The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Willabd, A. J.The parties to this suit have united in submitting the controversy to this Court, under Sec. 389 of the Code of Procedure. The formal remedy is in the nature of quo warranto. Section 389 contains the following language: “Parties to a question in difference which might be the subject of a civil action, may, without action, agree upon a case containing the facts upon which the controversy depends, and present a submission of the same to any Court which would have jurisdiction if an action had been brought.” If this- Court can adjudicate this case, it is authorized, by the same Section, to give judgment according to the right of the parties, and, if the plaintiffs would, in a formal proceeding, be enti-*86tied to judgment of ouster, that judgment can be rendered in the present case.
The question of jurisdiction, though not pressed, -was mooted upon the argument, and it is proper that it should be here considered. The right to adjudicate the case, in its present form, depends upon whether the “question in difference” is “the subject of a civil action.” Before the Code, civil actions did not, in a technical sense, include proceedings by quo warranto. Section 443 abolishes the writ of quo warranto, and proceedings by information in the nature of quo warranto, and provides, instead thereof, “ that the remedies heretofore obtainable in those forms may be obtained by civil actions.” The Constitution (Art. IV, Sec. 4,) declares that the Supreme Court “ shall always have power to issue writs of injunction, mandamus, quo ivarranto, habeas corpus, and such other original and remedial writs as may be necessary- to gi.ve it a general supervisory control over all other Courts in the State.”
Under this grant of jurisdiction, it is to be considered, whether Section 443, so far as it abolishes the writ of quo warranto, is operative as it regards the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court. If the effect of Sect. 4, Art. IV, of the Constitution was to perpetuate the particular forms of legal proceeding particularized in it, then the Legislature could abolish them, if at all, only under Sec. 3, Art. V, of the Constitution, which provides, among other things, “ that justice may be administered in a uniform mode of pleading, without distinction between law and'equity, they (the Legislature,) shall provide for abolishing the distinct forms of action, and, for that purpose, shall appoint some suitable person or persons, whose duty it shall be to revise, simplify and abridge the rules, practice, pleadings and forms of the Courts now in use in this State.”
It is clear that it was not the intent of Sec. 4, Article IV, of the Constitution, to place the writs enumerated beyond the power of the Legislature to abolish them, as to form, and substitute other forms in lieu thereof, so long as the grant of jurisdiction in such eases remains unimpaired in the Supreme Court. The primary end and intent of this Section was to confer upon the Supreme Court general revisory power over the proceedings of other Courts, and original jurisdiction in certain specified cases. The write of mandamus, quo warranto and habeas corpus are referred to as a convenient and usual means of marking out the limit of jurisdiction intended for the Supreme Court. In legal parlance, the writ or form of action is allowed to personate and stand for the jurisdiction to *87which it relates to avoid inconvenient particularization. It is in this sense that the terras are here used. Such writs were then in common use, and furnished the common forms of expression for conveying the sense thus intended by this Section, To separatedhe expression “shall always have power to issue writs,” &c., from the context, might create a doubt whether the conservation of the writ, or the extent of the powers of the Supreme Court, was the object in view, but read by the context it is clear that the technical value of the writs, as remedial means, was not the subject of consideration, but substantial rights to be protected by lodging certain judicial powers in the Supreme Court was the single end contemplated. There is no direct expression of an intent to limit the ordinary powers of the Legislature in respect to moulding the forms of procedure in the Courts. To raise such an intent by implication would be open to the objection of depriving the Legislature of customary and convenient powers, when no such implication is essential to effectuate either the particular or general intent of the Constitution. Such a construction would be especially objectionable in view of the provisions of Sec. 3, Art. V, making it the duty of the Legislature to enter upon a thorough reorganization of the remedial system of the State.
The argument that can be urged with greatest force against this position is, in substance, that conferring power to issue certain writs “always” implies that the writs must always exist, otherwise they would not be issued. This would be a fair argument, if the actual issuing of mandates of a particular form, and attested in a particular manner, was intended ; but as the expressions are’used as terms of art, covering larger and more substantial ideas, they are not subject to such nice verbal criticism.
' Although the Legislature could change the form of the remedy, the jurisdiction of this Court remains based upon the terms of the Constitution. This Court having, therefore, jurisdiction of an action based upon the rights set forth in the submission, the present ease is properly before us, and we will proceed to dispose of the points made.
