This is аn original proceeding whereby the executors of the will of Hugh J. Crawford, deceased, ¡Seek to compel the auditоr of Los Angeles County to issue a warrant in a sum claimed to be due for services rendered during his lifetime by the decedent as judge оf the Municipal Court of the City of Los Angeles. Petitioners allege that Judge ¡Crawford received compensation at the fate of $7,500 pef year until August 23, 1933, at which time the legislature reduced the compensation of judges of the Municipal Court of Los Angеles to $6,500 per year and left the compensation !of the judges of the Municipal Court of the City of San Francisco at the sum of $7,500, the amount which before that time had been paid to the judges in both cities. Petitioners j claim there is due them the sum of $1889.61, the difference between the amount actually received and the amount which it is claimed should have been paid as cоmpensation for services rendered between August 23, 1933, and the time of his I death at the rate of $7,500 per year.
It is contended by petitioners that the amendment of 1933, by which the salaries of the Los Angeles judges were reduced, is unconstitutional in that the compensation of judges is not regulated in proportion to duties and that the amendatory act is special and local in character. Muc|h discussion is contained in the briefs on the question whether the amendment referred to is rendered ineffectivе by section
5
of article XI of the Constitution. It is clear, however,, that the question must be determined adversely to petitioner^’ сontention for the reason that the constitutional amendment adopted in 1924, article VI, section 11, providing for the establishment of municipal courts contains this provision “The compensation of the justices or judges of all courts of
*487
record, shаll be fixed and the payment thereof prescribed by the legislature.” The municipal court is a court of record. The language just quoted is simple and does not require interpretation. The legislature has been given plenary power in the matter оf the compensation to be received by the judges and all other parts of the Constitution inconsistent with this section have been superseded. Nothing is found in the amendment restricting the legislature in its control of judicial salaries. No provision is made therеin for fixing compensation in proportion to duties or population. The decision of the Supreme Court in
Sevier
v.
liiley,
Petitioners further contend that the 1933 amendment to section 7 of the act relating to municipal courts is so indefinite and uncertain as to bе ineffective. The amendment provides: “There shall be thirty judges . . . each of whom shall receive six thousand five hundred dollars, pаyable in equal monthly installments; . . . ” It is argued that it cannot be ascertained for what period of time the sum of $6,500 shall be paid.
Salaries of judges of courts of record have uniformly been fixed in California on an annual basis. The Constitution provides in article V, section 19, that the compensation .of the state officers therein mentioned shall be at a given sum “per
*488
amram”. Beforе the amendment of 1933, section 7 of the Municipal Court Act provided: “There shall be thirty-judges, each of whom shall receive sеven thousand five hundred dollars per annum, payable in equal monthly -installments; ...” It is evident that the words “per annum” were inadvertently omitted and that the legislature intended that the statute should read, “six thousand five hundred
per annum,
...” Since the sum specified is made payable in equаl monthly instalments it is manifest that it was not intended that the sum of $6,500 should be paid monthlyj or for any lesser period. It is also manifest that the sum of ¡$6,500 was not intended as payment for services for the full term for which such judges are elected or appointed, since an еlected judge serves six years and an appointed judge ¡ serves only part of a term. Effect must be given to a legislative аct if -by a reasonable interpretation the legislative intent can be ascertained.
(Thomas
v. Joplin,
We conclude that the legislature by the amendment of 1933 fixed the compensation of the muniсipal judges in Los Angeles at the sum of $6,500 per annum.
The alternative writ is dismissed.
Crail, P. J., and McComb, J., pro tern., concurred.
*489 An application by petitioners to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on May 14,1936.
