OPINION OP THE COURT.
*380 4 *379(After stating the facts as abovej The points made as to the claim pro and con may be classified as fotir. It is contended, first, that while the form of certificate made was sufficient, the fifteen books as certified to and delivered, were not properly certified, in that no certificate was attached to each book as required by Section 2 of Chapter 70 of the Laws of 1899, and that decedent’s estate is therefore entitled to no compensation whatever for the work done. We find nothing, however, in the record to sustain the claim that each book was not certified. Neither the findings of the trial court nor the stipulations supplementing such findings so state, nor does any inference properly deducible therefrom lead us so to conclude. On the contrary the presumption in favor of a compliance by a public official with a public duty, recognized as it is by the allowance of this claim at least in part by the county commissioners and its approval in its entirety by the District Court, leads us in *380the absence of any proof to the contrary to sustain the trial court upon this point and to reject as untenable a contention thus for the first time and without proper basis urged in this court.
1 It is in the second place contended that there was error in allowing for folios embodied in the printed forms of the instruments in the books delivered and that only the written portion of such copies should be compensated for. We regard this, however, as entirely too narrow a basis of payment. While it was true that the books as delivered were largely printed forms filled in with the data appropriate to each instrument, in order to deliver such, it became necessary for the copyist to compare the two forms, to note erasures and interlineations and finally by his certificate to show that the form as -certified to was a true and complete copy of the original. It is a matter of common knowledge that in this Territory the forms of conveyance differ considerably, the divergence being from a word or two in some instances to additions of sentences. The use of printed forms tends to the public convenience and for the work of comparison, correction and addition necessary to make the copies speak the truth, the probate clerk was in our judgment entitled to the same folio allowance as if he had extended the instrument in long hand instead of correcting and adopting a printed form.
2 *3813 *380Having thus indicated two respects in which the claim was properly treated by the trial court, we come now to two directions in which we deem it to have been erroneously considered. We are of the opinion first, that ■no compensation should have been allowed for work done by decedent’s administrator. Mr. Summers died on Feb. 13, 1906, three days after he had certified to fifteen of the books subsequently delivered to the county commissioners. After that his administrator made six books'of indexes which, with those just mentioned made as we have seen the total of twenty-one, delivered by the 'administrator on June 3, 1907. The trial court allowed not only for the fifteen books, copied and certified to and thus completed by the deceased, but also for indexes made after his death by his son and administrator. We *381cannot approve this conclusion. The direction given by Chapter 70 of the Laws of 1899, is that upon the creation of new counties “it shall be the duty of the-probate clerk” of the old county to transcribe the records pertaining to real or personal property transferred to-the new county and that such officer shall be paid therefor •at the rate allowed by lav* for making copies of such records. It is manifest that this is a duty imposed by law upon a public officer and the rate of compensation goes to-him as such. Upon his death the duty, with the emoluments, ceases, and it is not within the power of his -administrator to carry forward the work as his and demand the fees. All such a personal representative may do is to proceed to the collection of the amount due for his intestate’s-work up to the date of the latter’s death. The allowance for anything occurring subsequent to Mr. Summers’ death was therefore improper.
We are further of the view that the trial court erred in allowing fifteen cents per folio. As just indicated the work up .to Mr. Summers’ death was done under the statute of 1899, which provides as- payment for transcribing the rate then allowed by law for making copies of such records. This under Comp. Laws, Sec. 1768, was ten cents per folio of a hundred words.. By the Act of March 16, 1907 (C. 28), probate clerks were allowed fifteen cents per hundred words for “copying, comparing, indexing and certifying” • such transcripts. The latter act provided a higher rate of compensation but imposed the additional and important duty, not found in the Act of 1899, of indexing the records thus copied. This latter was a duty of' no little laboriousness, evidenced here by the fact that six index books were found by the administrator necessary for fifteen copied volumes. The increased rate must therefore be deemed referable to the fact that under the new law the clerk was not only to copy the records but after having dons so to make the minute re-examinations of them necessary to accurate indexes. The work imposed was an entire one and the rate was based upon it as such. Since the officer died a year before the Act of 1907 was passed, and since* he performed none of the new duties it imposed, his estate-*382cannot be deemed entitled in any event to tbe increased compensation provided by it, and any payment allowed must be upon the basis afforded by the law in force when his work was performed, compensating that class of work. Under the view which we take of the matter we find it unnecessary to determine the question argued at the bar as to the power of the legislature to increase, after one has rendered service to a county, the compensation for such service. It is sufficient for us to observe that the service here properly chargeable against Sandoval County was not performed according to the terms of the Act of 1907 and cannot be paid for according to that Act.
4 There is also a suggestion made that the indebtedness sought hereby to be imposed upon Sandoval County will be violative of Sec. 4 of the Act of Congress of July 30, 1886, known as the Springer Act, upon the idea that it will cause the county indebtedness to exceed four per centum of the value of the taxable property of such county. We need only say, however, that this question was not raised below, nor was that court nor are we possessed of knowledge from the record or otherwise as to the existing indebtedness or the taxable property of Sandoval County so as to be able to pass upon the question.
The judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to ascertain the number of folios (both printed and written matter) in the fifteen boobs completed and certified to previous to .Summers’ death, and, having ascertained these to enter judgment in favor of appellee therefore at the rate of ten cents per folio, (the costs of this court to be equally divided.)