It will not be necessary for the decision of this case to review the judgment in
Hoke
v. Henderson,
*285
It is admitted that a lucrative public office is private property, of which no one can be divested except by the law of the land; and it may also be admitted so far as this case is concerned, that after a law has once fixed the tenure of the office, a subsequent Act of the Legislature cannot alter the tenure to the detriment of persons then in office;
e. g.
by converting it from an office during good behaviour, or for four years, into an office for two years. This was the decision in
Hoke
v.
Henderson,
and in
Taylor
v.
Stanley,
It may also be admitted that the Legislature cannot select a particular officer, and by a special law applicable to him alone, deprive him of any material part of his duties and emoluments. This partakes of the nature of a judicial forfeiture without a trial. This was the case of
King
v.
Hunter, 65
N. C. 603. Neither can the Legislature take away the entire salary of an officer.
Cotten
v.
Ellis,
But a public office is property of a peculiar nature. It is said in the opinion of the Court in Hoke v. Henderson, page 20, that if the Legislature should increase the duties and responsibilities, or diminish the emoluments of the office, the officer must submit. Clearly any other rule- would subordinate the public welfare to the interest of the officer. He takes subject to the power of the Legislature to change his duties and emoluments as the public good may require.
When the present plaintiff qualified as Clerk, the Constitution of 1868 was in force, and by § 19 of Art IY, the General Assembly was required to provide for the establishment of Special Courts for the trial of misdemeanors in Cities and Towns when the same was necessary. He took his office therefore with a knowledge that the Legislature might establish a Criminal Court substantially the same with that which they did establish by Act of 1876-’77, ch. 271, under the amended Constitution and of which they made the defendant, Clerk.
*286
Having accepted the office on those conditions, he has not been injured and has no right to complain. His ease is in principle the same with
Head
v.
The
University,
PeR Cukiam. 1 Judgment affirmed.
