(dissenting). The relator having performed the duties of the office of superintendent of the Insurance Department of this State, has a strong equitable claim at least to the compensation which that officer is entitled to receive according to law. It is true that this additional responsibility was assumed by reason of a vacancy in the office of superintendent by operation of law, but under-ordinary circumstances it is not to be assumed that it was contemplated by the legislature that increased burdens and responsibilities should be imposed and performed without any corresponding increase of compensation.
Public officers in this State are held to be mere agencies, and the right to compensation arises from the rendition of the services, and is deemed an equivalent for them. Conner v. The Mayor, 5 N. Y. (1 Seld.) 285, 295, 296; Smith v. The Mayor, 37 id. 518.
Having in view this salutary principle, it follows as an irresistible conclusion that the relator, having performed the services of the chief officer of the insurance department, should be entitled to receive the same compensation as the superintendent who was appointed to that office originally did receive.
The right of the relator, however, to the increased salary depends somewhat upon the construction to be placed upon the law under which he acted in the discharge of the duties of the office of superintendent. The statute in question (Laws of 1859, ch. 366, § 2, as amended in Laws of 1861, ch. 336, § 1), provides, among other things, that the chief officer of the department, the superintendent, "shall employ, from time to time, the necessary clerks tó discharge such duty as he shall assign them,” etc., and " he shall appoint one of the said clerks to be his deputy, who shall possess the powers and perform the duties attached by law to the office of *201principal during a vacancy in such office, and during the absence or inability of his principal.” In the interpretation of this statute we should have in view the intent of the framers and the purpose it was designed to accomplish, without regard to technicalities or strict rules which are peculiarly applicable to a certain class of cases. The intention should be followed when it can be discovered with reason and discretion, although contrary to the letter. Sedg. on Stat. 298; People v. Utica Ins. Co., 15 Johns. 358, 380, 381; Jackson v. Collins, 3 Cow. 89, 96; Potter’s Dwarris, 180.
In a case like this the interpretation should not only be reasonable, but liberal, after considering the cause and necessity of the statute as well as the circumstances which it was intended to provide for. Looking at the statute cited in this aspect, it is difficult to discover any sufficient reason why an officer selected by law to fill a vacancy should not receive the same compensation as his predecessor, whose place he occupies. It is hardly to be supposed that the legislature intended to deprive the successor to the vacant office of the same remuneration which had been fixed for the same services, and to pay which an ample appropriation had been made annually.
Upon a vacancy being created by the resignation of the superintendent, the relator became vested with all the powers and authority of that office to the same (extent as if he had been appointed to fill that office. According to the obvious and unambiguous meaning of the statute, he was obligated to perform the duties of the office as principal, and not as deputy. If he had acted for the principal in case of an occasional absence or disability from sickness, his acts would have been the acts of the principal and not of the deputy. But when the office became vacant by the resignation of the superintendent he did not exercise and perform his functions as a deputy, but as the principal and head of the Insurance Department. He was in fact the superintendent, vested with all the powers of that officer and entitled to all its privileges, among which were the emoluments and perquisites arising from the latter position. His “powers” as deputy were not simply enlarged in a technical sense, but he became, by operation of law, promoted to the higher position. He was the principal, and not the agent as he was when merely a deputy.
The practical working of the system by which the lesser office becomes merged in the greater is familiar in the history of our institutions. By the constitution of the United States (art. 2, § 1, subd, 6) it is provided that “in case of the removal of the president from *202office, .or his death or resignation or inability to discharge the powers and duties of the said office, the same shall devolve on the vice-president.” This provision is similar in legal effect to the enactment •now to be construed, and has been repeatedly applied upon the death of the president. Tinder it the powers and duties of the office of president have devolved upon the vice-president, and no one has entertained a doubt as to his right to exercise the office, to assume its title and enjoy its powers and emoluments the same as the president. His position as president has received universal recognition, and it has never been claimed that he acted as servant or agent of the deceased president, or in any other or inferior capacity whatever. It has been a conceded fact that he held the office of president directly in accordance with the constitution and by virtue of express authority.
Under the constitution of this State (art. 4, § 6), in case of impeachment, removal, death, etc., of the governor, the powers and duties of the office devolve upon the lieutenant-governor, and it cannot, I think, be claimed that under such circumstances the lieutenant-governor was not possessed of all the powers and functions of the governor, and the right to receive the salary of that officer.
The same rule, it is apparent, applies to a deputy superintendent' in case of a vacancy. He does not act as agent of the defunct officer, but has no superior and holds his office by virtue of express provision of law. He is directly an officer of the State, and not the deputy of the officer by whom he was originally designated as deputy.
One of the rights which he enjoys by virtue of the office which is thus conferred upon him is the authority to draw his salary as superintendent. This is derived from the general powers conferred upon him by law, and is one of the incidents to the office itself. I am inclined to think that it is one of the powers conferred by the statute, and that the attempted distinction sought to be made between the right to receive and enjoy and the power to draw the salary has no foundation, and is without any real difference.
If the relator was actually superintendent, and possessed all the powers of that officer, then he was manifestly authorized to employ such powers to receive and collect his salary.
