27 Barb. 89 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1858
The learned and venerable relator has presented an argument of much ingenuity and
The application is based upon the supposed inability of the legislature to reduce the salary of a judge during his term of office, after the amount of such salary shall have been once fixed by law 5 and the ground of this alleged inability is, that it violates the constitution of the United States by impairing the obligation of a contract. It is not necessary to deny that the transaction by which a judge accepts the office conferred upon him by an act of the legislature, with a salary attached to the same, and impliedly undertakes the faithful performance of its duties, is a contract, within the meaning of the constitution. The more important question is what is the nature of the contract; what are the conditions embraced in it; and what are the limitations under which it is accepted. The legislature having fixed the compensation, have they not the right to alter it from time to time as the public exigencies require? Is there any absolute, stipulation on their part, either express or implied, that they shall not do so ? Does not the appointee accept the office with a knowledge of this power, and Under an implied consent that its exercise shall be left to the discretion of the legislature ? Is the appointment in the nature of a grant upon sufficient consideration, which the legislature cannot afterwards either revoke or modify? Are there in the case vested rights which cannot be interfered with ? If the office is conferred during good behavior or for life, or until the incumbent reaches the age of sixty years, is the duration of the term beyond subsequent legislative control ? Is the office itself an immortality—to endure forever ? And if the legislature, or the people whom they represent, can abolish the office, can they not shorten the term, or curtail the salary ? Do all public officers, of every grade and description, hold their places by the same immovable tenure, and at the
The argument of the relator, so far as it is founded upon • the supposed incompetency of the legislature to disturb judicial salaries, on the ground that it would interfere with the independence of the judiciary, strikes us as of less weight. It is aimed not so much at the existence of the power as at the expediency of its exercise. It is an argument more properly addressed to the legislature itself, or to the people in convention, than to the courts. It would scarcely answer, we think, for judicial tribunals to overrule and annul legislative action upon considerations of so general and indefinite a character.'
It remains to consider the additional defenses against this . application, which are set up in the comptroller’s return to the alternative writ, and which, being demurred to for insufficiency, are admitted so far as they contain allegations of fact.
The first is, that the relator’s salary has been fully paid. It is difficult to see whether this is intended as an allegation of fact, or of law. If the former, then it negates the averments in the alternative mandamus as to the non-payment of the sums therein mentioned, and is a complete defense to the application. If the latter, then it simply presents the legal question already discussed,
The second defense interposed by the comptroller, is that no appropriation has ever been made by law for the payment of the claim, as required by the 8th section of the 7th article of the constitution. And this we regard as a conclúsive answer to the application. The provision is general and imperative. It embraces all cases where money is sought to be drawn from the treasury of the state. It is designed as an absolute and compulsory restriction upon every disbursement from the treasury, except under the sanction of a legislative appropriation, specifying distinctly the object to which it is to be applied ; thus imposing a salutary and needed check upon the disbursement of the public funds. We think there can be no doubt that this provision is applicable as well to claims against the state, existing prior to the constitution of 1846, as to those subsequent. The reason of the rule is the same, and the mischiefs of a contrary practice are equal in either case. In the case at bar, conceding the existence of a valid claim against the state, there has been no appropriation by law for its payment, and the comptroller would be guilty of official miscon
Wright, Gould and Hogeboom, Justices. ]
The order made at' the special term,- denying a peremptory mandamus, must he affirmed.