W. J. Ray, tbe plaintiff and respondent herein, being a taxpayer of tbe county of Billings and state of North Dakota, prosecutes this action for tbe purpose of restraining tbe county auditor of the county of Billings from paying tbe salaries of tbe various county officers (with the exception of tbe state’s attorney and tbe -sheriff) their salaries for tbe year 1916 on tbe basis of tbe valuation as banded down by tbe state board of equalization for tbe year 1914. He contends that tbe assessed valuation for tbe year 1915 should apply and be tbe basis of tbe salaries. We are satisfied that plaintiff’s contention is correct. Prior to tbe enactment of chapter 112 of tbe Laws of 1915 it is clear that tbe salaries of tbe county officers involved were rated by tbe statute *647according to the assessed valuation of the preceding year. See article 4, § 3506, Compiled Laws 1913. In chapter 112 of the Session Laws of 1915 the legislature changed the basis of the ascertainment of the salaries of the county officers from an assessed valuation to a population basis. It, however, provided that: Section 8. “The provisions of this act shall not apply to the present term of officers elected or appointed prior to the talcing effect of this act: provided further that the salary of the officers herein enumerated shall be the same during the remainder of the term for which they may have been elected or appointed as they are respectively receiving at the time this act taires effect.”
The intention of this section, as we construe it, was to continue in force, as far as officers elected or appointed before its passage are concerned, the old basis for the ascertainment of salaries, which was the assessed valuation. .The word “same” which is used in the section means the same basis; viz., assessed valuation. The intention was merely that this basis, and not the population basis, should apply to officers already elected. It is also, however, clear to us that the intention was that in no case should either this act or chapter 254 of the Laws of 1915, to which we will afterwards refer, operate to increase the salaries of such county officers beyond that which they would have received under the assessed valuation of 1914 and the then existing statutes.
The defendant and appellant, however, calls special attention to § 2 of chapter 254 of the Laws of 1915, which provides that “no salary of any official now determined by the amount of the assessed valuation of property within any political subdivision shall be increased during the years 1915 and 1916, or prior to July 1st, 1917, beyond the amount now authorized on the basis of assessed valuation for the year 1914.”
He maintains that this section makes the assessment of 1914 the basis, and it is particularly relied upon by him as, in the case at bar, the valuation of Billings county for the year 1915 was reduced to a large extent on account of the recent creation of Slope county from a portion of its territory.
As we understand the statutes, however, all that the legislature was interested in was that the increased valuation of the property of the state, which was anticipated at the time of the passage of the acts in *648question, should not unduly operate to increase the salaries of the county-officials. In spite of that increased valuation, it still contemplated that the salaries of the persons then in office should be on the basis of the-assessed valuation. It merely provided that these salaries could in no> event exceed the amount which would be received under the valuation for the year 1914. It evidently did not contemplate the contingency of a county being divided so that the assessed valuation of what was left would be less, than the valuation of 1914. It still, however, contemplated a salary on the basis of assessed valuation; that is, a salary which was based on the work to be done and the ability of the taxpayers to pay the same.
But it is contended that § B of chapter 254 of the Laws of 1915 is applicable in this case, and that the provision therein contained, that “the rights and duties of officers shall not be changed or modified,” controls the situation which is before us. It is contended that the defendant, as auditor of Billings county, has a right and duty to perform in connection with the issuing of warrants for the payment of salaries, and that if plaintiff’s contention is sustained, this duty would be interfered with.
We do not, however, so read the section. It provides that “when under the laws of this state the duty of any official to levy taxes, or the right, duty or authority of any person to perform any act is conditioned upon the assessed valuation of the property within any political subdivision, the rights, duties and authority as now fixed and established under the assessed valuation of the property within such political subdivision for the year 1914, shall not be in any manner changed or modified during the years 1915 and 1916, or prior to July 1st, 1917, except when the addition of 5 per cent and 10 per cent for the years 1915 and 1916, respectively, to the assessed valuation for the year 1914 would be sufficient to vest such authority, right, or duty, under existing laws.”
The right, duty, or authority mentioned in this provision is a right, duty, or authority to perform any act; it is not the right to receive a salary. The duty of the auditor also is merely to issue the warrants for the amount due. The fixing of that amount is not a part of his duties. The provision, therefore, is in no way applicable.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.