The plaintiff, Alexander, claims the office of Mayor of Columbia, and the other' plaintiffs the offices of Aldermen of said city, under an election held on the second Tuesday of April, 1870, in pursuance of an Act of the Legislature', passed February 26,1870, entitled “ An Act to alter and amend the charter and extend the limits of the city of Columbia.” \
*88The defendants aver possession of the same offices, claiming in virtue of due election under the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the election of the officers of incorporated cities and towns in the State of South Carolina,” passed September 25, 1868, and that the terms for which they were elected have not yet expired.
The case propounds the following questions for the judgment of the Court: 1st. “ Was the election held .under the Act of February 26, 1870, a valid election ?” 2d. “ Are the plaintiffs entitled, under such election, to immediate possession of said offices ?”
The answer to these questions depends upon the power of the Legislature to oust the defendants from their offices before the expiration of the terms to which they were originally elected, and the expression of such an intent in the Act. These subjects will be considered in ihe order just stated.
I. If. the defendants have a legal right to the offices held by them for the remainder of the term to which they were originally elected, as against the legislative power, it must arise from one of the considerations, either that they are to be regarded as having a property in such offices, or a vested interest under contract with the State Government, the obligation of -which it is not in the power of the Legislature to impair, under the Constitution of the United States.
It -was very properly conceded on the argument that no such contract existed as is contemplated by the Constitution of the United States in the clause prohibiting the States from passing laws impairing the obligation of contracts. The case is, therefore, narrowed down to the single question whether the defendants have such a property in their offices as to be beyond the power of the Legislature to destroy it.
An office implies three things: first, power to act in the exercise of the rights of another ; second, an obligation to exercise this power within and for the purposes intended in its, creation ; and, third, a right to compensation. Offices differ in the nature of the power, the uses to which it is to be employed, and the incidents attached to it by the Act creating it, or by the law of the land.
The most important division of powers, according to their nature, is into political and personal. Communities exercising sovereign authority, or the right to control the action of individuals for the promotion of the common good, are said to be possessed of political powers. Each individual, on the other hand, is born to the possession of a certain natural capacity or liberty, in the exercise of *89which powers arise ihat are recognized by the law. In the absence of a better expression, these have been termed personal. .Another and familiar division of powers illustrates the nature of the distinction based upon the uses to which the powers are devoted — it is that between public and private powers. Communities, for governmental purposes, having the capacity of holding property, exercise proprietary rights, in the course of which agents are appointed and empowered to control the application of such property to public uses. Authority of this character can hardly be called political, although it is clearly public.
The power of a magistrate, in the enforcement of the laws, clearly differs in nature from that of an engineer in charge of a State work. While no such difference, in the nature of the powder exercised, exists between the engineer on a State work and one conducting a similar private enterprise, still the fact, that one is intended to enure to the public use, and the other to private uses, fully sustains the distinction between public and private powers apart from the idea of a political character.
It will be unnecessary to do more than merely allude to a class of powers that partake more or less of all the attributes that have been named in this connection, among which the most conspicuous are franchises, both public and private. As it regards the difference between offices, as to the incidents attached to them by their creation or the law of the land, something will be said hereafter in connection with some of the incidents of political offices as existing in England.
The present case involves exclusively public offices erected for the exercise of political powers, for the powers of the Mayor and Aldermen of a city appertain to this class. It follows, from the foregoing, that if the defendants have any proprietary rights attaching to the offices claimed by them, such rights must arise either from the nature or uses of the power involved, from the character of the obligation for its due exercise resulting from the possession of such power, or from the claim to compensation incident thereto.
It is of the nature of powers to be. revocable at the will of the creator. To this, political powers are not an exception. It is not, however, an invariable rule. The true distinction is, that when the beneficial use of the power is in the grantor, the power is revocable at his pleasure; -when the beneficial use is in the one holding the power, or in a third person, the power is not usually revocable. Trustees, guardians, executors and administrators possess powers in *90the strictest sense, but subject to incidents of so peculiar a nature that they are not ordinarily classed among powers, technically considered.
