dissenting. I have given to the questions involved herein a most thorough investigation and the *664best thought that I am capable of bestowing on them, and in the end am compelled to dissent. from the opinion of the majority of the Court. I do so, however, with the utmost respect for the opinions of my brethren of the majority, for I-know they have conscientiously and laboriously striven to arrive at a correct conclusion as to the law of the case.
The main contention of the defendants is that the old Board of Internal Improvements, consisting of the Governor and two Commissioners, C. A. Cook and J. 0. L. Harris, commenced a term of office of two years from the 8th of March, 1891; that the members of the old Board were pub lie officers, and therefore that the action of the new Board in undertaking to remove the old Board on the 24th of .February, 1899, and before the expiration of the term of office of the old Board, was invalid, because it deprived them of their vested rights of property in their office. The cases of Hoke v. Henderson, 15 N. C., 1; Wood v. Bellamy, 120 N. C., 212, and State Prison v. Day, at this term of the Court, were relied on for their position.
I am of the opinion that there is a clear and well defined distinction between the character and nature of the offices which are here the subject of dispute and those offices which the Court were considering in the cases above mentioned. The office concerning which the litigation occurred in the case of Hoke v. Henderson, supra, was that of Clerk of the Superior Court of Lincoln County. The duties of that office required the continuous services of the incumbent, and the fees and perquisites were the consideration for which he gave his time and services. The office was one of profit, for the fees were naturally more to be considered when taken in connection with the duties of the office than the honor attached to the place. The Court in that case said, “He (the Clerk) is not merely a public servant and political agent. If he were and *665had no interest of his own he might be discharged at pleasure. The distinction between agencies of the two kinds is obvious. The one is for the public use exclusively, and is often neither lucrative nor honorary, but onerous. To be deprived of such an office is often a relief, and never can be an injury. The other is for the public service conjointly with a benefit to the officer. To be deprived in this last case is a loss to the officer.” The kind of office which the Court had in view in that case is further illustrated in the opinion, where it is said: “The office is created 'for public purposes, but it is conferred on a particular man, and accepted by him as a source of individual emolument. To the extent of that emolument it is private property.” It is true, as was said in State Prison v. Day, supra, “The duties of the office are of the first consequence, and the agency from the State to perform those duties is the next step in the creation of an office. It is the union of the two factors, duty and agency, which makes the office; but that which practically malees the office property is the emoluments.”
Now to apply the above tests to the offices which are in controversy in this action: By statute the compensation of each member of the Board of Internal Improvements is fixed at $3 per day for the time he may be employed in the public service, and his traveling expenses. On the very face of the law it is apparent that the office is purely honorary, there being no salary or fees attached or allowed except as a reimbursement for actual expenses incurred by the officer for the public benefit, the mileage and per diem being on the face only sufficient for that purpose. There can be no profit or emoluments in such an office; its duties are mostly supervisory, and the members act not for their.personal gain or profit, but for the public welfare entirely. In the appointments the Board may make and in the exercise of the powers conferred on *666them by law, they are required, by both a sense of duty and by a clear inference from their oaths of office, not to receive any private advantage therefrom, but in all things to do their duty without reward or the hope of reward, or any private motive whatsoever. Can it be said then that such an office as that filled by a member of the Board of Internal Improvements is property in the incumbent, and that the incumbent would be injured by the transfer of such an office to another on the ground that his property had been taken from him by law and given to another ? Truly it would seem that such an office, while honorary, would be onerous. It certainly is not a lucrative office.
My conclusion on that question then is that while the members of the Board of Internal Improvements are public officers, yet the offices are not lucrative ones; that they therefore can be transferred to others at any time, regardless of the term of office, without a violation of any of the rules governing property; and that the appointment or election by the General Assembly, at its session of 1899, of the plaintiffs as members of the new Board of Internal Improvements was regular and valid.
