12 S.D. 433 | S.D. | 1900
The only question presented by this appeal is whether the defendant shall receive compensation for his services on the brand and mark committee, in addition to his salary as secretary of state. The state constitution provides that the powers and duties of the secretary of state shall be as prescribed by law, that he shall receive an annual salary of $1,800,
The legislature may undoubtedly impose additional duties upon the secretary of state, or any other public officer, without providing for additional compensation; and there is no limit upon its power to create new offices, for which it may provide such compensation as it may deem proper. State v. Kipp, 10 S. D. 495, 74 N. W. 440. It was hold in California, under constitutional provisions substantially the same as here, that although the constitution is wholly silent with respect to the duties to be performed by the attorney general, secretary of state, controller, and treasurer, and contains no express limitation on the power of the legislature as to the nature of the duties it may impose on these officers, yet a limitation on this power is necessarily implied from the nature of these offices; that such limitation will be found in the general class of duties which the incumbents of similar offices performed in other states before the constitution was adopted; that, in assigning to these officers their duties, the legislature possesses a wide discretion, with which the courts will not interfere unless the duties assigned are in their nature wholly foreign to the office; and that the attorney general was entitled to compensation as a member of the board of examiners, in addition to his salary as attorney general. Love v. Baehr, 47 Cal. 364. Without deciding that the implied limitation defined by the California court exists in this state, or, if it does, that the duties imposed upon the defendant as a member of the brand and mark committee might not have been imposed upon him as