Section 374 of Wyo. Comp. Stat. 1920 provides, among other things, that the national guard of Wyoming shall par*404ticipate in encampments, maneuvers etc. at least 15 days in each year unless excused by the secretary of war.
Sections 386 and 387 provide that:
(Sec. 386) ‘ ‘ For each twenty-four hours duty during encampments, maneuvers, or other exercises, each officer and enlisted man of the national guard of Wyoming shall receive, while so engaged in such duties, the same pay and subsistence, transportation and travel allowances, as officers and enlisted men of corresponding grade and rank of the regular army are, or may be, entitled to by law, and in addition thereto, each enlisted man shall receive one dollar per day. And for each day a troop of cavalry or battery of artillery or mounted detachment is actually in encampment, maneuver, oh other exercises, or enroute to or from the same, not exceeding in all thirty days, for each encampment, maneuver, or other exercises, there shall be allowed not to exceed one dollar and fifty cents per day for each horse actually and necessarily used, not to exceed one horse for each officer and enlisted man: provided, that all vouchers for transportation, subsistence, medical attendance (when not rendered by a medical officer of the service), supplies and quarters, and for the use of horses for the troops, shall be forwarded to the adjqtant general, if to be paid for from the state funds, and to the United States disbursing officer if to be paid for from federal funds: When audited by the adjutant general and approved by the governor, the said vouchers shall be paid from the fund appropriated for that purpose; provided further, that if any payment for such encampment, maneuver, or other exercises, or allowances for horses, authorized to be paid for from federal funds, no payment shall be made from state funds except the one dollar per day additional pay for enlisted men. ’ ’
(Sec. 387) “Payments made from state funds under the preceding section, shall be made by the adjutant general. No vouchers for any such payments shall be audited unless *405certified as correct by the proper commanding officer and audited and approved as provided for in the preceding section ; pay rolls of companies, troops and batteries, and also the field and staff officers, non-commissioned officers of the staff, and bands of regiments, shall be furnished and certified to by commanding officers of such organizations. Payments made from federal funds shall be governed by rules and regulations prescribed by the war department. ’ ’
The state constitution contains the following provisions:
Art. Ill, Sec. 35:
“Except for interest on public debt, money shall be paid out of the treasury only on appropriations made by the legislature, and in no case otherwise than upon warrant drawn by the proper officer in pursuance of law. ’ ’
Art. XVI, Sec. 7:
“No money shall be paid out of the state treasury except upon appropriation by law and on warrant drawn by the proper officer, # *
Art. Ill, Sec. 34:
“The general appropriation bills shall embrace nothing but appropriations for the ordinary expenses of the legislative, executive and judicial departments of the state, interest on the public debt, and for public schools. All other appropriations shall be made by separate bills, each embracing but one subject. ’ ’
Art. XVII, Sec. 2: “ The legislature shall provide by law for the enrollment, equipment and discipline of the militia to conform as nearly as practicable to the regulations for the government of the armies of the United States. ’ ’
The general appropriation act of 1923, making appropriations for the two-year period ending March 31, 1925, *406contains the following item: “Militia contingent, fifty thousand dollars. ’ ’ Laws 1923, C. 115, Sec. 9.
The same legislature, by a separate act, appropriated the sum of $300 “to pay members of the National Guard in Federal Service.” Laws 1923, C. 108.
Pursuant to section 374, supra, the national guard, which is the enlisted and organized militia of the state, was called into encampment and maneuvers for a 15-day period during the month of July, 1923, and the state paid to each enlisted man $1 per day for that period in accordance with the provisions of sections 386 and 387, supra, on vouchers audited by the adjutant general and approved 'by the governor. The state auditor in authorizing the payment of said vouchers, ordered them to be paid, and they were paid, from the appropriation of $50,000 for “Militia Contingent,” as made by section 9, supra, of chapter 115 of the laws of .1923, the auditor claiming that that appropriation, and no other, was available for that purpose.
The adjutant general, as relator, seeks by mandamus to compel the state auidtor, as respondent, to credit back to the “Militia Contingent” appropriation the amount so paid from, and charged against, that appropriation. The ease has been heard on respondent’s demurrer to the petition.
