This action was brought by appellant in the district court of the eighth judicial district against respondent under sec. 7459, Rev. Codes, for the purpose of obtaining respondent’s removal from office as a member of the board of county commissioners of Bonner county and for judgment in the sum of $500 in favor of the informer as provided for in that section.
*306The information sets forth two causes of action. A demurrer, however, was interposed to the first cause of action and by the trial court sustained, which action of the trial court is not involved in this appeal.
This cause was tried to the court without a jury upon the second cause of action. After appellant’s testimony was introduced, counsel for respondent interposed a motion for non-suit which was granted. Judgment was thereupon entered for respondent dismissing the second cause of action. Thereafter a motion for a new trial was made by appellant and by the trial court overruled. This is an appeal from the order of the trial court overruling appellant’s motion for new trial.
There are fifty-seven errors assigned in appellant’s brief. For the purpose of disposing of this appeal, however, we will consider only such as we deem necessary under three heads.
The first error assigned is based upon the action of the trial court in sustaining the objection made by counsel for respondent when respondent was called by appellant for cross-examination in pursuance of the provisions of sec. 1, Senate Bill 28, Sess. Laws 1909, p. 334.
From the record it appears that at the beginning of the taking of testimony appellant, for the purpose of making out his own case, called respondent as a witness; whereupon counsel for respondent objected to respondent’s giving any testimony in support of the information upon the ground that the proceedings were brought under sec. 7459, Rev. Codes, providing for the removal of public officials, which proceeding is in its nature and effect a criminal action, coming within sec. 13, art. 1 of the constitution, which provides that “No person shall be ... . compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.”
The trial court sustained the objection, and this action on the part of the court is fully supported by the supreme court of the United States in the ease of Boyd v. United States, 116 U. S. 616, 6 Sup. Ct. 524, 29 L. ed. 746, and by the supreme court of California in the case of Thurston v. Clark, 107 Cal. 285, 40 Pac. 435. In the latter case the court aptly said: “Removal from office under the summary proceed*307ing provided for by section 772, supra [which is substantially identical with see. 7459, Bev. Codes], is a punishment for wrongdoing by the class of officials designated in chapter 2 of title 2 of part '2 of such code.....In all its essentials of cause and effect, the latter is a criminal proceeding, equally with the former. The proceeding is a nondescript, but resembling somewhat a qui iam action. But whatever its garb, it is in body and spirit, in its aim and object, a process for the punishment of crime. When the constitution declares that no person shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, it must be construed to apply to all cases in which the action prosecuted is not to establish, recover or redress private and civil rights, but to try and punish persons charged with the commission of public offenses. A criminal case is an action, suit or cause instituted to punish an infraction of the criminal laws, and, with this objection in view, it matters not in what form a statute may clothe it; it is still a criminal case, and the person charged therein is protected from being an enforced witness against himself by the aegis of the constitutions national and state.”
The second objection urged by appellant and assigned as error is the action of the trial court in striking out, on respondent’s motion, paragraph 8 of the amended information which charges respondent as a member of the board of county commissioners of Bonner county, and while acting in conjunction with the other two members of the board and performing the duties and functions of a board of equalization, with having knowingly, intentionally and illegally and in violation of sec. 64, chapter 58, Laws of 1913, permitted assessments to stand whereby certain pieces of property were assessed at less than their full cash value.
It must be remembered that this proceeding waa instituted under sec. 7459, supra. This section provides substantially that any officer within the jurisdiction of the district court who has been guilty of charging and collecting illegal fees for services rendered or to be rendered in his office, or has refused or neglected to perform the official duties pertaining to his office is subject to removal therefrom in a summary pro*308ceeding at the instigation of a private citizen in whose favor, in the event of the removal of the public official, a judgment shall be entered in the amount specified in the statute.
Respondent is not charged in said paragraph- 8 with having refused or neglected to perform the official duties pertaining to his office, but he is charged with having knowingly, intentionally and illegally permitted assessments to stand whereby certain pieces of property were assessed at less than their full cash value. If this was done knowingly, wilfully and intentionally, it would constitute wilful and corrupt misconduct in office, and not a failure or neglect of official duty within the meaning of sec. 7459, supra. In other words, respondent, as charged, did not refuse to perform a duty; neither did he neglect to perform such duty; but he is charged with knowingly, intentionally and illegally performing said duty. He is not charged with failure to act, but with acting in an unlawful and corrupt manner. The charge is not nonfeasance, but malfeasance in office, and if it be true, respondent would be liable to prosecution under sees. 7445-7457, Rev. Codes.
Where an official is charged with knowingly, intentionally and illegally performing the duties of his office as a ground for his removal, his good faith or intention in doing the act with which he is charged is a matter upon which he is entitled to be heard in evidence, and the truth or falsity of such charge is for the jury and not for the arbitrary disposition by the court.
If the allegations in paragraph 8 of the amended information be true, respondent necessarily must, as heretofore stated, have performed — not refused to perform — his official duties, and together with the other members of the board of equalization passed upon the assessed property as it appeared upon the assessment-roll of real property of the county. Otherwise he could not have knowingly and intentionally permitted improper assessments to stand.
