DocketNumber: No. 1470.
Citation Numbers: 45 P. 243, 23 Nev. 216
Judges: Belknap, Bigelow, Bonnieield
Filed Date: 4/5/1896
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The facts sufficiently appear in the opinion. At the general election held in the month of November, 1894, John E. Jones was elected governor of the state and Reinhold Sadler was elected lieutenant-governor. Governor Jones died on the 10th day of April, 1896. Thereafter the relator assumed the duties of the gubernatorial office, and, before the institution of this proceeding, demanded of defendant, as controller, a warrant upon the treasurer for the amount of his salary as the acting governor from the 11th day of April, 1896, to the 30th day of the same month. Defendant declined to draw the warrant as requested, although there is an unexpended balance in the treasury appropriated for the payment of the salary of the governor.
The provision of the constitution bearing upon the subject is as follows: "In case of the impeachment of the governor, or his removal from office, death, inability to discharge the duties of the said office, resignation or absence from the state, the powers and duties of the office shall devolve upon the lieutenant-governor for the residue of the term, or until the disability shall cease." * * *
It is claimed, on the part of respondent, that, when the contingency above mentioned arises, by which the powers and duties of the office of governor devolve upon the lieutenant-governor, no change occurs in the position of that officer. He remains lieutenant-governor, exercising the powers and duties of the governor, but not entitled to the salary attached to the office.
An analogous question was considered in the case ofChurch v. Hopkins,
Again at page 80: "In case of a vacancy in the office, all its powers and duties at once devolve upon the deputy. There remains no other vested with any of its functions. The deputy at once becomes acting superintendent, and his acts are, to all intents and purposes, those of superintendent. *Page 220 He is entitled to the emoluments of the office, the same as though appointed thereto by the governor, etc., as provided by statute. The duties and responsibilities are the same. His acts thereafter are regarded as those of superintendent, and not those of deputy. He is entitled to the salary of the former and not to that of the latter office. The statute precludes the idea that the same person can hold both offices. This would be my conclusion in the absence of any precedents sustaining it. But there are precedents which, though not judicial, I regard as entitled to be considered as decisive of the question under consideration. In the constitution of the state, adopted in 1822, will be found the following provision: ``In case of the impeachment of the governor, or his removal from office, death, resignation or absence from the state, the powers and duties of the office shall devolve upon the lieutenant-governor for the residue of the term, or until the governor — absent or impeached — shall return or be acquitted.' (Const. 1822, art. III, sec. 6.) On the 11th of February, 1828, the office of governor became vacant by the death of De Witt Clinton, the then incumbent of the office, and its powers and duties, under the above provision of the constitution, devolved upon Nathaniel Pitcher, then lieutenant-governor. The question arose whether he was to be regarded, in the exercise of the powers and performance of the duties so vested in him, as acting governor, or in the performance of the contingent duties of lieutenant-governor, and as a consequence, whether he was entitled to the salary of the former office, or the compensation given to the lieutenant-governor for his services as such. It was held by William L. Marcy, then comptroller, that he was to be regarded as the acting governor, and entitled to the salary given by law to that officer. The same questions, under the same provision, again arose in 1829, upon the resignation of the office of governor by Martin Van Buren, and the powers and duties of the office devolving upon Enos T. Throop, then lieutenant-governor, and were decided in the same way by Silas Wright, then comptroller. It will be seen that these questions were identical with that in the present case. We surely shall not go far astray in following the precedents established by these able jurists, wise statesmen and rigid economists." *Page 221 Merriam v. Clinch, 6 Blatch. 5, was a contest for the emoluments of the office of collector of the customs at the port of New York between the administrator of the estate of Preston King, the late collector, and Mr. Clinch, a special deputy, appointed by Mr. King. The twenty-second section of the act of congress of March 2, 1799, authorizes the collector to appoint a special deputy upon whom, in case of the death of the collector, the duties and authorities of the office of collector shall devolve, and for whose conduct the estate of the deceased collector shall be answerable. The analogy between the provision of the constitution of the United States upon the devolution of the powers of the presidential office and a similar provision in the twenty-second section of the statute providing for the devolution of the powers and authorities of the collector upon the deputy was noticed. The court said: "The constitution of the United States (art. II, sec. 6) provides that ``in case of the removal of the president from office, or of his death, resignation or inability to discharge the powers and duties of the said office, the same shall devolve upon the vice-president.' The provision, in this section of the constitution, that the powers and duties of the office of president shall devolve upon the vice-president, is identical, in legal effect, with the provision, in the twenty-second section of the act of 1799, that the authorities and duties vested in the collector shall devolve on his deputy. Three times since the adoption of the constitution the president has died, and, under the provision referred to, the powers and duties of the office of president have devolved upon the vice-president. All branches of the government have, under such circumstances, recognized the vice-president as holding the office of president, as authorized to assume its title, and as entitled to its emoluments."
In Chadwick v. Earhart,
In the statute of March 21, 1891, fixing the salaries of state officers (Stats. 1891, p. 104), the pay of the lieutenant-governor when acting as governor is fixed at $8 per day. From the fact that the legislature appropriated the sum of $1,000 only for this purpose, I am of opinion that this was intended for compensation when the governor was temporarily absent from the state, and not for the purpose of fixing the compensation when the duties of the office devolve upon the lieutenant-governor upon the death of the governor. *Page 223
Relator, as acting governor, is entitled to the salary attached to the office of governor.
Let the writ issue.