Robert Smith was elected one of the justices of the peace for Sweetwater County, Wyoming, in one of the justice’s and constable’s precincts of said county, also designated as election district number three, which comprised two election or polling precincts. The justice’s precinct was established by order of the county commissioners on the 6th day of October, 1892, and the election was held November 8, 1892. Said Smith qualified as such justice of the peace on or about the 4th day of January, 1893, and on the 7th day of February, 1893, the board of county commissioners of the county adopted the following order: “On motion made by Thos. Sutton and seconded by B. P. Maxon, Rock Springs justice *479precinct Nos. 1 and 2 — district number three — are hereby made a salaried precinct from Feb. 1st, 1893.” At the same meeting, the county board audited and allowed the bill of said Robert Smith, the justice of the peace of said precinct, for the sum of $15.00 for office rent for the month of February, 1893. The action brought by the plaintiff in error was, in effect, to enjoin the board from making the precinct a salaried precinct and from making any further payment of office rent to said justice of the peace. The district court gave judgment for the plaintiff in error upon the pleadings, as to the second cause of action of his petition, containing this allegation of the unlawful allowance for office rent, and enjoined the board of county commissioners from auditing and allowing any bill presented by the said Robert Smith, justice of the peace for office rent, but overruled the motion for judgment on the pleadings as to the first cause of action seeking an injunction against any future action of the board in acting upon its order making the precinct a salaried precinct. The court also overruled the demurrer of plaintiff in error to the answer of the defendant in error. Upon trial on the issues joined as to said first cause of action of the petition, the court found for the defendant in error, and the plaintiff in error seeks a reversal of that judgment.
The action of the court below in disposing of the motion for judgment on the first cause of action for the plaintiff, and in overruling his demurrer to the answer of the defendant may be reviewed with the evidence, as merely the questions of law involved in the case were passed upon by the trial court in the disposition of the preliminary questions, and the facts alleged in the pleadings are substantially those proven on the trial. It appears that the dispute in this case is as to the effect of the order of the board of county commissioners, and also its validity. It is insisted that the order of the board was an attempt to increase the emoluments of the said Robert Smith as a public officer after his election and appointment, in violation of the inhibition contained in Sec. 32 of Art. 3 of the Constitution, to that effect, and the *480case of Burns v. Board of Commissioners, 3 Wyo., 691, is invoked as decisive of the ease at bar. It is further maintained that the order of the board was retroactive and indefinite, and void for uncertainty.
While the order of the hoard of commissioners declaring the precinct a salaried precinct is not precise or exact in its terms, as it does not state the population of the precinct or determine the amount of the salary of Smith as justice of the peace, the subsequent action of the board determines that. Iiis salary fixed was evidently allowed at the rate of $750 per annum, the lowest amount fixed by statute as a salary in any precinct. Under the terms of the constitution, justices of the peace must be paid fixed and definite salaries in precincts having a population of 1,500 or more, but in precincts containing less than that population they are to receive fees. Where a salary is received by a public officer, he must account for and pay into the county treasury of the proper county all fees received by him in the discharge of his official duties. Con. Wyo., Art. 14, Secs. 1-2. The statute enacted to carry into effect this constitutional provision provides fees for justices of the peace in precincts containing less than 1,500 population, and salaries for such officers in precincts containing more than that number of people, and these salaries are graded according to population; those in precincts containing between 1,500 and 3,000 people being fixed at $750 per annum, and those in precincts containing over 3,000 people at $1,200 per annum. Chap. 55, Sess. Laws 1890-91, Sees. 11-12. As a guide for ascertaining the population of a precinct, this statute declares in See. 14 thereof that: “Humber of inhabitants or population of a precinct for the purpose of this chapter shall be ascertained by a reference to the census thereof by the United States or the State of Wyoming, whichever shall have been last taken. In precincts in which the official records of the census as aforesaid do not show the population, or the population cannot be ascertained therefrom, the presumption shall be, until overcome by satisfactory evidence to the board of county commissioners, that the population thereof is less than fifteen hundred.”