Had he refused to act at all in regard to this matter, he would clearly be subject to removal under the provisions of sec. 7459, supra; but having acted, if he knowingly, illegally *309and corruptly acted, lie would be subject to removal under secs. 7445-7457, supra, which, among other things, provide that “An accusation in writing against any district, county, precinct, or municipal officer, for wilful or corrupt misconduct in office, may be presented by the grand jury of the county for or in which the officer accused is elected or appointed”; that “the accusation must state the offense charged, in ordinary and concise language, and without repetition”; that “if the defendant pleads guilty, or refuses to answer the accusation, the court must render judgment of conviction against him. If he denies the matters charged, the court must immediately, or at such time as it may appoint, proceed to try the accusation”; and that “the trial must be by a jury, and conducted in all respects in the same manner as the trial of an indictment for a misdemeanor.” Under sec. 7459, supra, a public official who is charged in the information of a private citizen with refusing or neglecting to perform the official duties pertaining to his office is not entitled to a jury trial. But a public officer who, while In the performance of his official duties, is charged with knowingly, intentionally and illegally performing those duties is entitled to a jury trial. His good faith and intention in doing the act with which he is charged are matters upon which he has the constitutional right to a trial by a jury.
See. 64, chapter 58, Sess. Laws 1913, should be construed in pari materia to secs. 7445-7457, supra. While it is true that sec. 64, chapter 58, supra, provides that “Any member of the board of county commissioners who knowingly permits any assessments to stand, or permits any alteration to bé made in the assessment-roll, whereby any property is assessed at more or less than its full cash value, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and of malfeasance in office, for which he may be removed from office in the manner provided by law for the summary removal of public officers from office,” it does not provide for the imposition of a judgment in favor of the informer and against the official in the sum of $500; nor is it amendatory of sec. 7459, supra. For these reasons and in the absence of an express provision to that effect, we *310are of the opinion that it was not the intention of the legislature to extend the provisions of sec. 7459 to include violations of see. 64, chapter 58, su-pra.
The proceedings provided for under sec. 7459, Rev. Codes, are clearly restricted to cases where an officer is guilty of knowingly, wilfully and corruptly charging and collecting illegal fees for services rendered or to be rendered in his office, or of knowingly, wilfully or corruptly refusing or neglecting to perform the official duties pertaining to his office. (Collman v. Wanamaker, 27 Ida. 342, 149 Pac. 292; Corker v. Pence, 12 Ida. 152, 85 Pac. 388; McRoberts v. Hoar, ante, p. 163, 152 Pac. 1046.) And as neither of these offenses was charged against respondent in paragraph 8 of the amended information, the trial court did not err in striking out that paragraph.
In the case of Siebe v. Superior Court, 114 Cal. 551, 46 Pac. 456, the court had under consideration sec. 772 of the California Penal Code, which is practically identical with sec. 7459, Rev. Codes of Idaho, and in that case it was said: “Pen. Code, see. 772, authorizing the superior court to entertain an accusation made under oath by a private citizen against an officer within its jurisdiction, charging him with having collected illegal fees, or with having refused or neglected to perform his official duties, does not confer jurisdiction to entertain such an accusation charging an assessor with having assessed certain property at a sum below its full value; such act, if corruptly done, being 1 wilful and corrupt misconduct in office,’ subjecting the officer to indictment, and, if not, being of a judicial nature, and one for which he is not amenable to the penal laws.”
The third assignment of error complained of is based on the action of the trial court in granting respondent’s motion for a nonsuit. It is contended by counsel for appellant that the evidence was sufficient to support the material allegations of the amended information as found in paragraphs 1 to 7, inclusive, of appellant’s second cause of action, and that the court should have required respondent to introduce proof to establish his defense to those charges which, ■ in substance, *311are that the respondent knowingly, intentionally, wilfully and illegally, while acting with the other two members of the board of county commissioners of said Bonner county, failed and refused to meet, organize and remain in session as a board of equalization from day to day, from the first Monday in July, 1913, up to and including the fourth Monday in July, 1913, as required by law, for the purpose of equalizing assessment of all property entered upon the real property assessment-roll; failed to determine complaints in regard to the assessment of such property; failed to examine the real property assessment-roll, tract by tract, name by name and the value of each item of property; and knowingly and illegally permitted certain pieces of property to escape assessment.
On an examination of the entire record it clearly appears, we think, that respondent met with the other two members of the board of county commissioners as required by law, and thereafter organized as a board of equalization in pursuance of law; that they remained in session as a board of equalization during the entire time required by law; and that the adjournments and reconventions of the board from time to time were not illegal and did not vitiate their subsequent acts. It further appears that the deputy clerk of said board of county commissioners in preparing the minutes of the board inadvertently showed that they were sitting as a board of county commissioners, when in truth and in fact they were pérforming the duties of a board of equalization.
The trial court did not err in permitting counsel for respondent, upon cross-examination, to inquire into the facts as they really were. The respondent was not bound by what the record showed unless it stated the truth.
We have examined the entire record in this ease and have failed to find any evidence in support of the material allegations ofJ appellant’s amended information, upon which this cause was tried, that would have justified the court in refusing to grant respondent’s motion for nonsuit. Finding no error in the record, we have reached the conclusion that the trial *312court was justified in refusing to grant appellant’s motion for a new trial.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed, with costs to respondent.
Sullivan, C. 'J., and Morgan, J., concur.