188 Wis. 442 | Wis. | 1925
The relatrix is the widow and designated beneficiary of one Albert E. O’Neil, who died while in service as principal of the Oshkosh high school on March 17, 1925, at the age of sixty years and after, thirty years of teaching in Wisconsin schools.
By ch. 459 of the Laws of 1921, creating secs. 42.20 to 42.54, Stats., there was enacted the Teachers’ State Retirement Láw. Mr. O’Neil came within the designated class “A” of said law, namely, one who at the time of the enactment of the law was a member of and entitled to the benefit from the prior created teachers’ insurance retirement fund.
The respondent board, having charge of the computing and certifying of the amounts to be paid out under the law, certified the sum of $2,047.76 as all that was due the rela-trix, and that amount was paid.
The relatrix here asserts a demand that the board allow and certify a further sum of about $6,000 as still due under the law as a death benefit on account of accumulations for
The benefit to be paid on the death of a teacher to the designated beneficiary such as is the relatrix here was provided for in sec. 42.50, Stats., and would be, under the original law, the full amount of the accumulation in the provision of the law next herein quoted.
The particular provision over which the present dispute arises is, so far as material here, as follows:
.42.51 (3) “When any member of class A . . . who has taught at least twenty-five years in the public schools . . . shall become entitled to any benefit derived from the accumulation of state deposits, the benefit shall be increased by the benefit which would be granted at the rates then in force on an accumulation equivalent to the amount of the computation above defined, and such additional benefit shall be paid from the contingent fund.” Stats.. 1921.
The respondents contend that they are prohibited from now recognizing such demand of relatrix by reason of an amendment made by ch. 416 of the Laws of 1923, which added at the end of the last above quoted statute the following language: “This section shall not authorize or include any increase in or addition to the death benefit provided in section 42.50.”
It is argued on behalf of the Annuity Board that the death benefit here involved, payable as it is out of state funds as distinguished from contributions or accretions thereto made by Mr. O’Neil, being originally a matter of legislative grant, can be taken away by subsequent legislative repeal or modification of the law.
Prior to the amendment of 1923 this court passed upon provisions of this statute under a situation similar to the
In State ex rel. Harbach v. Mayor, etc., decided herewith (189 Wis. 84, 206 N. W. 210), it is held that the entire field of education in this state is one of state affairs and regulations rather than one belonging to the local affairs or government of municipalities. Evidently, therefore, when the State by the law of 1921 expressly required (although undoubtedly the same effect would have been reached by its other provisions were such precise provision omitted) that the State on the one hand and the teachers complying with the law on the other should come under certain fixed contractual obligations, the State cannot now lawfully withdraw or be relieved from such obligations by subsequent legislation.
It has been held by this court from an early date that a teacher stands in a contract relation as distinguished from the tenure or holding of a public officer. So held in the State University as to a professor (Butler v. Regents, 32 Wis. 124) ; as to the principal of a high school in South Milwaukee Board of Ed. v. State ex rel. Reed, 100 Wis. 455, 462, 76 N. W. 351; and as to a district school teacher in Clune v. School Dist. 166 Wis. 452, 458, 166 N. W. 11.
In Hall v. State, 103 U. S. 5 (cited with approval in Long Island W. S. Co. v. Brooklyn, 166 U. S. 685, 690, 17 Sup. Ct. 718), it was held that a contract, pursuant to a legislative enactment, between the state and a commissioner to make a geological survey was protected under the federal constitution from impairment or destruction by later legislative action and that such a commissioner was not a public officer, thereby reversing Hall v. State, 39 Wis. 79, which held that such commissioner was a public officer and his office and right to salary could be abrogated by subsequent legislation.
The distinction between contract relationship and that of a public officer is pointed out in a case'holding that an officer in the army or navy of the United States does not hold his office by contract but at the will of the sovereign power. Crenshaw v. U. S. 134 U. S. 99, 10 Sup. Ct. 431. This vital distinction, therefore, between the contract of a teacher and the position of a public officer renders the decision in
It being dear, therefore, that we have here a contractual relationship between the state of Wisconsin and the deceased teacher, Albert E. O’Neil, the rights that accrued to him under the law as it was passed in 1921, and the provisions of which were complied with in all respects by him so as to then entitle him to benefit under its provisions, were of such a nature that it was beyond the rightful power of the legislature, by its amendment by ch. 416 of the Laws of 1923, supra, to take away or modify without the consent of the other party to the contract.
Hall v. Wisconsin, supra, is ample and controlling here if outside authority on the question of such contracts for service is necessary, and we need not, therefore, refer to the long line of decisions maintaining the same doctrine as to other forms of contract such as were passed upon in Superior W., L. & P. C.o. v. Superior, 263 U. S. 125, 135, 44 Sup. Ct. 82.
A similar result to that reached here was arrived at in Allen v. Board of Education, 81 N. J. L. 135, 79 Atl. 101, and Ball v. Trustees, 71 N. J. L. 64, 58 Atl. 111. See, also, 24 Ruling Case Law, 621.
It follows that the repeal by ch. 416 of the Laws of 1923 of the provision in the law of 1921 creating the right to a death benefit such as is here involved and as was determined and upheld in the Dudgeon Case, supra, is in force only as to those coming within the Teachers’ Retirement Law after such amendment became effective on July 16, 1923, and is
By the Court. — Let the writ of mandamus as prayed for issue.