84 P. 671 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1906
Plaintiff, Tout, and one W. E. Hawkins, were, at the general election of 1902, opposing candidates for the office of supervisor of district No. 4 in Tulare county. Upon a canvass of the returns Hawkins was declared elected and a certificate of election regularly issued to him, and he thereupon, within the time required by law, took the oath of office, executed his bond, and, on the fifth day of January, 1903, *181 entered upon the discharge of the duties of such office and continued so to act until the thirty-first day of May, 1904. Plaintiff, within due time after the canvass of vote, instituted in a proper court his contest of the right of Hawkins to hold the office, upon the ground that he had received at such election a greater number of votes than any other candidate, and averring that he was duly elected to such office. A trial was had and judgment went for plaintiff, which judgment became final May 31, 1904. The salary of the office for the period within which Hawkins performed the duties of supervisor under his certificate was regularly paid to him by warrants drawn by the auditor upon the treasury. Plaintiff, on June 28, 1904, demanded of the auditor that he draw his warrants upon the treasury in his favor for the salary covering the period between January 5, 1903, and May 31, 1904, which demand was by the auditor refused. Plaintiff thereupon instituted a proceeding in the superior court of Tulare county in mandamus to compel the issuance of his warrants. Judgment went for defendant auditor, from which, and an order denying a new trial, plaintiff appeals.
The principal contention of appellant is that the salary annexed to a public office is incident to the title of the office, and not to its occupation and exercise. This established principle received recognition in our supreme court in Stratton v. Oulton,
It is suggested that it is possible so to construe section 936 of the Political Code as to hold that the legislature was intending *183 to be generous and thereby give two salaries. This construction can scarcely be maintained, when we consider the constitutional limitation of legislative power in the matter of fixing the compensation of county officers.
We are of the opinion that appellant is entitled to no part of the salary accruing before he assumed the duties of the office; and the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Gray, P. J., and Smith, J., concurred.