Doherty v. County of Ransom

63 N.W. 148, 5 N.D. 1, 1895 N.D. LEXIS 1
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 63 N.W. 148 (Doherty v. County of Ransom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doherty v. County of Ransom, 63 N.W. 148, 5 N.D. 1, 1895 N.D. LEXIS 1 (N.D. 1895).

Opinion

Bartholomew, J.

The controversy in this case arises out of the following facts: The plaintiff was the duly elected and qualified state’s attorney in the defendant county, and entered upon the duties of his office, January 3, 1893. Prior to that time, and prior to the time that North Dakota became a state, the board of county commissioners of said county, acting under the provisions of § 431, Comp. Laws, fixed the salary of the district attorney for that county at $800 per annum. Section 173 of the state constitution, subsequently adopted, contains the following: “The legislative assembly shall provide by law for such other county, township and district officers as may be deemed necessary, and shall prescribe the duties and compensation of all county, township and district officers.” Subsequently the legislative assembly passed an act known as Ch. 55, Laws 1890, the first section of which reads as follows: “The board of county commissioners, at their quarterly meeting in the month of July, or at some special meeting during said month next prior to each and every general election, shall fix the amount of salary which shall be received by every county officer for the ensuing term, whose salary is fixed by the board of county commissioners, and is entitled by law to receive a salary, payable out of the county treasury. And the salary so fixed shall not be increased or diminished during said term of office. This section shall not apply to any county wherein the salaries of its officers have been provided and fixed by law.” Under this statute the board of supervisors of said defendant county in July, 1892, fixed the salary of state’s attorney at $500 per annum. At the end of his first quarter year’s service as state’s attorney, plaintiff presented his bill for salary to the county commissioners, at the rate of $800 per year. This the board refused to allow, but did allow the claim at the rate of $500 per year. From this action plaintiff appealed to the District Court, where his appeal was dismissed, and from such judgment of dismissal he appeals to this court. He bases his claim for the larger salary upon the ground that the section of the constitution heretofore quoted devolved upon the [3]*3legislature the duty of fixing the salary of state’s attorney, and prohibited the legislature from delegating that power to the board of county commissioners, and that consequently Ch. 55, Laws 1890, is unconstitutional and void; and that, as the legislature never has fixed the salary of state’s attorney, the salary prevailing at the time of the adoption of the constitution must remain as the salary of that office until changed by the legislature. The respondent contends that said chapter 55 is in all respects a valid enactment, and that the constitutional provision already quoted is but a grant of power to the legislature, and the grant of a power which the legislative branch of the government would have possessed, and does possess, without the constitutional grant; but that the right of the legislature to delegate to municipalities the power to fix the compensation of local municipal officers has been so often asserted by the courts that it no longer remains an open question. It is no doubt true that the legislative branch of government possesses the power to prescribe the compensation of municipal officers without any constitutional grant of such power, and it is equally time that the power thus possessed can, in the absence of all inhibition, be delegated to the municipalities created by legislative authority. Cooley, Const. Lim. (5th Ed.) 228 et seq.; 2 Am. and Eng. Enc. Law, p. 699, and notes; Ryan v. Outagamie Co., 80 Wis. 336, 50 N. W. 340. But we are constrained to view our constitutional provision, not as a grant of power, but as a limitation upon power. As we have said, no grant of power was required. If that were the purpose, the language was superfluous. The words used are not the words usually employed to confer power. For that purpose the constitutions generally, if not universally, use the word “may.” Here the mandatory word “shall” is used. The connection is also suggestive. The constitution says: “The legislative assembly * * * shall prescribe the duties and compensation of all county, township and district officers.” It will not be contended for a moment that under this language the legislature could delegate to a board of county commissioners the power to [4]*4prescribe the duties of a state’s attorney, and yet the words are so connected that they will not admit of a construction that places the legislature in one relation to the duties of county officers and another relation to their compensation. One phrase covers both, and one intention covers both, unless the constitutional convention was guilty of juggling with words. The propriety of having duty and compensation prescribed by one and the same authority is too evident to require mention. In Dougherty v. Austin, 94 Cal. 601, 28 Pac. 834, and 29 Pac. 1092, the court had under consideration the corresponding provision in the California constitution. That provision is perhaps somewhat clearer as to the intention of the constitutional convention than ours. It provides that the legislature “shall regulate the compensation of all such officers in proportion to their duties and for that purpose may classify the counties by population.” There the legislature is required to regulate compensation in proportion to duty. Here it is required to prescribe the duties and the compensation clearly, with the thought that the latter would be commensurate with the former. We think the two provisions should receive the same construction. The California court held that a statute delegating to the board of county commissionei's power to incx'ease the pay of a county officer under cei'tain circumstances was void, being in contx'avention of their constitutional px'ovision, and the dissent of Judges McFarland and Patterson was as to the effect of the statute. The judges were unanimous, as we gather, in holding that the legislature could not delegate the power to fix compensation, and this holding was affirmed in People v. Johnson, (Cal.) 31 Pac. 611. Under these authorities, as well as under the wording of our constitution, we hold that Ch. 55, Laws 1890, which empowered boards of county commissioners to fix the salaries of state’s attorneys, was a violation of section 173 of our constitution, and void.

But there is yet another point in the case. The x-espondent contends that, if said chapter 55 be unconstitutional, the law existing px'ior to statehood, which empowered county commis[5]*5sioners to fix the compensation of state’s attorneys, remains in force until such time as the legislature shall act under the constitutional provision, and fix such compensation by legislative enactment; that section 2 of the schedule of the constitution, which says “all laws now in force in the Territory of Dakota, which are not repugnant to this constitution, shall remain in force until they expire by their own limitations or be altered or repealed,” continued the prior law (the validity of which is not questioned) in force; that the limitation contained in section 173 of the constitution was prospective only; that while the legislature could not thereafter delegate to boards of county commissioners the power to fix compensation, yet the limitation, standing alone, was powerless to repeal an existing power legally resting with such board. And the further point is urged that, if the constitutional limitation repealed the former law, then the 'office of state’s attorney was left without any salary attached whatever, and in either view the action of the trial court must be affirmed.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.W. 148, 5 N.D. 1, 1895 N.D. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doherty-v-county-of-ransom-nd-1895.