The defendants were justices of the peace, and by virtue of their office (Code, sec. 2014) were a board of supervisors and were required to look after the public roads in their townships. They *Page 482 were required also (Code, sec. 2015) to hold stated meetings for the purpose of consulting on the condition of the roads, and, by section 2024 of The Code, to make to the Superior Court at term time an annual report of the condition of the roads. The General Assembly of 1897 in chapter 514 undertook to repeal the provision of The Code, above referred to, as to Hertford County, and to impose upon others the duties required of the defendants. The defendants after the enactment of the act of 1897, failed and refused to discharge the duties enjoined upon (700) them under the provisions of the former law (The Code), and they were indicted on account of such failure and refusal. The act of 1897, in its entirety, is contrary to the provision of our State Constitution and is therefore void. In the act a tax for making, repairing and keeping up the public roads of Hertford County, a necessary county expense, was authorized to be levied upon property, solely. The constitutional equation between the tax on the poll and that on property was not observed. It was contended here by the counsel of defendants that a part of the act was in conformity to the Constitution, and that such part should be upheld, but upon a careful reading of each of its provisions it is manifest that they are all interdependent. The county commissioners had refused from the beginning to act under the law of 1897, and hence the question of the appointment of the officers prescribed by that act, in place of the defendants, and the consequent effect of such appointment does not arise.
The whole act appears on its face to be one common plan for working the public roads of Hertford County, and the enforcement of its provisions depends entirely upon the tax provided for in the first section, and that section being void because it disregards the equation of taxation between property and the poll, the whole act fails.
The question for decision then is, Is one who is a public officer under a former provision of law compelled under pain of indictment and punishment to perform the duties of the office during the time when there was on the statute books a subsequent act unconstitutional in all of its provisions? The matter is an important one both to the public and to the individual. With us, public office is a public trust and public officers are merely the agents of the people. This fundamental (701) principle of republican government may not always be recognized by the officer, but it is nevertheless the true theory. When the people, through their representatives, create a public office and prescribe the duties of the officer, the people act for the common good and the incumbent of the office is the mere instrument used for the general welfare. His gain or profit is not in contemplation of the lawmakers. The public interest is the chief consideration. What an anomalous state of things would we have then, if a person believing himself to be a public *Page 483 officer, because of the discharge of the duties which he thought he owed to the public, should afterwards be indicted and punished because the courts had held the act, which created the office and prescribed its duties, to be against the provisions of the Constitution and void. Such a proposition would be equivalent to declaring that the individual officeholder must be wiser than the whole people represented in their General Assembly. Such a proposition to us seems opposed to every idea of justice. It could not be true. The criminal law cannot be invoked to punish one who acts as a public officer — as an agent of the people — and who in the discharge of a public duty had obeyed an act of the lawmaking power even though the law be unconstitutional, unless the act itself had required the committal of a crime — a thought which could not be entertained for a moment. And it makes no difference that in the case before the court the defendants are indicted for a refusal to perform certain duties under a former law attempted to be repealed by a subsequent unconstitutional statute and not for doing positive acts under an unconstitutional law. The principle is the same in both cases. The defendants here cannot be punished under the criminal law for failing and refusing to perform the duties of an office which (702) office and the duties pertaining to it had been sought to be repealed by a subsequent act of the Legislature, afterwards declared by the courts to be unconstitutional. Until the subsequent statute was declared to be unconstitutional by competent authority, the defendants, under every idea of justice and under our theory of government had a right to presume that the lawmaking power had acted within the bounds of the Constitution, and their highest duty was to obey.
It is not necessary to a proper determination of this case to go into the realm of the effect of contracts, executed or executory, made by a person claiming to be a public officer, but where there is no lawfully created office. The counsel for the prosecution cited to the court in support of his position the case of Norton v. Shelby County, 118 U.S. 425, and especially to that portion of the opinion wherein it was declared by the court that "an unconstitutional act is not a law; it confers no rights; it imposes no duties; it affords no protection; it creates no office; it is in legal contemplation as inoperative as though it had never passed." The opinion in that case was rendered upon the effect of an executory contract made by one who claimed to be a public officer, the office having been created without authority of law. For the reasons given in this opinion, the case of Norton v. Shelby County, supra, does not apply to the facts in this case.
Upon the special verdict the judgment of the court below was that the defendants were not guilty, and the judgment is
Affirmed. *Page 484
(703)