delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is аn original proceeding in which the Senate of the Forty-seventh General Assembly (1969) by Senate Resolution Nо. 8 seeks our opinion upon interrogatories submitted to us under article VI, section 3, of the Colorado constitution. We have agreed to answer these interrogatories.
In 1967 the Forty-sixth General Assembly passеd, and the Governor signed, Senate Bill 121 (now 1967 Perm. Supp., C.R.S. 1963, 63-2-28,
et seq.).
We held in
In re Interrogatories by the Governor,
Second Interrogatory: Does section 9 of article V of the constitutiоn which prohibits an increase of “salary or mileage” for any member of the General Assembly during the term for which he was elected preclude the Senators who were members of the Forty-sixth Assembly and whose tеrms have now extended into the Forty-seventh General Assembly from receiving during this biennium the lodging allowance аuthorized in Senate Bill 121?
Answer: No. Article V, section 6, of the Colorado constitution, in effect, provides that “compensation” to the legislators consists of salary and traveling expenses. In re Interrogatories by the Governor, supra. Section 6 prоvides that “[n]o general assembly shall fix its own compensation.” In contrast to section 6 of article V, section 9 of the same article provides that no member of the General Assembly shall receive an increase of “salary or mileage” during the term for which he was elected under any law passed during suсh term. The term “traveling expenses,” while specifically included in section 6, is conspicuously absent from section 9. Only one form of traveling expenses is expressly forbidden to be increased by section 9, thаt is, mileage. Applying the familiar rule of expressio unius est exclusio alterius, it is clear that increases in other forms of traveling expensеs are not forbidden by the constitution.
Nor are the expenses for lodging, as contained in Senate Bill 121, any part of salary. We have said in
In re Interrogatories by the Governor, supra,
that the allowance for lodging applies only to expenses actually incurred, and therefore such allowance cannot be deemed to be salary, аs was the allowance held .to be invalid in
In re Interrogatories,
First Interrogatory: Does the term mileage, as used in section 9 of article Y of the constitution of the State of Colorado apply only to the rate of reimbursement per mile of travel, or does such term apply as well to the total number of miles traveled for which the member may be reimbursed, or the number of trips for which reimbursement may be made?
Answer: The term mileage, as used in section 9, аrticle V, applies only to the rate of reimbursement per mile of travel.
Webster’s Third New International Dictionary
defines “mileage” as allowance for traveling expenses at a certain rate per mile. This definition receives support in the decided cases.
Steenson v. Wallace,
