Sheriff Tom Steyer
3040 S. SR. 100
Tiffin, Ohio 44883
(419) 447-3456



Past Sheriff's of Seneca County
 

Agreen Ingraham 1824-1828
William Patterson 1828-1830
David Bishop 1830-1834
Joel Stone 1834-1838
Levi Keller 1838-1842
Uriah P. Coonrad 1842-1846
Eden Lease 1846-1850
Stephen M. Ogden 1850-1854
Ephriam C. Wells 1854-1856
Jesse Weirick 1856-1860
Levi Weirick 1860-1862
Edward Childs 1862-1866
Peter P. Myers 1866-1870
John Werley 1870-1874
George D. Acker 1874-1878
Lloyd N. Lease 1878-1882
Thomas F. Whalen 1882-1886
George Homan 1886-1890
John L. Hepp 1890-1891
Alonzo Burman 1891-1895
Joseph VanNest 1895-1897
W.M. Shaffer 1897-1901
A.J. Henzey 1901-1903
Henry Brohl 1903-1905
Charles Nepper 1905-1909
Philip H. Reif 1909-1913
George E. Bare 1913-1914
Charles H. Bare 1914-1917
Charles J. Mutchler 1917-1921
Joseph W. Parks 1921-1925
Amandus B. Grossman 1925-1929
George A. Burkett 1929-1933
Verne F. Deats 1934-1940
George R. Steinmetz 1941-1948
John Dysard 1949-1960
Robert Wagner 1961-1969
James B. Roberts 1970-1978
H. Weldin Neff 1979-1989
Carl Runion 1989-1991
Larry D. Stephens 1991-1997
H. Weldin Neff 1997-2000
Thomas G. Steyer 2000-Present
 

Did you Know:

The Office of the Sheriff is over 1000 years old and has a long and interesting history. Nearly as far back as the beginning of English and Scottish Law,  the Office was the center of local administration of justice.

The word "Sheriff" itself came about in an unusual manner.  Originally the word "Reeve" meant an administrative official who had the general duties of a steward, or overseer or bailiff.  His authority extended over various territorial area sometimes called his "Bailiwick" His title was often used in combination to indicate his jurisdiction.  The Reeve of a Borough was called a Borough-Reeve, The Reeve of a Church, a Church-Reeve, and the Reeve of a Shire, the Shire-Reeve.

The Shire was a territorial division roughly equivalent to a county.  Eventually, a Shire-Reeve was shortened to Sheriff, and the word survives to this day.  The Sheriff's principal function in the earliest days seems to have been to protect the interests of both the King and people against the powerful barons.  He executed the King's Writs and presided in the county court and the hundred court.

The Posse Comitatus is the entire body of people who may be summoned by the Sheriff to assist in preserving the public peace or in executing any legal precept which is forcibly opposed.  The term is still in use today, although almost invariably the comitatus is dropped, and we speak of the posse, or the Sheriff's Posse.  Presiding at the courts and holding the power to call out the posse comitatus gave the Sheriff more power than any other official in the County.

In the early days the office was elective, but eventually the power to appoint Sheriff's was invested in the Crown.  In certain sections powerful land owners became allied with the Sheriff, and they attempted to make the Office hereditary.

At that period, the Office was on a par with that of a member of Parliament, with the Sheriff being a Lord and holding a title.  For a time, the duties of the Sheriff included the collection of taxes within his Shire.  The Sheriff also accompanied the judges of the assizes when they held court.  Assizes are periodical sessions of the Superior Courts in the Counties of England,  held for the purposes of administering justice in trials.  The Office of the Sheriff was to this country by the Pilgrims.

The Sheriff's responsibilities in the colonies were basically that of collecting taxes and overseeing local elections as the representative of the Governor.  Before the Revolutionary War,  Sheriff's were appointed by the Governor and held office at his pleasure.  The State Constitution, adopted July 2, 1776,  provided for the annual elections of Sheriff's and Coroners,  who were ineligible for reelection after three terms.  These were the only county officials elected by the people.