The judgment of the court was pronounced by
King, J.*The secretary of state, and treasui’er of the state, alleging ” that they constituted the Board of Currency, applied to the District Court for a mandamus, directing the board of managers and directors of the Citizens’ , . , 7 J £ ,, ,. ¶ J Bank, to give them access to the books, minutes, and papers of that bank, and to submit to their authority generally as a Board of Currency. The defendants answered : 1st. That under the -present state of our legislation the Citizens Bank is not subject to the supervision of the Board 6f Currency ; and 2d. That the board, as actually established, is in conflict with the 126th art. of the constitution, and has been abrogated by that article. The district judge sustained the first of those pleas, and dismissed the action, and the plaintiff’s have appealed. In support of the first ground of defence it is contended that, the act of the 5th of April, 1843, (Acts p. 56,) and the act of the 6th April, 1847, (Acts p. 76,) have relieved the Citizens’ Bank from the control and supervision of the Board of .Currency, and have provided for it a new and entirely different administration of its affairs.
The Board of Currency was brought into existence "by the act of the 5 th of February, 1842, sec. 2, (Acts p. 38.) The principal object of its creation appears to have been, “ to take care that the paper money issued under the authority of the State be not depreciated.” But -the important duty was also imposed upon it, of supervising the administration of the commissioners appointed for the management of banks in liquidation. Secs. 2, 16. The act “To provide for .the liquidation of banks,” approved, 14 March, 1842, (Acts p. 234,) imposed further duties, and conferred additional powers on the Board of Currency, subjecting the.-entire administration of.the liquidating banks to the control and supervision of that board. Secs. 15.27. 28. 29. In regard to those banks in which the State was a stockholder, or for which it had issued bonds, it is provided, in the 29th section, that if any of them “ against which a decree of forfeiture shall have been rendered as aforesaid, should not enter into the foregoing arrangements, then and in that case it shall be liquidated as follows, to wit: As soon as the governor shall have ascertained that such decree has been rendered, it shall be his duty, by and with the advice and consent of the senate, to appoint six managers of each bank, and, if the senate be in recess, then the governor shall make the appointment of said managers, who shall elect one among themselves as president, and by whom the affairs thereof shall thereafter be conducted in its corporate name, and under the direction of the Board of Currency; and it shall be the duty of the president and directors of such bank, who may be in office at the time such decree shall be rendered, to deliver up to said managers all the property, effects, debts and assets of every description; and said managers shall be, and are hereby, and until otherwise provided by the legislature, invested with the same powers and duties, and subject to the same liabilities, penaltie.s and restrictions provided by the respective charters of said banks, so far as not inconsistent with this act.”
A judgment of forfeiture was rendered against the Citizens’ Bank, and that institution went into liquidation under the provisions of this act, and remained under the supervision of the Board of Currency, whose authority was never questioned, until the refusal longer to submit to this supervision which led to the present suit. Notwithstanding this .long acquiesence, it is now contended that, the express grants of power contained in this act were in reality withdrawn, as far back as 1843, by the'act of the 5th of April of that year (Acts, *348i p. 56); that the 8th section of that act, together with the silence of the legislature in relation to the Board of Currency, indicates the intention of the legislature to relieve the bank from the supervision of the board, and repeals the 29th section of the act of 1842. The 8th section of the act of 5th April, 1843, relied on, is as follows:
Sect. 8. “ That the twenty-ninth section of the act providing for the liquidation of the 'banks, approved fourteenth March, eighteen hundred and forty-two, be and the same is hereby modified and explained, so that the powers, rights and duties of the managers of the Consolidated Bank and of the Citizens’ Bank of Louisiana, shall be the same, and they shall be subject to the same responsibilities, as those defined by law with regard to the president and directors of these institutions before their being brought into liquidation, so far as is not inconsistent with the provisions of this aet, with the only exception that the managers of the said bank in liquidation shall not, under any pretext whatever, issue notes or bonds bearing the appearance of, or for the purpose of, circulation: the sairj, managers being also liable to the same fines and restrictions established by the laws now in force, in relation to the property banks in. liquidation."
The avowed objeet of the legislature was to explain, not to repeal, a previous statute, and a comparison of the two laws shows clearly the particular objects to which the explanation relates. No powers are conferred on the managers incompatible with those of the Board of Currency; but, on the contrary, it is expressly declared that the managers shall be liable to the same restrictions established by the laws now in force in relation to the property banks in liquidation. Independently of this express reservation no clause of the act indicates an intention to repeal the previous statute, and this construction appears to have been given to the Jaw by the bank itself, for a number of years. By no rule of interpretation cau a change of legislative intention be inferred from its silence.
