Cook v. City of Springfield

Loring, J.

The plaintiff was a license commissioner of the city of Springfield under St. 1894, c. 428, for a term beginning June 1, 1896, and ending May 31, 1902. By § 6 of that act it is provided that “ Each city shall pay its board of license commissioners such salaries as the city council, subject to the approval of the mayor, may from time to time establish,” and it is conceded that under that act the license commissioners were to be paid and were not to serve gratuitously.

In October, 1894, nearly two years before the plaintiff’s term of office began, the city council of Springfield passed an order that the compensation of the chairman should be $250 a year, and that the other two members of the board should serve without compensation.

*248In January, 1897, that is to say, in the January succeeding the June when the plaintiff’s term of office began, he and his fellow commissioners petitioned the city council to increase the salary of the chairman, and that a salary be paid to the other members of the board, on which the petitioners were given leave to withdraw. A like petition was made by them in April, 1900, with the same result.

In June, 1900, the plaintiff was appointed chairman and secretary of the board, and served as such during the remainder of his term ; and for the time during which he has served as chairman he has received compensation at the rate of $250 per annum, but he has received no other compensation.

On November 18,1901, the plaintiff petitioned the city council “ to take such action as will result in paying him the annexed bill of $5,000 for services as a member of the board of license commissioners from January 1,1896, to June 1,1901, said bill being at the rate of $1,000 per year.” On this he was given leave to withdraw.

On December 23,1901, the city council passed an order fixing the compensation of the member of the board who acted as chairman and secretary at the rate of $250 a year, and the compensation of the other two members at the rate of $5 per annum, these salaries to be the compensation for services rendered from July 2,1894, to December 31, 1901.

On March 21, 1902, the plaintiff brought this action against the city, to recover the reasonable value of his services as license commissioner from the beginning of his term to December 1,1901, outside of his service as chairman and secretary; and he testified that these services were reasonably worth $5,500, being at the rate of $1,000 a year. The plaintiff also testified to the character of the services rendered by him and that he estimated that he devoted sevent)T-five days each year to the work. The defendant tendered the plaintiff compensation at the rate of $5 per annum, with costs. This was declined. A verdict was ordered for the defendant, and the case is here on an exception to that ruling.

What this court said of assessors in Walker v. Cook, 129 Mass. 577, 578, is true of license commissioners. In that case Endicott, J. said : “ The assessors, therefore, are public officers, in the performance of whose duties the whole community has an *249interest. Towns have no authority to direct or control them, but all their powers and duties are prescribed and regulated by statute ; and, in casé they do not perform their duties, the town has no remedy against them. They are not, in any sense, the agents or servants of the town,' and. the town, by the election of assessors, enters into no contract with them for the payment of their services.”

The plaintiff was not employed by the defendant city, and has not rendered service at its request for which it has come under a contract, as in the case of a city engineer. Chase v. Lowell, 7 Gray, 33. See in addition to Walker v. Cook, 129 Mass. 577, Sikes v. Hatfield, 13 Gray, 347; Farnsworth v. Melrose, 122 Mass. 268.

The plaintiff has been appointed to a public office, which, by an act of the Legislature, is to be filled by an appointment of the mayor of the defendant city, and whose compensation the Legislature has directed the city council of the defendant city to fix and the defendant city-to pay. If that compensation is not fixed the law would issue its writ of mandamus requiring the city council to perform its duty and fix it, Attorney General v. Lawrence, 111 Mass. 90, Attorney General v. Boston, 123 Mass. 460, and when fixed, if it was not paid the law would give the public officer an action to recover it, not by reason of a contract express or implied in fact between the plaintiff and the city, but by reason of the statute which makes it its duty to make the payment. Walker v. Cook, 129 Mass. 577, 579.

The plaintiff’s contention comes to this: Where a public office is created and the compensation to be paid for services rendered by the incumbent of the office is to be fixed by a public body, the omission of that body to perform its duty transfers that duty to the court. It is hardly necessary to say that this is not so.

.Exceptions overruled.