*481TRe “evidence satisfactory to the hoard” is that of two of its members. One of them was registry agent of the election district, which was the same in territorial extent as a justice’s precinct, and which contained two polling or voting precincts. He was a resident of Rock Springs, and stated to the board that the registration of voters in the election district for the two voting precincts thereof at the election of 1892, in which Smith was elected justice of the peace,, which was eo-extensive with the limits .of the election district, and which is called the south side justice’s precinct, was 751. This of itself, applying the ordinary rules of computing the total population from the voting population, would seem to indicate that the election district or justice’s precinct contained a population of over 1,500, even taking into account the fact that the elective franchise was exercised by women as well as ‘men. But the reason for the action of the board is based upon the further fact that according to the decennial Federal census of 1890, the last official census, whether state or national, that' was taken, the town of Rock Springs contained a -population of 3,300, and that two-thirds of this population was to be found in the south side justice’s precinct, established on October 6, 1892. This fact, with the additional one that the-town has largely increased since the census of 1890, would seem to be decisive of the matter, and to show that the population of the justice precinct of the south side of Rock Springs contained a population largely in excess of 1,500 at the time of the general election of 1892, when Robert Smith was elected justice of the peace of said precinct or election-district.
This evidence adduced before the board, coupled with the intimate knowledge of a majority of the county board of the-population of the town of Rock Springs, would - seem to be “satisfactory evidence.” It is tolerably clear, under the statute, that the population of the election district and justice’s precinct could be ascertained from the census of 1890, as the whole population of the town was shown to be 3,300, while that of the justice’s precinct was two-thirds , of that, or 2,200, taking into consideration the fact that there had been no de*482crease’of the population of this flourishing community between the time of taking the census and the election of 1892.
m effort was made on the part of the plaintiff in error to show that the commissioners erred in the determination of the fact that the justice’s precinct contained over 1,500 population at the election of 1892, when Smith was elected a justice of the peace. The complaint is made that the hoard did not proceed upon satisfactory evidence. It is not claimed that the precinct contained a population of less than fifteen hundred at the time of Smith’s election. In the absence of proof showing that tlie board erred in its- determination of the fact, we think that its action'ought not to be set aside. The evidence was deemed satisfactory to the board. True, it might not have been deemed sufficient in a court of justice in an original action therein, but it is clear that the board acted honestly, with authority derived from the statute, and with sufficient knowledge to determine the matter. Until the determination of the board of the matter upon evidence satisfactory to it, the presumption was that the precinct contained less than the required population for a salaried precinct, but this presumption could be rebutted at any time. The ascertainment, of the fact of the population of the precinct was as it existed at the time of the election of Smith as justice of the peace, not of the date of the order of the board, or as of February 1, 1893’, when it was directed to take effect. There was no increase of the salary or emoluments of the official after his election or appointment. The salary was based upon the existence of the requisite population at the time of the election to make the precinct one where á salary could be paid to the precinct officers, instead of fees. It is shown that the salary was larger than the fees would have been. ■ But as the precinct was entitled to be made a salaried one at the time of the election of Smith, and subsequent action of competent authority declared it to be so, notwithstanding the order of the board recites that it was to take effect from the 1st of February, 1893, instead of at the time of the commencement of his official term on the 4th of January preceding, we do not think that there.was an *483increase of the emoluments of tire official after Iris election and appointment, as the order of the board must be construed as taking effect from the commencement of the term. The whole matter is to be determined by the existence of a fact occurring at or immediately before the election of the official, not a fact existing at the time of making the order, and in this respect the case is clearly distinguishable from that of Burns v. Board of Commissioners, supra, where it was held that a fact occurring after the election of the officer and during his official term — that is, the increase of the assessed valuation in the property of the county — could not'serve to increase the salary of the officer, which was determined by the assessed valuation of the county as it existed at the time of his election. Monroe v. County of Luzerne, 103 Pa. St., 278; Apple v. Crawford Co., 105 Id., 303, cited in Burns v. Board of Commissioners, supra. The order of the board, so far as Smith is concerned, making the office a salaried one from February 1, 1893, about a month after the beginning of Smith’s official term, may have been caused hy the fact which appears in the evidence that Smith was absent from his precinct from the date of his qualification for the remainder of the month of January, 1893, and made no claim for h‘is fees or salary for that month.
We are-constrained to hold that the order of the board’was based upon the population of the precinct at the time of the election of Smith, and not as of February 1, 1893, and that it should be so considered, and that Smith was and is entitled to a salary instead of fees, as in fact his precinct, but recently established, contained at the time of his election sufficient population to entitle its officers to a salary in lieu of fees, and that the determination of this fact, made within a-reasonable time, by competent authority, was required by the -law and the’ constitution itself, and is not to be considered as an attempt to increase or as increasing the emoluments of the officer after his election.
The 'judgment of the’ district court of Sweetwater county for- the- defendant in error must be affirmed.
Costawáy and ClaRK, JJ., concur.