66 So. 61 | Ala. | 1914
Article 10 of the Code of 1907 (sections 2210 to 2267 of said Code) creates the state tax commission, fixes the number of commissioners, the manner of their selection, their terms of office, their salaries, and the salary of their secretary. In this chapter the various duties and powers of the commission are enumerated, provision is made for the expenses of the commission, including the expenses of their secretary, and the wages paid stenographers, engineers, experts, and assistants. Sections 2219 and 2220 of the Code deal Avith these particular items of expense, and
An examination of the article and cognate acts of the Legislature will disclose that the commissioners, as general supervisors of the matter of state taxation, are invested with large powers, and are charged with the performance of various and important duties which must necessarily entail upon the commission various expenses for which no express provision ab ante can be made. Section 2222 of the Code provides that: “The entire appropriation for the commission, together with every item of expense allowed therefor, shall not exceed in any one year the total sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, which sum, or as much thereof as may be necessary, is hereby appropriated annually.”
1. The trial judge was of the opinion that the salaries of the three members of the commission and of the secretary of the commission are chargeable ag'ainst said sum of $25,000 provided for in above-quoted section 2222 of the Code. We do not think that, when section 2222 of the Code is read in connection with the other sections of the article of the Code to which it belongs, said section should be given such construction. We think that the Legislature, in said article and in the general appropriation bill which was adopted in 1911, has indicated that it intended the appropriation of $25,000 to be treated as a fund placed by the state at the disposal of the commission for the purpose of enabling them to meet, as they may arise, the vari eras important duties which they are by the law required to perform. The salaries of the members of the commission are fixed definitely by section 2216, and there is in said section an express provision that their salaries “shall be paid out of the state treasury in the same manner as the salaries of other state officers are paid.” The commissioners, therefore*
All other employees and all the other expenses of the commissioners of all sorts are required to be paid by voucher approved by the Governor. As to- the salaries of the members of the commission and the secretary, there existed no necessity for the Legislature to- make appropriation other than Avas made for them in the section fixing the amount of the salaries. As to the matter of the expenses of the commission there Avas a Avise reason for declaring a limit beyond which such expenses should not go.
2. It seems to us that the Legislature, in so far as the question noAv in hand is concerned, has been its own interpreter. In section 1 of the act of 1911, known as the general appropriation bill, Ave find the following:
“Be it enacted by the Legislature of Alabama, that the following sums of money, or so much of each sum as may be necessary, be and the same are hereby appropriated for the purpose hereinafter specified, to be paid o-ut of any money in the state treasury, not- othenvise appropriated, for the fiscal years ending, respectively, on the 30th day of September, 1911, 1912, 1913 and 1914, to wit: * * * (51) For compensation of the chairman of the state tax commission, three thousand dollars for each year; (52) for compensaion of the two associate members of the state tax commission, twenty-four hundred dollars for each year; (53) for compensation*436 of one secretary of the state tax commission, eighteen hundred dollars for each year.”
Endlich on the Interpretation of Statutes says: “Where it is gathered from a later act that the Legislature attached a certain meaning to an earlier cognate one, this is to be taken as a legislative declaration of its meaning there.”
While such legislative declaration is not conclusive as to the construction which should be given a statute, nevertheless, in providing in the manner above shown in the general appropriation bill of 1911 for the salaries of the members of the commission and the secretary, we think that the Legislature solved all doubt about the ■question we are considering and substantially declared that the salaries of the members of the commission and the secretary were not chargeable against the $25,000 provided for in section 2222 of the Code. Section 71 of the Constitution reads as follows: “The general appropriation bill shall embrace nothing but appropriations for the ordinary expenses of the executive, legislative, and judicial departments of the state, for interest on the public debt, and for the public schools. The salary of no officer or employee shall be increased in such bill, nor shall any appropriation be made therein for any officer or employee unless his employment and the amount of ■his salary have already been provided for by law. All other appropriations shall be made by separate bills, ■each embracing but one subject.”
It may be that the provision for the salaries of the members of the commission and the. secretary was unnecessary ; but, as the Legislature saw proper to provide .for the payment of their salaries just as it provided for the payment of the salaries of all other public officials in the general appropriation' bill and which is entitled “An act to make appropriations for the ordinary ex
A critical examination of the above-quoted section 71 of the Constitution will disclose that the Legislature is prohibited, by the express command of the section, from embracing in a general appropriation bill anything but “appropriations for the ordinary expenses of the executive, legislative, and judicial departments of the state, for interest on the public debt, and for the public schools.” Under this same constitutional provision there is an express command also that: “The salary of no officer or employee shall be increased in such bill, nor shall any appropriation be made therein * - * * unless his employment and the amount of his salary have already been provided for by law.”
In this same section there is also an express direction that: “All other appropriations shall be made by separate bills, each embracing but one subject.
It wo-uld seem, therefore, that when, in the general appropriation bill to which we have above referred, the Legislature made an appropriation for the salaries
We hardly think that it would be seriously argued, if the salaries of the commissioners had been decreased by the general appropriation bill of 1911, that such provision had not, in fact, operated upon such salaries in such a way as to affect their actual reduction during the four years in which this general appropriation bill was intended to operate.—Riggs v. Brewer, 64 Ala. 282.
It may be that the act. of the Legislature, in providing for the salary of the secretary in the general appropriation bill, was, because the salary of such secretary is not fixed by the. law, but by the commission itself, abortive. This circumstance indicates, that, as the act creating, the office of .secretary and providing for the payment to him of a salary not to exceed a certain limit, as other officials are paid, the Legislature regarded— perhaps erroneously, because of the above constitutional provision — his salary as being a salary which comes within the purview of the customary appropriation bill, and that its payment should be provided for in such bill.
We are, in passing upon the point involved, not concerned with the question as to whether the creation by the Legislature of the state tax commission was or was not a wise legislative act. The commission was created, and its various powers were conferred upon it, by the act under consideration and cognate acts for the purpose of placing in the hands of those who are called upon to execute our laws which concern the subject of taxation the authority to so equalize the burdens of taxation as to require each citizen of the state to pay into the state’s treasury that toll which, from the character and amount of protection furnished to him by the state, the state has the lawful right to demand of him as a just equivalent for such protection. Salaries are paid to public officials not so much as an equivalent for ser
3. It is, of course, the rule shown by provisions in the Constitution itself that appropriation bills shall be
4. It follows from what we have above said that, in our opinion, the trial court committed reversible error in sustaining the demurrer to the petition of appellant.
The judgment of the trial court is therefore reversed, and the cause is remanded, to the court below for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.