In reference to the questions whdther or not the offices of President and Directors of the Atlantic and North Carolina Bailroad Company are public offices, I have arrived at the conclusion that they are not. They are in no sense such officers as are the presiding officers of the several asylums and the penitentiary. Those institutions are “a part of the Government and part of the State polity;” while the President and Directors of the Atlantic and North Carolina Bail-road Company are only officers in a corporation chartered by the State, and in which the State has a large interest. That corporation is simply a business enterprise in which the State is interested pecuniarily. When the State became *667a stockholder, it laid aside its character as sovereign, and made itself equal and only equal with the individual stockholders. The President and Directors are merely the agents —the employees of the State, and are removable at the will of the State in any manner the State may choose to exercise that right, with or without an assigned cause. The amended charter of the corporation gives that power to the Board of Internal Improvements, and Chapter 122, of the Acts of 1897, is not restrictive of that power, but only conferred on the Governor and the Board the power to remove for cause whenever the Governor becomes satisfied that such removal should be made. That Act is now amended so as to deprive the Governor of all power in the matter.
I am not inadvertent to the fact that in Eliason v. Coleman, 86 N. C., 235, the Court, in giving example of such officers as had been declared public officers, mentioned that of the President of the Western North Carolina Railroad Company, who had been elected through the directors of the State. But the Court in the last named case mentioned as the reason for including that officer amongst public officers that the Court had sustained an action by that officer — How-erton, in Howerton v. Pate, 68 N. C., 548. Upon an examination of the last mentioned case, it will be seen that the Court did not decide that question, and, in touching upon it, it seems that the case was decided more upon the weakness of the defendant’s title than upon the strength of the plaintiff’s. The Court said: “Admit for the sake of the argument that directors in a Railroad Company are not officers in the strict meaning of that term, but only officers in a corporation in which the State has a large interest, still the reason of the rule in Clark v. Stanley, 66 N. C., 59, applies and destroys the foundation upon which the defendants have built.”
The defendants there, were claiming under legislative *668appointment and the plaintiffs under the appointment of the Executive. The plaintiffs in this action, although they are not public officers, can yet maintain the action by a statute permitting it — Subsection 1, of Section 607, of The Code. I think the judgment below should be affirmed.
ClaRK, J., dissenting. About two-thirds of the capital stock of the Atlantic and North Carolina Eailroad Company is owned by the State of North Carolina, and the amendment to its charter enacted in 1854-5, provides (Section 4) that the stockholders shall elect four directors, and the other eight of its twelve directors shall be appointed annually and be removable by the Board of Internal Improvements. The Code, Section 1688, provides that the Board of Internal Improvements shall consist of the Governor ex officio, and “of two commissioners to be appointed biennially by the Governor, with the advice of the Senate, any two of whom shall constitute a board for the transaction of business, and in case of vacancies occurring in the Board, the same shall be filled by the other members.” The General Assembly by an Act ratified on the 10th of Eebruary, 1899, repealed the above Section 1688, of The Code, and substituted for it an enactment that the Board of Internal Improvements shall consist of nine members, one from each Congressional District, to be elected by the General Assembly. On February 12th the new Board of Internal Improvements were thus elected, they met on February 24th, and by virtue of the aforesaid provision in the charter removed the eight State Directors, thus removing also the President, as the charter requires that he be a director, and appointed eight others as Directors, who met on February 28th, with two of the Directors elected by the stockholders, and chose one of their number President. These are the plaintiffs in this action, and the defendants are *669tbe eight State Directors appointed by the former Board of Internal Improvements, together with one of the directors elected by the stockholders, who adheres to them. This action is for possession and control of said railroad, and for the offices of President and Directors, which the defendants refuse to surrender.
It is conceded, and indeed is beyond controversy, that the Legislature could repeal Section 1688 of The Code, and abolish the former Board of Internal Improvements, and that, being legislative offices the General Assembly, by virtue of the constitutional amendment of 1875, can elect the new Board of Internal Improvements itself. Ewart v. Jones, 116 N. C., 570.