The .relator contends that sections 386 and 387, supra, make a continuing appropriation of the general funds of the state to pay the amount in question, and that the said payments should be charged against the general fund so appropriated for that purpose, and not against the appropriation for the militia contingent. In support of the contention that sections 386 and 387 make a continuing appropriation the relator relies on State v. Burdick, 4 Wyo. 272, 33 Pac. 125, 24 L. R. A. 266. In that case it was held that an act of the legislature which provided that “the state examiner shall receive an annual salary of $2000, * * * which shall be paid by the treasurer of the state in the same manner as other salaries * * * of state officers are *407paid,” constituted a continuing appropriation of an amount sufficient to pay said salary. The court noticed the constitutional requirement that the legislature shall provide by law for the appointment of a state examiner whose compensaiton, as fixed by law, cannot be increased or diminished during the term for which he is appointed, and the decision, in so far as it may be thought to have been influenced by the constitutional provisions prohibiting the diminishing of salaries, would not be in point in the ease at bar. However, it was not held in State v. Burdick that the constitution itself made an appropriation or dispensed with the necessity of an appropriation to pay the salary of the state examiner, but that the statute in question was an appropriation for the payment of the salary within the meaning of section 35 of article 3 and section 7 of article 16 of.the constitution. The court said that the constitutional requirement that no money shall be paid from the treasury except on appropriations made by the legislature or by law, means that no money shall be paid out of the treasury except in pursuance of law; that an act of the legislature directing the state treasurer to pay the amount of an annual salary of a public officer may be held to be an appropriation of a sufficient amount of money to make the required payments, and that such an appropriation is continuing and perpetual so long as the statute is unrepealed. The appropriation was said to be implied from the direction to the treasurer to pay.
No doubt these principles need not be confined in their operation to cases of salaries. In deciding whether there has been an appropriation by statute, either for the payment of a salary or for some other purpose, we must seek to discover the legislative intention .as expressed in the law. In the case of salaries which could 'not lawfully be diminished, the court would hesitate to attribute to the legislature an intention to refuse an appropriation, and the conclusion that an appropriation was intended might, therefore, be reached more readily in salary cases than in some *408others. The salary directed to he paid by the act considered in State v. Burdick was a fixed and definite annual amount. In the ease at bar, the payments to be made to enlisted men, while definite as to the amount for each man per day, is not definite as to the number of men, nor as to the term of the service, but depends for those matters on the rules and orders of the Department of War. It might be urged that the decision in State v. Burdick is not authority for holding that an appropriation can be implied from a direction to pay claims of the kind here involved; and that, to constitute an appropriation in a case like this, the maximum amount to be paid must be fixed by the law. We do not think it necessary to our decision in this ease, to pass upon the question thus suggested, but deem it sufficient for present purposes to say that an intention to make an appropriation would be more readily implied in a case where the claims to be paid were fixed and; definite than in a case where the amount to be drawn from the treasury could not be foretold.
So far as we are advised, the authorities are unanimous in holding that a statute merely creating an obligation — a promise or duty to pay a claim against the state — is not an appropriation of state funds: for the payment of the claim, and will not authorize the state officials to draw a warrant for that purpose. Restine v. State, 20 Ind. 328; State v. Moore, 50 Nebr. 88, 69 N. W. 373, 61 Am. St. Rep. 538. While it was settled by State v. Burdick that the legislature had the power under the constitution to pass a law that would operate as a continuing appropriation until it is repealed, it was made clear by that case, and must have been since understood by the legislature, that such an appropriation for the payment of a continuing or recurring obligation must embody a direction sufficient to authorize the officers of the state to draw and pay the warrants therefor without any further appropriation. In'the absence of such a direction in the law, it must be assumed to have been intended that each legislature should make an appropriation *409sufficient to meet the obligation, and if the contemplated or promised appropriations are not made, it is not within the power of the courts to order the obligation discharged from funds that have not been appropriated. State v. Carr, 127 Ind. 204, 26 N. E. 778, 11 L. R. A. 370, 22 Am. St. Rep. 624.
Sections 374, 386 and 387, supra, were enacted by the legislature of 1917. Laws 1917, C. 107, §§ 23, 35-36. Under the principles that we have stated, the declaration in section 386 that enlisted men “shall receive one dollar per day, ’ ’ and that, with that exception, under the stated conditions, no other payment should be made from state funds, does not, in our opinion, make an appropriation. By the general appropriation act passed by the same legislature (Laws 1917, C. 125, § 12) an appropriation was made to meet the claims that would arise under section 386 during the years 1917 and 1918, and we believe it was intended that similar claims during future years should be paid from appropriations by succeeding legislatures. Aside from the authority to draw and pay warrants pursuant to the appropriation made by the general appropriation act, the laws of 1917 contained no direction to the proper officers for the payment of claims to arise under section 386. It is provided in section 387 that payments to be made from state funds under section 386 shall be made by the adjutant general. But state funds are in the custody of the state treasurer and are disbursed only on warrants drawn by the state auditor. The adjutant general himself can receive no funds from the state treasury except on appropriation by the legislature and on warrant drawn on the treasurer by the auditor. A direction to the adjutant general to make the payments could only mean that he do so from funds received by him in the foregoing manner from the state treasurer, and shows no legislative intention from which an appropriation could be implied.
