Opinion
No. 35116
Decided May 8, 1957.
Justice of the peace — Act prescribing how fixed annual salary determined — Law of general nature must operate uniformly throughout state — Section 1907.47, Revised Code — Salary determined by county commissioners — Delegation of legislative authority — Constitutional law.
APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Belmont County.
Plaintiff, a duly elected, qualified and acting justice of the peace of Mead Township, Belmont County, filed his petition in the Common Pleas Court of that county, alleging that the defendant Board of County Commissioners of Belmont County, purporting to act under the provisions of Section 1907.47, Revised Code, fixed the annual salary and expenses of the office held by plaintiff at a total sum of $150; that such section is unconstitutional and void in that neither it nor any other section of the Code prescribes any standards or rules governing the exercise of authority stated therein to be delegated to the board; and that the provisions of the statute purport to be of a general nature but cannot have uniform operation throughout the state.
The prayer of the petition is that the section be declared unconstitutional and void, or that so much of the resolution of the board as pertains to plaintiff's salary be set aside and the board be ordered to enter as the annual salary of plaintiff the sum of either $3,600 or $1,000.
The cause was submitted on an agreed statement of facts. The court held Section 1907.47, Revised Code, to be unconstitutional and void and entered judgment for plaintiff.
The Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment.
The cause is now before this court on an appeal as of right and pursuant to the allowance of a motion to certify the record.
Messrs. Lewis Henry, for appellee.
Mr. William H. Irwin, prosecuting attorney, for appellants.
The question presented is whether Section 1907.47, Revised Code, is constitutional. It reads as follows:
"The justices of the peace shall receive a fixed annual salary and such salary shall be determined by the Board of County Commissioners of the county in which such office of the justice of the peace is situated, and may include a fixed annual allowance for supplies, forms, and equipment."
Has the General Assembly, by the enactment of that section, delegated legislative power to the county commissioners by not prescribing any standards or rules governing the exercise of the authority to fix salaries therein vested in the county commissioners?
The defendant board investigated and ascertained the number of cases docketed and fees reported by each of the justices of the peace of the county for a two-year period and fixed his salary based largely on the fees collected during a one-year period. Their annual salaries, as fixed, ranged from a high of $3,600 to a low of $25. The salary of each justice was fixed at substantially his earnings for a one-year period.
Justices of the peace are not now constitutional courts (Section 1, Article IV, Constitution) but are created by legislative authority and may be abolished or their compensation changed at the will of the General Assembly (Section 20, Article II, Constitution), so long as its act is in conformity with constitutional limitations. However, justices of the peace are county elective officers, and an act of the General Assembly relating to the fixing of their salaries is a law of a general nature and must operate uniformly throughout the state. State, ex rel. Guilbert, Aud., v. Yates, Aud., 66 Ohio St. 546, 64 N.E. 570.
The law applicable to this case is expressed, as follows, in paragraphs four and five of the syllabus in the case of State, ex rel. Godfrey, a Taxpayer, v. O'Brien, Treas., 95 Ohio St. 166, 115 N.E. 25:
"4. The General Assembly of Ohio cannot delegate the authority conferred upon it by Section 20 of Article II of the Constitution, to fix the compensation of officers.
"5. The provisions of an act of the General Assembly purporting to confer authority upon the * * * Board of County Commissioners, to fix the salary of county or township officers within certain limits, without providing a uniform rule for determining such compensation in the several counties of the state, are in conflict with Section 26 of Article II of the Constitution of Ohio, and void."
Under the statute in its present form, the Board of County Commissioners in each of the 88 counties could adopt a different formula for fixing salaries, which would not be in conformity with Section 26, Article II of the Constitution. This court is of the opinion that there is a definite lack of direction in Section 1907.47, Revised Code, as to the manner or method of fixing annual salaries for justices of the peace, which renders the section unconstitutional.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
WEYGANDT, C.J., ZIMMERMAN, STEWART, BELL, MATTHIAS and HERBERT, JJ., concur.
Inasmuch as no reasons were advanced or arguments made for reversal of the judgment of the Court of Appeals, I concur in the affirmance of that judgment. However, in such an instance, where admittedly only one side of the questions involved have been presented and the appellant is asking for an affirmance, it appears to me to be not only unnecessary but also unwise for this court to give any other reasons for its judgment. For example, those being advanced in the per curiam opinion herein would apparently have required different decisions from those which were apparently rendered by this court in State, ex rel. Dempsey, Chief Justice, v. Zangerle, Aud., 114 Ohio St. 435, 151 N.E. 194; State, ex rel. Matthews, v. Andrews, 97 Ohio St. 333, 120 N.E. 879; and Board of County Commissioners of Butler County v. State, ex rel. Primmer, City Solicitor, 93 Ohio St. 42, 112 N.E. 145. Although the Primmer case ( 93 Ohio St. 42) has been subsequently followed by this court on at least two occasions and has never been questioned, the Primmer case is not referred to in the report of the Godfrey case ( 95 Ohio St. 166); and the Godfrey case has never been noticed by this court in considering any question of law relating to either Section 20 or Section 26 of Article II of the Constitution. I do not believe that this court should, by dressing it up as other than a consent judgment, lure prospective litigants, other courts and even itself into regarding the judgment being rendered in the instant case as other than a consent judgment. It is elementary that a consent judgment (apart from any effect under the doctrines of res judicata and estoppel by judgment) cannot be considered as a precedent in a later case. 21 Corpus Juris Secundum, 383, Section 209. See 14 American Jurisprudence, 291, Section 75.