31 Wash. 638 | Wash. | 1903
The opinion of the court was delivered by
— The respondent, who was county superintendent of common schools of Thurston county, brought this action against the county to recover the sum
The article of the constitution defining the appellate jurisdiction of this court provides that “its appellate jurisdiction shall not extend to civil actions at law for the recovery of money or personal property when the original amount in controversy, or the value of the property, does not exceed the sum of two hundred dollars ($200), unless the action involves the legality of a tax, impost, assessment, toll, municipal fine, or the validity of a statute.” Constitution, art. 4, § 4. It will be observed that
The section of the statute which is claimed to be unconstitutional is § 8. of the act of March.19> .1901. (Session Laws 1901, pp. 310, 311.) It reads as follows: -
“Tor each mile actually and necessarily traveled in the-performance of their official duties and in attendance on the convention of county superintendents, called by the Superintendent of Public Instruction, county superintendents shall be allowed mileage as follows: In each county, of the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh,' eighth, ninth, and tenth classes, five cents per mile; in ’ each county of the eleventh class and' all' counties having a higher class number than the eleventh, ten cents per mile; Provided, That no county superintendent shall be':, allowed to charge or collect any fee for the performance of any other duties herein named; Pi’ovided further, That no constructive mileage shall be charged.”
The act is said to be unconstitutional because of the difference made in the mileage x-ates. The specific provision of the state Constitution which is said to be violated by this act is § 12 of art. 1, which .prohibits the legisla: ture fx’onx passing a law granting to any citizexx, or class of citizens, pxivileges or immunities which, upon the same terms, shall not equally belong to all. We cannot think,. howevex’, that this clause of the Constitution has any reference to laws like the one in question. The law was intended to provide a means by which superintendents of the common schools could be reimbursed for the expenses
It is said-also thkt.the act is violative of the fourteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States, in that persons affected by it are not treated alike under like circumstances and conditions. Conceding, without deciding that this provision of the federal constitution is applicable to a case of this’kind, we cannot concede that it is conclusive of the question here. The legislature, instead of providing that the several officers should be reimbursed for their actual traveling expenses, had a right to prescribe that they should receive fixed mileage rates in lieu thereof. Cox v. Holmes, 14 Wash. 255 (44 Pac. 262). Whether the rates fixed operate equally or unequally must depend on circumstances; if, for example, the cost of traveling in counties from .the first to the tenth class, inclusive, is only five cents per .mile, while in the eleventh class and all counties having a higher class number than the eleventh it is ten cents per mile, then the law does not operate unequally ; while, if the cost is the same in all the counties, it does .so operate. But these are matters which the court cannot know judicially, and the legislative finding thereon must be deemed conclusive, at least in the absence of a showing to the contrary, of which there is none in the case before us.
As we find no error in the record which we are empowered to review, the judgment appealed from will stand affirmed.
Mount and Andeks, JJ., concur.