In Merriam, Ex’r, v. Clinch, 6 Blatchf. 5-9, a question arose as to the construction of section 2 of the act of March 2, 1799 (U. S. Stat. at Large, 644), which provided “ that in case of the disability or death of a collector, the duties and authorities vested in him *203shall devolve on the deputy,” etc., and Blatcheobd, J., held that the word “ authorities ” was hroad enough to include the emoluments of the office, and that this word includes not only such powers as are necessary to enable him (the deputy) to discharge his duties properly, but the right and power to demand and receive the emoluments. This word has no more force or significance than the word “powers” in the act now in question, and may be considered as equally comprehensive and controlling.
The right to receive extra compensation where additional duties have been performed, and there was no legal prohibition, has been repeatedly recognized in the general government, and is sanctioned by the opinions of several attorneys-general of the United States, in numerous cases, as well as by adjudications of the court.
In Dickins v. United States, 1 Court of Claims, No. 9, it was held, that a subordinate officer, performing temporarily the duties of another office of a higher grade, was entitled to receive compensation accordingly. It is true, that Dickins held the office of secretary of the treasury ad interim, by appointment of the president, as well as the office of chief clerk, but this does not alter the principle upon which the right to compensation is founded, which was stated by the learned judge to be, that “ he discharged the duties of both offices, and must be entitled to compensation accordingly.”
The relator’s right was equally strong, as he was vested with the powers and obligated to perform the duties of the office of superintendent, by operation of law, under an express provision of a statute which was quite as effectual and conferred as great authority as if he had been appointed. If any difference exists between the case cited and the one at bar, it is in favor of the relator, as he only demands compensation for one office, and not for the performance of the duties of both.
The same principle is upheld in the United States v. Morse, 3 Story, 87; see, also, opinions of attorneys-general, vol. 2, p. 189; vol. 4, 122-145.
The practice and precedent appear to have been in one and the same direction, from the higher officers of the government down to those occupying subordinate positions, that where an officer of an inferior grade, in a case of vacancy, performs the duties and possesses the powers of his superior, that he shall be entitled to the same salary or emoluments as the latter.
This principle of compensation is just and equitable, and I think *204should he allowed to prevail, unless there is some legal difficulty in the way. ■
It appertains to all private contracts for services rendered, that the person performing the service is entitled to a remunerative compensation, and there is no good reason why the State should be exonerated, in its dealings with its officers, from the application of the same just and salutary rule. Certainly the law should not be strained, and strict technical rules invoked, and applied to defeat a claim of such a character.
In opposition to the construction of the law claimed by the relator, an argument is urged, to the effect that if the relator was entitled to the salary of the superintendent, during a vacancy in the office, that he would for the same reason be entitled to the same remuneration, during any temporary absence or inability of his principal to serve. I think that this position, though specious, is not sound, and it is perhaps sufficient to say, that this question does not now arise, and, therefore, does not require discussion. It may, however, be remarked, that it is apparent that the question'in such a case depends entirely upon a different principle, and it is a full, complete and conclusive answer to the point urged, that in the case put, the deputy would act as the agent of the principal, while here, he is the principal himself.
There may be very satisfactory reasons for not paying the deputy the salary of the principal, while the latter holds the office and is entitled to the salary, although there is none whatever for refusing to pay when the deputy has superseded the principal, taken his place, performed all his duties,, and is invested’ by law with all his powers and authority. It cannot, therefore, be claimed, that the statute gives to the deputy the same right to the salary, in case of absence or inability, as it does when there is a vacancy, and. the superintendent has no claim for the salary.
When the relator assumed to act as deputy he did not, I think, thereby obligate himself to perform the duties of superintendent, in case of a vacancy, for the same compensation, and he was not bound by any special contract, express or implied, to that effect. The effect of his position was, in case he became superintendent by reason of a vacancy, to entitle him to all the rights, privileges and emoluments of that office. This was in fact his contract, and nothing less than this, and he by no means occupies the position of a public officer claiming an increased compensation upon the ground that a *205new duty has been cast upon him by the legislature. See People v. Supervisors of New York, 1 Hill, 362, 367.
In the case last cited a salaried officer sought to enforce compensation, extra his salary, for performing an additional service net originally required of him, and it was held that the legislature had declared that the salary was to be deemed a compensation for this as well as all other services. The case cited and the one before us are not at all analogous, for in the former there had been no transfer from one office to another, while here the officer had been placed in another and a different position. This is not, therefore, a case where an additional duty is imposed, but one where the deputy becomes the principal officer.
The learned counsel for the defendant suggests that if an act had been passed restoring to the comptroller all the powers of the Insurance Department, which were previously invested in him, and containing a provision to that effect, it would not enable the comptroller to draw the salary of the superintendent, either alone or in addition to his own salary, and he claims that this is a parallel case.
I think the counsel is clearly mistaken in this respect, and that there is no similarity in the two cases.
An act of the character described would virtually and absolutely abolish the office of superintendent, and hence such a provision would neither add to nor impair its effect. Besides, the lesser office would become merged in the greater, while here the greater office to which the relator was transferred supersedes the lesser.
The position that a mandamus will not lie because no money has been appropriated to pay the relator cannot, I think, be maintained. An appropriation was made for the payment of the salary of the superintendent, whose office the relator fills, and it was the duty of the comptroller to pay the same from this fund.
The relator is entitled to the judgment demanded, and a peremptory mandamus should issue directing the comptroller to issue his warrant for the amount of the relator’s claim, with costs.