By the Court,
This is an application for a writ of mandate requiring the state controller to draw his warrant in favor of rela
During all the times mentioned, and previously thereto, he was acting as stenographer in the attorney-general’s office, and received from the state for his services in that connection $100 per month. An act approved February 8, 1908, authorized the attorney-general to appoint deputies, but did not provide for the payment of any compensation to them by the state. On July 6, 1908, relator was appointed and qualified, and has since served as deputy attorney-general.
In the general appropriation bill approved March 22, 1909, there was appropriated, with other numerous items for the support of the government of the state for the years 1909 and 1910, for salary of stenographer in the attorney-general’s office $2,400, and for salary of the deputy attorney-general $4,800. (Stats. 1909, c. 140.)
In an act approved March 23, 1909, section 1 provides that "from and after the passage of this act the salary of the deputy secretary of state shall be $2,400 per annum, payable out of the general fund,” and section 2 that "the salary of one deputy attorney-general is hereby fixed at $2,400 per annum, payable out of the general fund in the same manner as salaries of other state officers are paid.” (Stats. 1909, c. 159.) Another act, approved March 22, 1909, provided that " from and after the passage of this act, the salary of the private secretary to the governor shall be $2,400 per annum, payable out of the general fund.” (Stats. 1909, c. 141.)
The general appropriation bill for 1909 and 1910 appropriated for the salary of the governor’s private secretary $4,800, and a like amount for the deputy secretary of state, sufficient to cover the salaries of those deputies as increased for the full period of two years, and including the time within the two years prior to the passage of the acts increasing the salaries; but it does not appear that they, or others, excepting the relator, who had their salaries increased by the legislature, and for whose salaries
It is claimed that under this general appropriation bill approved March 22, 1909, appropriating $4,800 for the salary of the deputy attorney-general for two years, and under the act of March 23, 1909, fixing the salary of one deputy attorney-general at $2,400 per annum, payable out of the general fund in the same manner as salaries of other officers are paid, the relator is entitled to draw the full $4,800 for the two years, and more particularly that part of it running at the rate of $200 per month, from the 1st of January to the 22d of March, 1909, during which time he served both as deputy attorney-general and as stenographer in the attorney-general’s office, and during which period he was paid only as such stenographer. As money cannot be paid out of the state treasury except under an act of the legislature indicating an intention that it shall be paid, the question arises whether there is anything in these acts which indicates that the legislature intended to pay the relator for services as deputy attorney-general for the part of the year previous to the passage of the acts, during which he was acting and received compensation as stenographer.
We find nothing in either of the acts which evinces such an intention. The setting apart in the general appropriation bills of various funds to cover the payment of salaries and the payment of other expenses of running the state government, while it may reserve the money for that purpose, does not, in itself, authorize the payment of the money from the fund. Notwithstanding the appropriations in the general appropriation bill, claims, for instance, for fuel and stationery, or for salaries, would not be payable until the stationery and fuel or the services had been furnished, and part or all of them might never be furnished, and the paying out of the various sums appropriated is ordinarily, and in the absence of
As we held in State v. Eggers,
At the time of preparing and introducing the general appropriation bill, the legislature probably did not know the exact date upon which the bill providing the salary for the deputy attorney-general would be approved and become effective, and for that reason could not provide in the general appropriation bill the exact amount neces
We think the mere appropriation of the $4,800 for the two years, considered in connection with the act passed one day later, did not authorize the controller to draw warrants for salary for the period prior to the passage of the acts. We are unable to say that it was the intention of the legislature to pay the deputy attorney-general for the services rendered prior to such passage. Words in a statute simply specifying that an officer shall receive a designated compensation have no retroactive effect, unless there is something in the language indicating it. It is the rule ordinarily that the mere designation of an amount in the general appropriation bill sets apart the sum specified, so that it may be used to pay some indebtedness of the state authorized and incurred under some other statute. We think the mere setting apart of the money in the general appropriation bill for the two years is too vague to indicate an intention on the part of the legislature to pay the relator a salary for a period prior to the passage of the act. and while he was drawing salary from the state for services rendered in another capacity.
The statement of the court, and cases cited in the case of State v. LaGrave,
See, also, Bradley v. Esmeralda County,
The application for the writ is denied.