But it is contended that the old Board of Internal Improvements having been appointed on March 8, 1897, under an Act providing for their appointment “biennially,” could not be replaced by a new Board till after March 8, 1899, and therefore the removal of the eight State directors and the appointment of eight others in their stead by the new Board on February 24, 1899, is null and of no effect, and for that the defendants rely upon Hoke v. Henderson, 15 N. C., 1, (decided in 1833). That decision holds that while the Legislature can abolish any office whose term is not fixed by the Constitution, it can not change the occupants of the office if the office is not abolished, provided it is an office with pay. But it also holds that if no pay is attached, the Legislature can change the officer without abolishing the office (p. 21), for the reason therein given, that where there is any pay attached the officer has a private interest in such office “to the extent of his emoluments” (p. 18), and his right thereto is property of which he can not be deprived unless the office is abolished.
Now, under Section 1688, the Governor serves ex officio, and without compensation, on the Board of Internal Improve*670ments; it is no part of bis duty as Governor conferred on him by the Constitution, but is simply an honorary appointment conferred on him by legislative enactment, and therefore under “Hoke v. Henderson” it is clear such duty can be taken from him, not only by abolishing the office of director of Internal Improvements, but by legislative enactment even when the office is continued. But the other two directors get three dollars for each day they were in session, and as it apears from the Auditor’s reports (of which official statements made by authority of law, the Courts take judicial notice), that this Board sits on an average only one or sometimes two days per year, and has therefore a salary of $3 per year, or at the most $6 per year, it is claimed that the Legislature was powerless to abolish the old Board and substitute a new Board of nine elected by themselves, to take charge of this great property of the State, till after the term of the two old directors had expired. It is extremely improbable that the old Board would have held another meeting before March 8th, or that they have lost one cent of emolument, which alone Hoke v. Henderson protects, yet for that possibility of that infinitessimal salary we are asked to set aside a solemn Act of the Legislature in providing for the management of a great State property. It is true that if the salary and not the public interest is the test, a small salary is as sacred as a large one, but this emphasizes the logical result of the doctrine that the salary of the officer takes precedence of the right of the people to change the control of their State institutions.
'Let us look this proposition squarely in the face: The statute (Code, Section 1688) directed the appointment of these two directors biennially, conferred on the Board the power to fi.ll up vacancies occurring in their own body, and to appoint the Directors (Section 1718) for the State in all *671corporations in which the State shall hold stock, and “shall have charge of all the State’s interest in all railroads, canals and other works of internal improvements, and also all public buildings which are the property of the State.” The charter of the Atlantic and North Carolina Railroad Company also provides that the eight directors on the part of the State shall be appointed by the Board of Internal Improvements. Now, if by reason of their receipt of compensation, averaging three dollars per year, the Directors of the Board of Internal Improvements are beyond legislative change until after the lapse of their term of two years, then if the Legislature had written in the Act “fifty years” instead of “biennial” as the term of office, inasmuch as a part of their office is to fill up vacancies in their own body from time to time, and the appointment of Directors for the State by them is provided in the charter of the Railroad Company, it follows that for fifty years a self perpetuating body could control this great work in which the people of the State have invested $2,000,000, and no Legislature for 50 yeai*s could in any way control the State’s interest therein because the members of said Board of Internal Improvements have $3 a year salary, and hence have a “property” in their offices, though it would be entirely otherwise and the incumbents of the office could be changed at the will of the Legislature, if this onerous duty (usually one day’s session per year) had been devolved upon its members without pay.
If this is a correct interpretation of "Hoke v. Henderson” the absurdity of that decision is so palpable, and its direct conflict with provisions of both State and Federal Constitutions is so clear that it should no be deemed authority for a moment, yet it is upon this construction, with its inevitable reductio ad absurdam that rests the right of the defendants to set at defiance the will of the people, as expressed by their *672chosen representatives, in reference to tbe management of a property in which, as appears from the record, the State has invested $2,000,000. The $2,000,000 the people have invested in the property is outweighed by the $3 per year which two officeholders have been receiving, and of which “property” it is said they must not be deprived!
It is clear that if a biennial office can keep the people from touching the management of the property for two years, an office for 100 years, with power given the Roard of Internal Improvements in Section 1688 of filling vacancies in their own body, would deprive the people from taking the management into their own hands for one hundred years.
