A demurrer was filed to this petition for writ of mandamus and the case was reserved upon the petition as amended and demurrer thereto for the determination of the full court, all parties having waived any right to file further pleadings.
The petitioner alleges that he was duly elected county commissioner for the county of Worcester by successive elections, the first occurring on the seventh day of November, 1905, and the last on the sixth day of November, 1928; that he and the respondents are the county commissioners of Worcester County; that the respondents have refused to recognize him as a county commissioner, to admit him to their meetings as such commissioner or to permit him to do any act or take any part with them as a county commissioner. He asks that a writ issue commanding the respondents to recognize him as a county commissioner and to permit him to enjoy all the rights and privileges belonging to the office.
It appears from the allegations in the petition that a retirement system for employees was duly organized in Worcester County under the provisions of St. 1911, c. 634, now G. L. c. 32, §§ 20-25, and a board of retirement duly chosen in which the management of the retirement system was vested; that on July 8, 1919, by virtue of the rights conferred on elected officers of Worcester County by St. 1919, c. 158, the petitioner applied for and was admitted to membership therein; that he has paid in full the required
The original act, St. 1911, c. 634, excluded from membership in the system officers elected by popular vote. St. 1919, c. 158, making officers of the county of Worcester elected by popular vote eligible to membership in the retirement association, notwithstanding the provisions of St. 1911, c. 634, § 3, expressly stated that all provisions of that chapter shall “except as is otherwise provided herein, apply to the said officers.” In the reenactment in G. L. c. 32, § 22 (3), of the provision relating to elected officers of Worcester County, the statement that all the provisions of the retirement act “shall . . . apply to the said officers” was omitted. St. 1919, c. 158, was expressly repealed by G. L. c. 282. G. L. c. 32, § 22 (4), permits retirement by the board upon certain conditions of members of the retirement system and then provides “any member who reaches the age of seventy shall so retire.”
The petitioner contends that St. 1919, c. 158, admitting elected public officers in Worcester County to membership in the retirement system; G. L. c. 32, § 22 (3), excepting elective officers of that county from those ineligible to membership in the county retirement system; and St. 1926, c. 378, in permitting public officers elected by the people in Worcester County only, to be classed as employees, are inconsistent with art. 14 of the Amendments to the Constitution: of the United States, as a denial to the elective officers of other counties in the Commonwealth of the equal protection of the law. He also contends that the act, conferring upon elective officers of Worcester County only, the right to membership in a system which grants to its members upon retirement pensions gained in part from a public
In this proceeding, as the question of the petitioner’s title to an elective office with duties to be performed if he is still a county commissioner is in issue, as well as the question whether he is being wrongfully deprived of the emoluments thereof, he may, though a beneficiary under the act assailed, raise the question of its constitutionality. Bogni v. Perotti,
In Vigeant v. Postal Telegraph Cable Co.
In Mayor of Lynn v. Commissioner of Civil Service,
County commissioners are county officers (see Opinion of the Justices,
In Boston v. Chelsea,
In Weymouth & Braintree Fire District v. County Commissioners,
"The counties, towns and cities, into which the Commonwealth is divided, are strictly public corporations, established for the convenient administration of government; their municipal powers and duties are not created and regulated by contract, express or implied, but by acts passed by the Legislature from time to time, according to its judgment of what the interests of the public require; and they have not the same rights to judicial trial and determination, in regard to the obligations imposed upon them, as other corporations and individuals have.” Agawam v. Hampden,
It is well settled that cities established under art. 2 of the Amendments to the Constitution may have different kinds of government, different officers and different modes of electing them. Graham v. Roberts,
Apart from constitutional restriction the Legislature has the power to fix and change the salaries of county officers, to regulate, limit or enlarge their duties, to shorten their
The retirement acts are intimately related to services rendered to the public. When the pension is paid the services have ended, but when the employee joins the system and becomes subject to its obligations he knows that the services which he is to render the public and the contributions which he is to make are conditions precedent to his receiving the benefits of the system upon retirement. See Brown v. Russell,
We are of opinion that the question, whether the public welfare would be promoted by extending the retirement system to elective officers in Worcester County alone, was for the Legislature to decide; that elected officials of other counties have not been deprived of the equal protection of the law under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States by the provisions of the retirement act relating to elected officers of Worcester County; and that these provisions ¡do not give the elected officers of that county exclusive privileges within the meaning of those words in the sixth article of the Declaration of Rights. See Hewitt v. Charier,
The petitioner’s further contention is that the act permitting elective officers to become members of the retirement system, if constitutional, should be so interpreted that the requirement for retirement at seventy years of age would not apply to them if the term of office otherwise fixed by statute would extend beyond that time. As applied to the petitioner who reached the age-of seventy before the
Upon the facts stated in the petition the petitioner ceased to be a county commissioner on September 7, 1931.
The entry must be
Demurrer sustained.
Petition dismissed.