Political powers always enure to the beneficial use of the political community, as such, exclusively, and never to the exclusive use of private persons. This results from the fact that government exists for the common benefit, and its powers cannot be appropriated to the exclusive benefit of individuals, except by violence, destructive of its principles. It therefore follows that political powers are revocable at the will of the government communicating them. In Butler vs. Pennsylvania, 10 How., 402, the question was as to- the validity of a statute reducing the salary of the Canal Commissioner, during the term for which he was appointed, below the amount fixed by law at the time of his appointment. The Court based its judgment upon the broad ground of the power of the government to the absolute control of its agents, either by removing them or changing their duties or compensations at its own pleasure. Judge Daniels says, (p. 416), “ the selection of officers, who are nothing more than agents, is for the effectuating of such public purposes, is matter of public convenience or necessity, and so too are the periods for the appointment of such agents; but neither the one nor the other of these arrangements can constitute any obligation to continue such agents, or to re-appoint them after the measures that brought them into being shall have been found useless, shall have been fulfilled, or shall have been abrogated, as even detrimental to the well being of the public.” Again he says, “ it follows, then, upon principle, that in every perfect or competent government there must exist a general power to enact and to repeal law's, and to create and change or discontinue agents designated for the execution of those laws. Such a power is indispensable for the preservation of the body politic and for the safety of the individuals of the community.” He holds that the organic law is the only check upon this power; that the tenure of an office created for the public use does not fall wdthin the class of vested private rights, vested under the Constitution of the United States, but, on the contrary, he adds, “ they are functions appropriate to that class of powers and obligations by which governments are enabled, and are called upon, to foster and promote the common good; functions, therefore, which governments cannot be presumed to have surrendered, if, indeed, they can, under any circumstances, be justifeed in surrendering them.” The Court sustained the validity of the law of Pennsylvania in question. 1 Parsons on Cont,, 530.
*91The nature and incidents of political powers have been frequently considered in reference to the rights and obligations of municipal corporations. Inasmuch as the character of political power does not undergo change in the hands of the agent for its exerftise, the decisions on such questions, in the case of municipal corporations, are applicable in whatever hands such powers may be placed.
In Dartmouth College vs. Woodward, (4 Wheat., 518,) Judge Story presents the distinction between public corporations possessed of political powers, such as cities, &c., and public corporations not possessing such powers, as a bank created and controlled by the government for its own uses. lie also adverts to the fact that political corporations may have proprietary rights united to their political powers.
The case of a municipal corporation havingsuch proprietary rights— and all have more or less — is a strong one for holding that political powers may become vested; for it is evident that the possession and right to use such political powers may be of great value in connection with the proprietary interest of the corporate body. Such a case is much stronger for the application of such a doctrine than the case of a public officer whose proprietary rights are independent of, and in no way connected with, the functions of his office. Much importance should, therefore, be attached to the views of the Courts in respect to the character and attributes of political powers when lodged in the hands of public political bodies.
In East Hartford vs. Hartford Bridge Company, (10 How., 511,) Judge Woodbury, speaking of the Legislative control over public corporations, says : “ When not restrained by some constitutional provision, this power is inherent in its nature, design and attributes, and the community possesses as deep and paramount an interest in such powers remaining in and being exercised by the Legislature, when the public progress and welfare demand it, as an individual can, in any instance, possess in restraining it.” In this case it was held that a city, after having established the grade of a street, could alter it, notwithstanding it would cause damage to the- property that had been conformed, to the original grade. The power in question was held to be political, and, therefore, incapable of being exhausted in its. exercise. In the People vs. Morris (12 Wen., 325,) it was held that the Legislature could deprive a village corporation of the power to grant licenses conferred by its charter. Judge Wilson, in an opinion, remarkable for its research and clear reasoning, examines the question of the rights and immunities of public bodies *92very fully, and concludes that the power to grant licenses is not one that can become vestéd in a public body enjoying it by the grant of the Legislature, it being in its nature “ wholly political.” He holds that political powers cannot become vested rights, as against the Government, in any individual or body of men, but are always “ public trusts.”
In Girard vs. Pennsylvania, 7 Wall., 1, it was held, that notwithstanding the city of Philadelphia. was, by the will of Stephen Girard, made trustee for charitable uses, still the power of the Legislature to remodel the city government, by extending its territorial limits and admitting the inhabitants of the surrounding country, brought within the new city limits, to a participation in all the rights and privileges enjoyed by the old city, was so complete and entire that the new city was capable of succeeding to the trust. Here was an instance where powers derived from a private source, followed the political powers granted by the Legislature, and, with them, became subject to the power of amendment and -repeal remaining in the Legislature — a strong assertion of the doctrine uuder consideration.
