having made the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
*104
■ The primary question in this .case, one which underlies the first, second and' third of appellant’s propositions stated above, is, whether an officer appointed for a definite time or du ring-good' behavior had any vested interest or contract right in his .. office of which Congress could not deprive him ? The question is not. novel. There seems to be but little difficulty in deciding ■that there was no such interest or right. The question was before this court' in
Butler
v. Pennsylvania,
■ The case of
Newton
v.
Commissioners,
In
Stone
v.
Mississippi,
In
Blake
v.
United States,
Applying the above, principles, it remains to say that we know of no instance in which their assertion is more imperatively demanded by the public welfare than in this case, and such others as this. If the position taken' by the appellant is correct, then a logical- and unavoidable result is, . that our country, if ever we are so unfortunate as to be again involved in war, will be compelled, after the treaty of peace,- to maintain the entire official; force of the army and' navy, and a host • of -sinecurists in full pay so long as they shall live; either that or to disband the army and navy before the peace shall be made, even this wholly inadmissible alternative being legally possible from one óf appellant’s, positions. It is impossible to believe that, such a condition of affairs was ever contemplated by the framers of our organic or statute law.
The effect of the authorities cited above, is in no respect modified'by section 1229 or by Art. 36 of section" 624 of the ^Revised Statutes. In the first place, if it were granted that those sections mean what appellant claims for them — if they mean beyond question that one- appointed as' a cadet shall never be dismissed by authority of either the executive or the legislature, or by both in- conjunction — yet that fact would
*108
make no difference. The great question of protection to con-traot rights and vested interests, which forms such, an interesting, and important feature of our constitutional law, is not dominated by the- turn of a'phrase. Oyr courts, both state and national, look on these questions through the form to the substance of things; and, in substance, a statute under which one takes office,, and which fixes the term of office at one year, or during good behavior, is the same as one which adds to those provisions the declaration that the incumbent shall not be dismissed therefrom. Whatever the form'of the statute, the officer under it does not hold by contract. lie enjoys a privilege revocable by the sovéreignty at will; and one legislature cannot deprive its successor of the power of revocation.
Butler
v.
Pennsylvania, supra; Stone
v.
Mississippi, supra;
Cooley’s Const. Lim. 283;
United States
v.
McDonald,
In the second place,, section 1229 and Art. 36 of section 1624 of the Bevised Statutes are a reproduction in the revision of the act of July 13, 1866, section 5, supra; and in Blake v. United States, supra, the court decided that that act only operated to withdraw from the President the power previously existing in him of removing officers at wfil, and without the concurrentes of the Senate; and that there was no intention to withdraw from him the power to remove with the advice and concurrence of the Senate. If that construction' of the statute be correct (and we see no cause for altering our view) it necessarily follows that it was not intended to place an officer where he never before had been — beyond the power of Congress to make any provision for his removal even by the Executive who appointed him.
It-is claimed, however, that the construction so given to the act of 1866 was induced by the consideration of certain other statutes in pari materia, and that the reintroduction of it in the revision, unaccompanied by those other statutes,' would render that construction inapplicable now. We do not think so. We,have already considered the act of 1866 in its historical relations,' and from the circumstances of its enactment deduced. its„ meaning. ■ When it was reenacted with' all other *109 statutes .of general interest, the .political exigency which: furnished the primary motive for its reenactment had drifted away with the lapse of time; but we do not think it can avail to give to a statute which, after all, is but a reenactment in the exact language of the original act, a meaning almost directly the reverse of that given to the original act. To give such effect to the action of Congress in codifying the statutes would go far to subvert all decisions and introduce chaos into our jurisprudence.
Thus far we have preferred to decide the case upon the broad grounds above stated, and, therefore, considered it as if the term of office enjoyed by the appellant was what he claims it to have been — a term for life. In fact, however, even if that were true as to other officers, it was not true as to him. The statute applicable to his case is section 1520 of the Revised Statutes, which fixes the academic course at six years; and when he entered the service under the regulations in such cases provided he executed a bond to serve for eight years, unless discharged b}r competent authority, thus recognizing his liability to be- discharged.
As to the fourth proposition of appellant, that in enacting the statute of 1882" Congress assumed the power of appointment which belongs to the Executive, we do not so regard the act. Congress did not thereby undertake to name the incumbent of any office. It simply changed the name, and modified the scope of the duties. This we think it had the power to do.
We think, too, that the appellant came within the terms of the act of 1882. There is- a very plain distinction between this case and that of a cadet engineer, fully explained in
United States
v.
Redgrave;
The judgment of the Court of Claims is
Affirmed.
