BUTLER v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania

51 U.S. 402, 13 L. Ed. 472, 10 How. 402, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1473
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 22, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by168 cases

This text of 51 U.S. 402 (BUTLER v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BUTLER v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 51 U.S. 402, 13 L. Ed. 472, 10 How. 402, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1473 (1851).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court of the State ' of Pennsylvania, under the twenty-fifth section of the Judiciary Act of 1789, .for the purpose of, revising a judgment rendered by the court above mentioned at the May term of that court, in the year 1848, against the plaintiffs, in error, in a certáin -action of assumpsit instituted against those plaintiffs on behalf of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

By authority of. a statute of Pennsylvania of the 28th of January, 1836, the plaintiffs in error were by the Governor of the State appointed to the place of Canal Commissioners; and by the same statute, the appointment was directed to be made annually on the 1st day of February, and the compensation of the Commissioners regulated at four dollars per diem each Under this law, the plaintiffs in error, in virtue of an appointment of the 1st of February, 1843, accepted and took upon themselves the office and duties of Canal Commissioners. By a subsequent statute, .of the 18th qf April, 1843, fclie appointment of Canal Commissioners was transferred from the Governor to the people upon election by the latter, and the per diem allowance, to be made to all the Commissioners was by this law reduced from four to three dollars, this reduction to take effect from the passage of the act of April 18th, 1843, which as to the rest of its provisions went into operation on the second Tuesday of January following its passage, that is, on the second Tuesday of January in the year 1844. Upon a settlement of their account as Canal Commissioners, made before- the Auditor-General of the State, the plaintiffs in error, out of money of the State then in their hands, claimed the right to retain compensation for their services at the rate of four dollars per diem, for the full term of twelve months from the date of. their appointment, by the Governor ; whilst for the State, on the other hand, it was refused to allow that rate of compensation beyond the 18th of April, 1843, the period of time at which, by the new law, the emoluments of the appointment were changed. In consequence of this difference,- and of the refusal of the plaintiffs in. error to pay over the balance appearing against them on the account as stated by the Auditor-General, an action was instituted against them in the name of the State, in the Court of Com *415 mon Pleas of Dauphin County, and a judgment obtained for that, balance. This judgment, having been carried by writ of error before the Supreme Court, was there affirmed, and from that tribunal, as the highest in the State, this cause is brought hither for revision.

The grounds on which this court is asked to interpose between the judgment on behalf of the State and the plaintiffs in error are these. That the appointment of these plaintiffs by the Governor of Pennsylvania, under the law of January 28th, 1836, was a positive obligation or contract on the part of the State to employ the plaintiffs for the entire period of one year, at the stipulated rate of four dollars per diem; and that the change in the tenure of office and in the rate of compensation made by the law of April 18th, 1843, (within the space of one year from the 1st of February, .1843,) was a violation of this contract, and therefore an infraction of the tenth section of the first article of the Constitution of the United States. In order to determine with accuracy whether this case is within the just scope of the constitutional provision which has thus been invoked, it is proper carefully to consider the character and relative positions of the parties to this controversy, and . the nature and objects of the transaction which it is sought to draw within the influence of that provision.

The high conservative power of the federal government here appealed to is one necessarily involving inquiries of the most delicate character. The States of this Union, consistently with their original sovereign capacity, could recognize no power to control either their rights or obligations, beyond their own sense of duty or the dictates of natural or national law. When, therefore, they, have delegated to a common arbiter amongst them the power to question or to countervail their own acts or their own discretion in conceded instances, such instances should fall within the fair and uneqúivocal limits of the concession made. Accordingly it has been repeatedly said by this court', that to pronounce a law of one of the sovereign States of this Union to be a violation of the Constitution is a solemn function, demanding the gravest and most deliberate consideration ; and that a law of one of the States should never be so. denominated, if it can upon any'other principle be correctly explained. Indeed, it would seem that, if there could be any course of proceeding more than all others calculated to excite dissatisfaction, to awaken a natural jealousy on the part of the States, and to estrange them from the federal government, it would be the practice, for slight and insufficient causes, of calling on those States to justify, before tribunals in some sense foreign to- themselves, their aots of general legislation. And *416 the extreme of such an .abuse would appear to exist in the. arraignment of their control over officers and subordinates in the regulation of their internal and exclusive polity; and over the modes and extent in 'which that polity should be varied to meet the exigencies of their peculiar condition. ' Such an abuse would prevent all action in the State governments, or refer the modes and details of their action to the tribunals and authorities of the federal government. These surely could never have been the legitimate purposes of the federal Constitution. The contracts designed to be protected by the tenth section of the first article of that instrument are contracts by which perfect rights, certain definite, fixed private rights of property, are vested. These are clearly distinguishable from measures or engagements adopted or undertaken by the body politic or State government for the benefit of all, and from the necessity of the case, and according to universal understanding, to be varied or discontinued as the public good shall require. The selection of officers, who are nothing more than agents for the effectuating of such public purposes, is matter of public convenience or necessity, and. so too are the periods for the appointment of such agents; but neither the one nor the other of these arrangements can. constitute any obligation to continue such agents, or to re-appoint them, after the measures which brought them into being shall have been found.useless, shall have been fulfilled, or shall have been abrogated as even detrimental to the well-being of the public. The promised compensation for services actually performed and accepted, during the continu-. anee of the particular agency, may undoubtedly be claimed, both upon principles of compact and of equity; but to insist beyond this on the perpetuation of a public policy either useless or detrimental, and upon a reward for acts neither desired nor performed, would appear to be reconcilable with neither common justice nor common sense. The establishment of such a principle would arrest necessarily every thing like progress or improvement in government; or if changes- should be ventured upon, the government would have to become one great pension establishment on which to quarter a host of sinecures.

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Bluebook (online)
51 U.S. 402, 13 L. Ed. 472, 10 How. 402, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-v-commonwealth-of-pennsylvania-scotus-1851.