This is a mandamus proceeding to compel the officers of the city of Lincoln “to place plaintiff upon the retired lisft of firemen in said city and pay him a pension of $50 a month, and that said pension he dated from April 1, 1904.” No alternative writ was issued, but the respondents filed a generаl demurrer, which was sustained by the district court, and the relator’s application was dismissed. The relator appeals.
In 1895, the legislature, by chapter 39, laws 1895, provided : “That all metropolitan cities and cities of the first
Among other things, section 7, art. IX of the constitution, deсlares: “The legislature shall not impose taxes upon municipal corporations, or the inhabitants or property thereof, for corporate purposes.” State v. Wheeler,
In German-American Fire Ins. Co. v. Minden, supra, the decision rests solely upon the principle that the ordinance considered was void because no procedure for the collection of the tax, other than by a criminal рrosecution, was provided.
In Aachen & Munich Fire Ins. Co. v. City of Omaha, sapra, at page 530, in the commissioners’ opinion, which the court adopted, it is said: “It is admitted by the demurrer that the assessment complained of was made by the tax commissioner of the city of Omaha for municipal purposes only.” Upon thisi hypothesis the oрinion was rendered.
On the other hand, in Gillespie v. City of Lincoln,
Gillespie v. City of Lincoln, supra, has not been criticised or in any manner discredited by this court, and must
We do not understand that by-enforcing the provisions of the statute the credit of the state is given or loaned in aid of any individual or corporation. Section 3, art. XII of the constitution, was intended to prevent the state from extending its credit to private enterprises. Oxnard Beet Sugar Co. v. State,
Section 16, art. Ill of the constitution, provides: “The legislature shall never grant any extra compensation to any public officer, agent, servant, or contractor after the services shall have been rendered or the contract entered into.” The respondents insist that the statute under consideration offends against this part of the fundamental law. A fireman’s pension may be classified as pаrt of his compensation for services rendered, or it may be said that it is paid to him for the purpose of stimulating all those engaged in a like public duty to prevent and suppress the destruction of property and the loss of human life incident to those conflagrations which the utmost vigilаnce may minimize, but cannot entirely prevent in populous cities. Within whichever class the pension may fall, public funds may be appropriated in conformity with legislative authority to pay the fireman, and the money is thereby expended for a public purpose. Gray, Limitations of. Taxing Power and Public Indebtedness, sec. 336; Trustees of Ex
Finally, the respondents contend that, inasmuch as the relator did not serve as a fireman for 21 years subsequent to the enactment of chapter 39, supra, he is not entitled to a pension, and cite State v. Ziegenhein,
The relator also asks that the respondents be compelled to pay him arrears of pension at the rate of $50 a month. Chapter 39, laws 1895, only authorized the payment of a pension to the extent of 25 per cent, of the fireman’s sal
In considering the right of the state to grant pensions, we enter an unexplored field from a local standрoint. In the constitution of 1866, the constitution adopted by the convention in 1871, but not ratified by the people, and in the constitution of 1875, the right of the state to loan its credit to individuals or to grant extra compensation to any officer of or contractor with the state is definitely and pоsitively forbidden. At no time has the policy of the state encouraged the creation of an office-holding class. Rotation in office within the dominant party and rotation in office by the change in party control of state, county, city and village government has been a reсognized feature of our civic life. It was not until 1871 that the congress of the United States seriously considered the subject of reform in the civil service and the creation of a force of permanent employees in government service, and agitation for the payment of рensions to civil officers is a subject of more recent development. The constitutional prohibitions just referred to were not formulated and adopted with a view to the eradication of evil practices then prevalent in the commonwealth. The state has genеrally, to say the least, been frugal in fixing official salaries, and it may have been anticipated that attempts might be made
In applying these limitations to the instant case, it may be conceded that the pension forms an inducement to the individual to enter and remain in the service of the fire department, and that the pension in a sense is part of the compensation paid for those services. 2 Goodnow, Comparative Administrative Law, p. 74; Gray, Limitations of Taxing Power and Public Indebtedness, sec. 336. In this aspect of the case, if no part of the service was rendered subsequent to the enactmnt of the law, the compensation would be a gratuity forbidden by the fundamental law of the state. Mead v. Inhabitants of Acton,
The fact that some firemen earned their pensions by serving a comparаtively short time subsequent to 1895, whereas others were compelled to continue in the service for a greater length of time, does not make the legislation void. The constitutional limitations do not apply to such conditions. The legislature is not restrained from paying unequal compensation for official services so long as its laws with regard thereto are general. Legislation must be couched in general terms, and in its application exact equality cannot always be obtained among individuals. These limitations do not restrain the legislature from apprоpriating money for the benefit of firemen disabled in the service while in the discharge of their duty,- or for the benefit of the widow and the children of a fireman fatally
It therefore seems to us that the writ should not issue in the form prayed for, and ordinarily we would not hesitate to affirm the judgment of the district court It may be the trial court Avas moved by some such considerations to deny the writ, but the arguments of counsel do not so advise us, and, in vieAV of the importance of this case to the pensioners upon the rolls of the Omaha department who have appeared here by counsel, as well as to the relator, we hold that the judgment of the district court should be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed.