Hoke vs. Henderson, 4 Dev., N. C. R., 1, holds the contrary doctrine, but is without the support of reason or authority. Misapprehension of the English doctrine on this subject has frequently given rise to erroneous views of the powers of political bodies. Judge Nelson, in People vs. Morris, 12 Wen., 325, points out the true view of this subject. He comments upon the origin and character of the idea of the inviolability of municipal charters prevailing in that country, and concludes that it is only as against the prerogatives of the Crown, and not as against the power of Parliament, that such inviolability has been asserted. After referring to the limitations put upon the power of the Crown, he says: “ The right or power of Parliament, in England, and of the Legislature here, to interfere with these bodies, created as auxiliaries to be employed in the government of the State, would present a different question. The doctrine that political power is inalienable, and cannot enure to the exclusive use of an individual, or body of men less than the whole political community, is not violated by holding municipal charters inviolable as against the Crown. It is merely one of the incidents impressed upon the office by the feudal doctrine of prerogative, not affecting the fundamental principle in which the delegation of political powers rests.” ■ Again, Judge Wilson says, towns, counties, cities and villages “ are, severally, political institutions, created to *93be employed in the internal government of the State. There is no contract between the government and the governed, for but one party is concerned — the public; and the individuals upon whom the powers and privileges are conferred are mere trustees, rvho hold and exercise such powers for the public good.” Finally, he says, “we know of no vested rights of political power in any body of citizens except those conferred by the Constitution.”
The authorities c'ited above, as well as many others of the highest authority, sustain the proposition already advanced, that .political powers always enure to the beneficial use of the political community, as such, exclusively, and áre revocable at the will of the Government communicating them.
If the idea of property cannot attach to the power appertaining to a political office, neither can it attach to the obligation that results from the possession of such political power. Such an idea is inconsistent on its face, for if any one has a property'in an obligation, it is not the one who is bound by the obligation, but he who may enforce it.
Then there remains only one more incident of an office to be considered in connection with the idea of a property in it,' namely, the right to compensation. Where the compensation of an office consists of fees, perquisites, tolls and the like, there would be a show of ground for ascribing to it the character of property. Even in such a case, the contrary was held in the well-considered case of Connor vs. The Mayor, &c., (1 Selden, N. Y., 285.) When, on the other hand, that condensation is a salary, no idea of property can attach. Whether such compensation can be claimed prospectively, depends upon whether the employment is a~contract within the constitutional definition. Chief Justice Ruggles, in People vs. Connor, says : “ The prospective salary and other emoluments of a public office are not the property of the officer, nor the property of the State; they are not property at all. They are like daily wages earned, and which maybe earned.” Again, he says: “The right to the compensation grows out of the condition of the service, and not out of any contract, between the Government and the officer, that the services shall be rendered by him.” The authority of Butler vs. Pennsylvania is to the same point.
If, therefore, it appeared that all the defendants were salaried officers, it would not help their case; though the fact appears to be that the Mayor is the only one of the defendants entitled to compensation. It may be remarked, also, that a fixed right to the *94compensation of the office at most would only give rise to a claim to damages, to be recovered by petition to the Legislature for the loss of the office, 'but under no circumstances confers a right to continue in. the performance of its duties against, the will of the Legislature. But it is clear, upon reason and authority, that the right to compensation is dependent on the right to exercise the office, instead of the latter being dependent on the former, and that, as the functions of the office have been removed from the defendants, there is nothing in their hands from which a right to compensation can spring, even if attached by law to the office.
It is clear, therefore, that the Legislature had full authority to withdraw from the defendants their powers as Mayor and Aldermen in any mode that might seem most advisable, and it only remains to see whether they have, in fact, done so. The Act of 1870 extends the territorial limits of the city of Columbia, and provides for the holding of an election -by the community to fill the offices of Mayor and Aldermen. It is not said at what time the officers elected shall enter upon their duties; but, it is obvious that the Legislature deemed the election of a new board as appropriate, in view of the increase of the territory and inhabitants of the city. The defendants contend that the Act ought to receive such construction that the new Mayor and Aldermen should not be admitted to the offices to which they have been elected until 1872, the end of the term for which the defendants were elected. The effect of this construction of .the Act would be, that while the law stands in its present form, the election of Mayor and Aldermen would always precede their entering upon the duties of their office by two years. Such a derangement of the elective principle cannot be ascribed to the intention of the Legislature without much clearer expressions than exist in the present case. As the Act leaves to inference when the newly elected officers shall enter upon their duties, that period must be ascertained in accordance with the charter and customary practice of the city.
It was contended, on the argument, that the right of the plaintiffs depended upon the power of amotion. As the Act removing the defendants was not a corporate Act, but the Act of the Legislature, the doctrine of amotion is wholly inapplicable to the ¡ore-sent case. Much of the argument was based upon the idea that the removal of the defendants could only be accomplished through the exercise of judicial power, and referenee was- made to the principles embodied in the Constitution and in the common law, *95checking the undue exercise of judicial power; but it is an entire misapprehension to refer the authority in question to this class of judicial powers. As the removal of the defendants involved no loss of property or of vested rights, it called for the exercise of political powers alone.
The plaintiffs have established their immediate right to the offices claimed by them respectively.
Moses, C. J., concurred.