Court Opinion

ID: 6565327
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:19:18.176032+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:56:42.359631
License: Public Domain

Francis, J.
This ease was tried before the district court* in and for Minnehaha county, without a jury, on an appeal from the action of the board of county commissioners of said county, purporting to fix the annual salary of the district attorney of said county.
The court, in making its findings of fact, found that at the general election in 1884, one E. G. Wright was elected as district attorney for said county for two years from the first Monday of January, 1885; that he duly qualified and acted as such district attorney during said term; that January 8, 1885, at a regular session of the board of county commissioners, the salary of the district attorney was fixed by the board at $1,200 per annum, payable quarterly; that at the general election in 1886, A. A. Polk, the plaintiff, (appellant,) was duly elected as *133■district attorney for said county for the ensuing term of two years from the first Monday of January, 1887, being the 3d day •of January, 1887; that on that day he duly qualified by taking and subscribing the oath of office and executing his official bond to the county in the sum, and with the two sureties, required by law, which bond was approved by the county clerk, and, with the oath of office written thereon, filed with said county clerk, January 3, 1887; and that since that date said A. A. Polk has acted and is now acting as district attorney; that at the regular session of said board of county commissioners held on said 3d day (first Monday) of January, 1887, being the first day of the session, and the same day on which the oath of office and bond of the plaintiff were filed, but some time — an hour or more —later on that same day, said board fixed the salary of the district attorney at $700 per annum; that at a regular session of said board, April 4, 1887, the said A. A. Polk, the plaintiff, having presented his account for salary as district attorney for the first quarter of the year, in the sum of $300, said board, on 'the 7th day of April, 1887, took action on the matter, and allowed the sum of $175; that from this decision of the board the plaintiff took an appeal to this court.
Upon these findings of fact the court made the following con•clusions of law, namely:
“And the court decides the law in this ease as follows, to-wit:
“1. The decision of the board of county commissioners aforesaid, rejecting said account in the sum of three hundred dollars, and allowing one hundred and seventy-five dollars thereof, was according to law, and not erroneous in any respect.
“2. And the decision aforesaid should in all respects be affirmed and approved.”
On these findings of fact and conclusions of law judgment was thereafter, April 30, 1887, entered in favor of the defend.ant and against the plaintiff, approving and affirming the decision of said board, (rejecting the account of the plaintiff in the .sum of $300 for salary, and allowing $175 thereof,) and awarding the defendant costs therein.
*134The one error assigned is as follows: “And the plaintiff herein says there is manifest error on the face of the record, in this i in making the conclusions of law on the findings of fact.”
It is evident that the assignment is well taken, and that the-court clearly erred in making its said conclusions of law upon the findings of fact stated.
The amendment to section 5 of the act entitled “An act to-create the office of district attorney” for the several counties of Dakota Territory, approved March 7, 1883, which said amendment was approved March 13, 1885, (Sess. Laws 1885, p. 83,) provides that “the district attorneys shall receive such salaries for their services as the board of county commissioners of the proper county shall allow, not less than four hundred dollars a year; but the salary of such district attorneys shall not be diminished during the term for which they shall be elected or appointed.”
It appears from the proof and from the findings of fact that the term of office of the plaintiff (appellant) began January 3, 1887, and that the action of the said board of county commissioners.appealed from, seeking to diminish the annual salary of the district attorney, was had and taken during the term of office for which the plaintiff (appellant) had been elected as district attorney, and after said term had begun, and also after he. had qualified for the office, and, in the law, entered upon its duties. This action was in clear violation of the plain provisions of law contained in the amendment above referred to.
There is a distinction between the office and the person holding the office.
The salary, when fixed or allowed, relates and attaches to the office itself, and also to the individual officer, in so far as that the person who for the time being holds the office is entitled to receive the salary of the office.
When the board once fixed the salary “of the district attorney” “at $700 per annum,” it remained as fixed for the full term, and until changed as provided by law, no matter what person held or occupied the office; and the law says the salary of the dis*135trict attorneys shall not be diminished during the term for which they shall be elected or appointed.
The contention of the attorney of respondent, that the board did not diminish, but fixed, the salary, has no real existence, and is not even the well-defined ghost of a respectable technicality. If they fixed or allowed the salary at a less sum than the salary then existing, they diminished it.
Neither is there any distinction in this case between the word “allow,” appearing in said amendment, and the word “fix,” as used in the wording of the motion or resolution of the board constituting the action appealed from. When the board “allow” the salary they “fix” it — it is fixed; and when they “fix” it, it is allowed — they allow it.
The further contention of the attorney for respondent, that “when one term expires another term begins at the same instant,” and that the proposition “that the board cannot then fix any salary that would be a diminution of the salary before fixed, leads to the absurd conclusion that it must at some prior session allow the salary in futuro,” raises no question that this court will consider in this case. We are to pass upon what was done, and not to determine what might have been done. Neither are we to decide whether or not, under existing law, the salary of district attorneys, when once allowed, can be diminished. It is sufficient for the purposes of this ease that the effort to diminish the salary in this instance was illegal; and the error consisted in holding it legal, and no valid judgment could be based or rendered upon such holding.
The board of county commissioners had no power or authority to diminish the salary of the office of district attorney after the term of office for which the plaintiff (appellant) was elected had begun; that is, during the term. Their action was illegal, and the district court should have so found and declared, and judgment should have been rendered accordingly.
The judgment of the district court is reversed.
All the justices concurring, except Palmer, J., dissenting, and Thomas, J., not sitting.