Once concede that a Legislature by giving a term of two years or four years to officers put in charge of State property or State institutions can deprive the State of taking charge again by an Act of the next Legislature then it can deprive not only the next Legislature, but the next ten Legislatures or the next fifty Legislatures from doing so. It is suggested that the Constitution forbids perpetuities and hereditary offices, but an office for 20 years or for 50 years (with power given the Board by Section 1688 of filling its own vacancies) is not hereditary, nor is it a perpetuity especially when almost every charter is for 99 years. Besides where is the constitutional provision giving the Court power to prescribe the number of years which the Legislature must not exceed in fixing the term of an office ? Cr the Legislature might simply fill the offices “for life,” as was the case with the defendant in Hoke v. Henderson, and for the life time certainly of the office holders (if any salary, if only $3 a year, is attached) the State will be powerless to resume control of its own property and its own institutions. The taxpayers can have the privilege of paying the expenses, but a temporary Legislature elected to sit for 60 days can appoint office holders, who, as long as they live *673must control tbe State’s institutions on tbe ground (not to be found in tbe Constitution) that tbe right of an office bolder to bis salary is a contract, and that tbe State can not abolish his office or get rid of him unless it permanently abolishes the institution to which the office is attached or at least does not re-create it, or one similar to it, at the same session. Wilson v. J ordam,, at this term.
But Hoke v. Henderson does not justly bear the construction placed upon it by the defendants. That case was decided in 1833 not very long after the Dartmouth College case bad held that a charter of a corporation was not a privilege but a contract, and if granted by one Legislature could not be repealed by another. The irretrievable ruin that would have been wrought by that decision if allowed full sway had not then been perceived. North Carolina had not then been roused to protect herself from it, as she has since done by inserting in her Constitution Article VIII, Section 1, that all charters may be altered from time to time or repealed, by the Legislature — a course which other States have pursued. Henderson was Clerk of the Superior Court, and held for life.
All the Courts weye at that time of legislative creation, and though the terms of tbe Judges, unlike Henderson’s, were prescribed by the Constitution to be for life, it seemed to the Court bad public policy, as indicated in their opinion, that the Legislature should put another person in Henderson’s life office, without abolishing his office. This is said without reflecting in the remotest degree upon the members of that distinguished Court, but to call attention to the different standpoint as to public policy which they occupied at a time when even the Courts were of legislative origin and without tbe present constitutional guarantees.
The Court, under such circumstances, held that an office created by legislative enactment is not a public agency, revoca*674ble at will of tbe power creating it (as is held everywhere else) but that it was a contract, and therefore property to the extent of the salary, for it is expressly held that if no salary is attached the office can be transferred by the Legislature to another. Indeed on page 18 it is said “to the extent of the emolument it is private property.” And on page 22 it is said that “'the transfer of the emoluments” is the loss or injury sustained by, the officer. These are not mere disconnected expressions, but the very basis upon which the opinion rests. Though the Court held that it is property it is a singular kind of property, for it further held that the Legislature could abolish it, that the Legislature could at will increase or diminish the duties or reduce its compensation (so it did not starve the incumbent out), that though property, its holder could not sell it or assign it- — -very singular attributes for property. Another striking feature of the decision is that the Court intimates that the proper tenure of office is for life, giving as a reason (p. 23) that if an office is conferred for an absolute term of years, upon the death of an incumbent during his term his office would go to his executors or administrator, “and an incompetent person might be introduced into it.” A decision with these features can not be held entirely sacred or flawless. Nowhere else has it ever been held by any Court in any country, at any time, that there was or could be private property in a public office which is created pro commodo populi — for public, not private, benefit, Black Const. Pro., Section 95, and cases there cited. The Court rested its ruling to that effect in Hoke v. Henderson upon the ground that there is a contract with the office holder for his salary, since it expressly excludes offices without salary. Since then the foundation of the decision is the contract for the salary, it necessarily follows that the true construction of Hoke v. Henderson, is that if the officer is removed without abolishing his *675office, bis grievance is for breach of the contract for “the transfer of the emoluments”' as is expressly said (p. 22), and as by virtue of the XI Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, the State can not be sued and forced to perform any contract whatsover, the office holder has his sole remedy by petition in the Supreme Court under Article IV, Section 9, of the Constitution of North Carolina. The only property of which the defendant could be deprived (since the decision held that it did not apply to offices without a salary) is the contract of the State to pay a salary and to grant a mandamus against the State to restore the officer that he may draw his salary would be to do by indirection what the Court can not do directly, to-wit: give the removed office holder judgment against the State for the emoluments of the office. When the term of office is fixed by the Constitution the Legislature can not interfere with it, not because it is property, not because there is any contract by the State, to pay the salary, but because by the organic law the Legislature is disabled from legislating in regard to it, there is that express limitation put upon its power, not by any judicial construction, but by the will of the sovereign people. Constitutional offices are mere public agencies like all others, but they are made irrevocable by the Legislature. They can be and have been revoked by the people in Convention as in this State in H 68. , In a Republic every office holder from the highest to the lowest is strictly and truly a mere public servant.
