In the Matter of the Txn. of the Salaries of Judges

42 S.E. 970, 131 N.C. 692
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 5, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 42 S.E. 970 (In the Matter of the Txn. of the Salaries of Judges) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of the Txn. of the Salaries of Judges, 42 S.E. 970, 131 N.C. 692 (N.C. 1902).

Opinion

To Thos. S. Kenan, Clerk of the Supreme Court.

Dear Sir: — I herewith, hand you the correspondence between Attorney-General Gilmer and myself with regard to the right of the-Legislature to tax the salaries of the Judges. And in doing so I wish to say that it is a full,. able and, indeed, an exhaustive discussion of the subject involved, and in my opinion a correct decision of the question.

It has been read to the Court sitting in conference and approved without a dissenting voice. It was then ordered by the Court that the Attorney-General’s opinion, together with my letter to him and this letter to yo-u, be filed and preserved among the records of your office, and be published in the 131st volume of the Supreme Court Reports.

It was then resolved that the Court would consider this' opinion of the Attorney-General as settling the matter therein discussed, to the same extent as if it were the opinion of this Court:

Very respectfully,

D. M. Fueches,

Chief Justice.

December 18, 1902.

*693 North Carolina — Supreme Court.

Raleigh, November 19, 1902.

Hon. Robert D. Gilmer,

Attorney-General of North Carolina.

Dear Sir: — The members of this Court bave heretofore been of opinion that their salaries were not subject to taxation, and for that-reason (except one Judge for the last two years) have not listed them for that purpose. But the Corporation Commission has decided that they are, and has directed the County Commissioners to proceed to collect the same. And as all the members of this Court, as are also all the Judges of the Superior Courts, are interested in the question, which would make it embarrassing if not incompetent for them to sit upon its hearing; therefore, as you are the legally constituted adviser of the government, the Court has decided to ask your opinion upon this important question. And for that purpose the Court has requested me to write you this letter, and whatever your opinion may be, it will be filed for the guidance of this Court in the matter.

Hoping you will favor the Court with such opinion at as early a day as it may suit your convenience, the Court respectfully awaits the same.

Very respectfully, etc.,

D. M. Furches,

Chief Justice Supreme Court North Carolina.

December 16, 1902.

To the Hon. David M. Furches,

Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of North

Carolina, Raleigh, N. C.

Dear Sir:- — -I beg to acknowledge the receipt of yo-ur favor of recent date, in which my opinion is asked upon a *694 question involving the liability of the official salaries of the Chief Justice and the Associate Justices of the Supreme Court of this State to taxation. In discharge of the duty imposed upon me by section 3363, sub-section 4 of The Code, 1 have the honor to submit the following:

The doctrine that the power to- tax is ah essential element of Government, and that the Legislature, in its exercise, is limited only by constitutional provisions, is elementary and fundamental. The power to tax the salary of a State officer is admitted, unless there is some provision in the organic law forbidding it. Such a prohibition upon legislative authority, if any exists, must appear in the Constitution of the State. Section 18, Article 4, of that instrument is in the following words:

“The General Assembly shall prescribe and regulate the fees, salaries and emoluments of all officers provided for in this article, but the salaries of the Judges shall not be diminished during their continuance in office.” Section 21 of the Constitution of 1176 provided “that the Governor, Justices of the Supreme Courts of law and equity * * * shall have adequate salaries during] their continuance in office.” Revised Code of North Carolina, page 16.

In the amended Constitution of 1835, the constitutional provision with reference to the salaries of judicial officers was changed and the following article enacted: “The salaries of the Judges of the Supreme Court, or of the-'Superior Courts, shall not be diminished during their continuance in office.” Revised Statutes of North Carolina, Vol. I, section 2, page 23. And' the sarnie inhibition against diminution appears in the article quoted above from the Constitution adopted in 1868. Under the Cbnstitution of 1776, it will be observed that the Judges were: to- receive “adequate salaries.” “What was an adequate salary,” remarked Attorney-General Bachelor, in 1856, in passing upon a question simi *695 lar to the one submitted, “was, ex necessitate to be determined by the Legislature, which had the power of fixing it. As this was a discretionary power, that body could declare an “adequate salary” to be any sum it thought proper. This power was liable to abuse, and though it would have been a violation of the spirit of the Constitution to have fixed these salaries at a sum clearly inadequate, yet .the Legislature, being unchecked by any other department of the government in the exercise of this discretion, could violate at will the spirit of this part of the Constitution. By it the power of reducing the salaries of the Judges during their continuance in office, is taken away. They may be increased, but cannot be diminished. But to secure them effectually against diminution, this provision should extend to indirect as well as to direct legislation. The power to lessen these salaries by direct legislation is now nowhere claimed; yet the passage of this act is an assertion by the Legislature of the power to diminish them indirectly; and if the Legislature has such power it can be used to any extent to which, in its. wisdom, it may see proper to carry it.”

While Attorney-General Bachelor, in his opinion, made no reference to the case of McCulloch v. State of Maryland, 4 Wheaton, page 316-207, his argument is sustained by the reasoning of Chief Justice Marshall, who delivered the opinion of the Court in that case — “that the power to tax involves the power to destroy.” This doctrine is exemplified in many cases decided by the Supreme Courts of other jurisdictions, declaring that the internal revenue acts of the Federal Government, requiring stamps on processes of State Courts are unconstitutional interferences with their proceedings.

Smith v. Short, 40 Ala., 385; Craig v. Dimock, 47 Ill., 308; Warren v. Paul, 22 Ind., 276; Fifield v. Close, 15 Mich., 505; Walton v. Bryenth, 24 Howard’s Practice Reports, *696 357; Jones v. Keep, 19 Wis., 369; Bumpass v. Taggart, 26 Ark., 298; 7 Am. Rep., 623; Forcheiner v. Holly, 14 Fla., 239; Latham v. Smith, 45 Ill., 29; Wallace v. Cravens, 34 Ind., 534; Pargoud v. Richardson, 30 L. An., 1286; Sporrer v. Eifler,

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