The office of assessor, by the Revised Statutes of 1887, was filled by election, unless the board of supervisors of the various counties should by ordinance unite and consolidate that office with the office of sheriff. By the Revised Statutes of 1887 the counties were classified into first, second, and third class counties, based upon the number of registered voters. In section 1 of act No. 47 of tbe Session Laws of 1889 the legislature, by statute, made the sheriff of each county of the second and third classes ex officio assessor. The sheriff
Appellant contends that although act No. 24 of the legislative assembly of 1897 provides that the act should not take effect until January 1, 1899, yet, so far as the election was concerned, it took effect immediately after its passage, and that his election at the general election of 1898 was a good and valid election, and that having been duly elected to the office, and having entered upon the. discharge of its duties, he was the legally constituted assessor, and the legislature could not legislate him out of office by changing the manner of filling the office during his term; that act No. 63 of the legislative assembly of 1899 was local and special, and in violation of the inhibition contained in the act of Congress of July 30, 1886, commonly known as the “Harrison Act.”
As to the first point, that it was beyond the power of the legislature to legislate him out of office, we regard it as the settled law that unless the method of filling the office, and the duration of the term, was one of constitutional provision, or unless regulated by act of Congress, the legislature, would have full control of the method of appointment and the duration of the term. Arizona as yet having no constitution, but operating under powers delegated to it by Congress, the Organic Act and the congressional enactments supply for- its legislature the limitation of power. Unless the act of the legislature was such as impaired the. obligation of contracts, there is no constitutional or congressional provision controlling the matter. In the case of Prince v. Skillin, 71 Me. 361, reported in 36 Am. Rep. 325, there is a clear enunciation of this principle:' “All offices, except when legislative authority is limited or restricted by constitutional provisions, are subject to the will of the legislature. There is, with the above exception, no vested right in an office or its salary. The office, may be abolished. The mode of appointment may be changed. The length of time of official existence may be shortened. The compensation for official services may be diminished,” and here cites Farwell v. Rockland, 62 Me. 298; Butler v. Penn
As to the contention that act No. 63 was local and special, and comes within the inhibitions of the act of Congress, the decision of this court in the ease of Bravin v. Mayor etc., 4 Ariz. 83, 33 Pac. 589, seems to us to cover the question. The city of Tombstone was created by act of the general assembly of 1881. The act provided for a city assessor who should be ex officio tax and license collector, health officer, and street commissioner. Bravin was duly elected to the office, and was in the discharge of the various duties incident to it, when the legislature, in 1891, provided that in all cities in which the total vote cast at the general election held therein on the fourth day of November, 1890, was less than six hundred the functions of the city assessor, city tax-collector, city license-tax-collector, and street commissioner should be incident, ex officio, to the office, of chief of police; thus legislating Bravin out of office. This court then held that if the act of 1891 was' held valid it would operate as an amendment to the charter of the city of Tombstone; that the act of the legislature did not reach a class, but it reached only an individual city,—• the only one in the territory to be reached by the act,—and was therefore local and special. The court further said that the classification of cities may be made, based upon population, upon the number of votes cast from time to time, upon the extent or character of particular business or industry done or pursued within its limits, etc., and this eyen though but one. city in the territory comes within the provision of the statute at the time of the enactment. But the statute must be elastic, so that other cities might attain the requisite conditions, and come within the classification and operation of the statute. Legislation affecting such class is not local and special legislation. Act No. 63 related to classes, and specified
Sloan, J., and Doan, J., concur.