73 Minn. 143 | Minn. | 1898
The plaintiff sought, by proceedings supplementary to execution, to reach, for the satisfaction of his judgment, a balance due, or claimed to be due, from the city of St. Paul to the judgment debtor, William Kingsley, for salary as building inspector.
We have repeatedly held that the salary of a public officer cannot be reached by his creditors by legal process. Roeller v. Ames, 33 Minn. 132, 22 N. W. 177; Sandwich Mnfg. Co. v. Krake, 66 Minn. 110, 68 N. W. 606; Sexton v. Brown, 72 Minn. 371. This doctrine is founded on reasons of public policy, which may be all summed up in the general proposition that any other rule would interfere with the efficiency of the public service.
It is sought, however, to distinguish this from former cases by
It is quite noticeable that, so far as we. can discover, none of the courts which hold with us that the salary of a public officer cannot be intercepted by legal process in favor of his creditors, have laid any stress upon the question whether the person was still an officer, or had ceased to be such before the process was issued. Indeed, we have not found any case where the question was alluded to, and in some of the cases it does not appear what the fact was.
It seems to us that the attempted distinction is merely one of degree, and not of principle. To permit money due as salary to a' public officer to be intercepted by legal process after the party had gone out of office could not, of course, affect or change the character of his past services, but such a rule might prejudicially affect the public service generally. The services of public officers are usually not paid for until after they have been performed. They are, as a rule, paid for at stated periods, — as, for example, monthly. There must be almost necessarily the lapse of some time between the expiration of a term of office and the payment of the last instalment of salary, during which, according to the plaintiff’s contention, it would be subject to be intercepted by legal process. The fact that this could be done might interfere with the right of the public to fill offices with the most suitable men, regardless of their financial condition, and might also affect unfavorably the character of the services of the incumbents of public offices, — at least towards the close of their terms of office. We can also conceive of abuses to which it might lead, where the power of removal from office at discretion is vested in some superior officer or body.
It may be, and probably is, an open question whether, under existing conditions, the immunity of the salaries of public officers from legal process benefits or injures the public service; but the doctrine is too firmly established to be overturned by the courts,
Order affirmed.