There is this striking difference between Hoke v. Henderson and cases like the present, and State Prison v. Day (at this term), which has not heretofore been mentioned. In Hoke v. Henderson, the defendant was Clerk of the Superior Court. He received no pay from the State, and his only emoluments were fees from individuals for services to be rendered in his office, and the Court may have thought that the *676only way to get them was for him to remain in office. But in cases like tbe present and tbe Day case, tbe salary comes entirely from tbe State, and to put tbe officer back after the State, though tbe Legislature has passed an act which removes him, is in effect an action against tbe State to compel tbe State to pay him a salary, and for tbe Courts (as said above), to do by indirection what they are forbidden to do directly. Henderson’s was a county office, and counties can be sued.
Tbe officers removed in this case and in the Day case are State officers, and to reinstate them is in effect a judgment against the State, which no court has power to render.
In Caldwell v. Wilson, 121 N. C., at page 468, Mr. Justice Douglas calls a halt as to the extension of JFIohe v. Henderson, and well says tbe varied and extraordinary claims made thereunder and tbe fact that we are tbe only State in tbeUnion recognizing tbe doctrine, may well cause us to pause and consider if we have not carried it to its fullest legitimate extent. If this is to remain a government “of the people and for tbe people,” it must continue to be a government “by tbe people,” and it is of tbe last, of tbe highest and most solemn importance that tbe will of tbe people as to governmental matters shall be expressed by their representatives in the law-making department of the government, and that when so expressed, the action of tbe Legislature shall be subject to review in every instance and in all mattters by the people themselves through the next or any succeeding Legislature, and no Legislature can postpone that review of their conduct by filling an office (or doing any other act), for a term that is fixed beyond change by the succeeding Legislature. The Constitution alone can place limits upon legislative power. The Constitution nowhere restricts the power of a Legislature to review, repeal or change the action of any preceding Legislature in any particular. When Chisholm v. Georgia seemed to do so as to State indebtedness, the *677Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution set the people free; and when the Dartmouth College case limited legislative power as to corporations, the new provision in the State Constitution (Article VIII, Sec. 1), removed the restriction as to all charters granted since its adoption, and if a construction can be placed upon "Hoke v. Henderson ’’ which will limit the freedom of each Legislature to review, repeal or change any action of a preceding Legislature because it may interfere with the salary of an office created by legislative enactment, then either that construction should be rejected or the decision itself overruled, as has been the fate of many another. Hoke v. Henderson is no more sacred than any other decision. The sacredness is in preserving to the people the fullest liberty in legislating in regard to the institutions and the property of the State, and in all matters which can come within the law-making power of a free people, and in always maintaining the right of the people to pass upon the action of their representatives through the next or any succeeding Legislature.
The $3 per year paid two of the members of the Board of Internal Improvements can not have the effect to prohibit the State from abolishing the Board and creating a new Board of nine members to take charge of its investment of two million dollars in the Atlantic and North Carolina Railroad whenever the Legislature may see fit. It did see fit to do so on February 10, 1899, and I can find no authority conferred on this Court to set aside and declare null that action of the General Assembly.