In view of our opinion that sections 386 and 387 did not make a continuing appropriation for the payment of the *410amount now in question, it is unnecessary to decide whether the budget law (Wyo. C. S. 1920, §§ 333-343), passed in 1919, or any other law enacted since the decision of State y. Burdick, would require a more limited construction of statutes relied upon as constituting continuing appropriations.
There being no continuing appropriation for the payments in question, it remains to be decided whether it was proper to make the payments out of the amount appropriated by the general appropriation law of 1923 for the militia contingent.
It is contended that, if there was no continuing appropriation for the payments, the only appropriation made for that purpose by the legislature of 1923 was made by chapter 108, supra, of the laws of that year, appropriating $300 to pay members of the national guard in the federal service. It is argued that the national guard, while in encampment or maneuvers, are in the federal service, and that this appropriation of $300, though inadequate for the purpose, must be accepted as the only appropriation out of which the payments in question could lawfully be; made. Of this argument we need consider only the premise, that the national guard, while in encampment or maneuvers, are in the federal service. This may be true in a sense, but we believe that a distinction may justly be drawn between service when assembled for purposes of training and when called to active duty in the actual, service of the United States, and that the national guard of the state, when in encampment and maneuvers as contemplated by sections 374 and 386, supra, are not in the federal service within the meaning of chapter 108 of the laws of 1923, and, therefore, that the appropriation made by the last mentioned law was not intended to be used in making payments provided for in section 386.
It is further contended that the appropriation for the militia 'contingent, as made by the general appropriation law of 1923, was not available for making the payments in *411question, because the claims paid were not for the “ordinary expenses” of the legislative, executive or judicial departments, within the meaning of section 34 of article 3, supra, of the constitution, and not, therefore, of the class of claims that could lawfully be paid from an appropriation embraced in the general appropriation bill. This contention cannot be sustained. Although, as held, sections 386 and 387, supra, do not operate as a continuing appropriation of state funds for the payment of enlisted men of the national guard for services during encampments or* maneuvers, there can be no doubt that those statutes created an obligation on the part of the state to make the payments. The legislature had the unquestioned right to create the obligation for the purpose of carrying out in part the requirement of section 2 of article 17, supra, of the constitution. The obligation continues so long as the law creating it is unrepealed, and its discharge may rightly be considered an “ordinary expense” of the executive department of the state.
It is alleged in the petition that, if the payments in question continue as a charge against the militia contingent appropriation, that appropriation will be so depleted that the state will be unable to meet other national guard expenses which must, if paid at all, be paid but of the same appropriation. It is furtherl alleged that these other expenses, which the state will be unable to pay, are essential' to the maintenance of the national guard in conformity with the national defense act, while the payments to enlisted men are not. Upon these grounds it is contended that the militia contingent appropriation cannot be nsed to make payments to enlisted men under section 386, but must be conserved for the payment of more important claims. If that was the intention of the legislature, the intention is not expressed in the law. Unless we are wrong in what we have already said, the state is obligated by law to pay enlisted men pursuant to section 386, and the discharge of this obligation is an ordinary and anticipated expense incident to the train*412ing of tbe national guard. Its importance as compared with other expenses of the national guard is a legislative, not a judicial, question. We assume that, pursuant to the budget law, the legislature of 1923 had before it estimates of all expenses of the national guard for the next bi-ennial period, and that such estimates included the amounts that would become due to enlisted men for services during encampments, as well as the other expenses now claimed to be of greater importance. In making its appropriations the legislature chose to set aside $50,000 for “Militia Contingent,.” which we believe was meant to cover all national guard expenses that could not properly be paid out of some other appropriation. No one has been able to find any other appropriataion out of which to make the payments in question, and we think it was proper to make them out of the militia contingent appropriation. If the legislature was unwilling to appropriaate suffiicent funds to pay all the expenses of the national guard, and intended that some claims should be preferred, it would have been easy in some way to express that intention in the law. The officers charged with the administration of the law are justified in following the expressed will of the legislature, and should not be held to accountability for failure to observe its secret and unexpressed intentions.
We are of opinion, therefore, that under the facts alleged in the petition, the auditor made the payments from the appropriation made available by law for that purpose, and the demurrer will be sustained.
Potter, Ch. J., and Blume, J., concur.