87 So. 601 | Ala. | 1921
August 25, 1915, the Legislature passed the act entitled "An act to establish an inferior court in precincts 15 and 20 in Calhoun county, Alabama, in lieu of all justices of the peace and notaries public with power of justice of the peace, in said precincts," etc., fixing the salary of the judge at $1,200 per annum. Local Acts, p. 93 et seq. September 23, 1919 (Loc. Laws 1919, p. 169), the foregoing act was amended so as to fix the salary of the judge at $1,800 per annum. The county treasurer refusing to pay a warrant drawn on him for the salary at the amended rate, the judge, appellant, filed his petition in the circuit court for a writ of mandamus to require payment. The writ was denied, and the judge has appealed.
Section 281 of the Constitution reads as follows:
"The salary, fees, or compensation of any officer holding any civil office of profit under this state or any county or municipality thereof, shall not be increased or diminished during the term for which he shall have been elected or appointed."
Notwithstanding the direct language of the foregoing provision, it is argued that it was competent for the Legislature to increase the salary of the then incumbent of the office. Salaries of the judges of this court and of other courts of record have been increased during their official terms; but that was done by virtue of the provisions of section 150 of the Constitution, which, taking judges of courts of record without the operation of section 281, and making a special rule as to them, provides, "The Justices of the Supreme Court, chancellors, and the judges of the circuit courts and other courts of record, except probate courts, shall, at stated times, receive for their services a compensation which shall not be diminished during their * * * terms," and then provides that such judges shall receive no fees or perquisites nor hold any office of trust or profit under this state or the United States during the term for which they have been elected or appointed. Commonwealth ex rel. Attorney General v. Mathues,
Justices' courts are not courts of record. Burns v. Campbell,
It is true, no doubt, that whether appellant's court shall continue to exist or not rests within the discretion of the Legislature, and that the Legislature could have abolished the court and created a new court in its place, fixing a new salary for the judge, as the argument for the appellant suggests; but it does not follow that the act of September, 1919, so far as it affected the incumbent of the office, was within the constitutional power of the Legislature, for the Legislature, when abolishing the court set up by the act of August, 1915, could not have continued appellant in office as the judge of the court set up in its place. It would have been necessary to fill the new office by a new appointment or election, in the result of which the appellant would have had no vested interest. Const. § 158. And, even if section 281 of the Constitution might in effect be evaded, that fact would not justify its demolition by direct assault. We can see no escape from the conclusion that the act of September 23, 1919, in so far as it affected the salary for the then current term of appellant, was unconstitutional and void.
The legislative construction of the constitutional provision in question must be considered, the theory being that it entered into the legislative consideration of the act in question; but of course that construction cannot be considered as final by the courts, and can have no effect against the plain mandate of the Constitution. Board of Revenue v. Huey,
Appellant cites Douglas County v. Timme,
Affirmed.
All the Justices concur.