed for the benefit of the Commonwealth, and instead of having the attorney-general depend for compensation for his services upon the contingency of collecting the fee from the unsuccessful litigant the Commonwealth became bound for such fee and for reimbursement depends upon the contingency of a collection. ,

Under section 117, Kentucky Statutes, the attorney-general is paid a salary for his services. He is no longer paid a given sum per case. This section does not repeal the previous act providing that fees should be taxed for the benefit of the Commonwealth. The section does not relate to the matter of the taxation of costs in Commonwealth cases, but relates alone to the salary of the attorney-general. It is in nowise inconsistent with the act which requires that .$20 shall be taxed for the benefit of the Commonwealth.

The motion to correct the taxation of costs is overruled.  