The act of the 6th April, 1847, (Acts, p. 76,) repealed the 9th section of the act of 1843, which provided for the appointment of six managers for the administration of the Citizens’ and Consolidated Banks, and provided for the appointment of “ a board of bank managers” to be composed of three members, and for the election of three directors to each of those banks, and then declares, “that the said directors, with the managers herein provided for, shall have the power to manage and to do all things necessary and proper to the liquidation of said banks respectively, not inconsistent with this act and existing laws; provided however that, no act of the directors shall have any validity or force, until it shall have received the sanction of the two managers."
This act, it is contended, provides a new administration for the bank, and has substituted the “ board of bank managers” and directors, for the Board of Currency, and has relieved the corporation entirely from the supervision of the latter. While making the change the legislature make a reservation similar to that contained in the act of 1843, that the powers and acts of the new administration shall not be inconsistent with existing laws. One of those existing laws placed the management of the bank under the supervision of the Board of Currency; it had not been repealed, and is still in fullvigor, unless it be repugnant to the act of 1847. It is urged that this repugnancy results from the proviso with which the section concludes, “ that no act of the directors shall have any validity or force, until it shall have received the sanction of the two mnnagej-s representing the State.” This proviso, it is said, controls the reser*349vation in the previous part of the section, and, by necessary construction, the acts of the directors, when approved by the managers, are valid and binding.
It is not necessary for the decision of this case to determine how far, if at , . , , all, this act has trenched upon the various powers previously conferred on the Board of Currency. The proviso at the conclusion of the section relied on is certainly not inconsistent with the exercise of the powers now asserted by the Board of Currency, of examining the books, papers,-and minutes of the proceedings of the Citizens’ Bank. If, in other respects, the provisions of the earlier legislation be in conflict with those of the last act, to that extent only will the former yield and be deemed to have been repealed by the latter. Other considerations influenced the legislature in subjecting the administration of those banks to the supervision of the Board of Currency, besides that of securing their counsel and participation in the active management of the affairs of those corporal ions. The State had large interests depending upon the proper administration of those banks, and upon their ultimate ability to meet their liabilities. In order to protect those interests the legislature prescribed rules regulating their liquidation, and the appointed agents to superintend the execution of those rules were the Board of Currency. Through the reports of that board the legislature was to be informed of the condition of the banks, and of the acts of the agents entrusted with the more immediate and active management of their liquidation ; and, with the view of enabling the board to supply the required information, the books, papers, and minutes of the banks, were to be submitted to their inspection. No provision of the act of 1847, nor other law to which we have been referred, authorizes the conclusion that the legislature intended to dispense with the agency, in this respect at least, of the Board of Currency, nor with the advantages proposed to be derived from it.‘ A law providing for a Board of Currency exists upon our statute books unrepealed, and among the powers which it confers are those claimed to be exercised by the plaintiffs.
But it is objected that the secretary of state and the treasurer of the state cannot constitutionally perform the functions of that trust. The 126 article of the constitution declares that, “ No person shall hold or exercise at the same time more than one civil office of emolument, except that of justice of the peace.” The act establishing the Board of Currency created a distinct office, and provided that the three members, of whom it was originally composed, should be appointed by the governor, with the advice and consent of the senate. Acts of 1842, sec. 2- (Acts, p. 38). The act of the 6th April, 1843, (Acts, p. 63), declares, “ That in future the Board of Currency shall consist of two members only, to wit, the secretary of state and the treasurer of the state, each of whom shall ex-officio be a member thereof, and shall be entitled to only the yearly salary of $1200, free from all expenses of office,” &c. Before the passage of this law the office existed as a separate trust, entirely distinct and disconnected from those of secretary of state or state treasurer. Its .existence as a separate office was not destroyed, by the designation of two officers who alone should discharge its duties ex officio. But, on the contrary, its existence as an office of emolument is recognized in the amendatory act itself. To this union of the trusts there was no impediment when the law was enacted. Similar instances of the accumulation^of a variety of offiees in the hands of one person were not unfrequent under our former legislation, the most remarkablo of which was that of the parish judge, who, *350in virtue of that office, discharged the duties of numerous trusts, both judicial and ministerial, which were not the less separate offices. This was deemed an evil by the framers of our constitution, and hence the adoption of the prohibitory article. Membership of the Board of Currency being recognized by law as an office of emolument, its tenure has become iricompatible with those of secretary of state or treasurer of the state, under our present constitution. The effect of the article has been to repeal so much of the act of 1843 as constitutes those officers ex officio members of the Board of Currency. The appointment of the one, oribe election.of the other, no longer carries with it membership of the board, or authority to discharge the duties, or receive the emoluments of that trust. The consequence of the repeal has been to leave a statute providing for a Board of Currency which is inoperative, there being no person upon whom the office can be .conferred under the law as it now stands.
Art 144 of the new constitution which provides that no office shall ho superseded by the taking effect of the constitution, but that the laws relative to the duties of the several officers shall remain in full force though contrary to the new constitution, and that the duties ■thereof shall .be performed by the respective officers according to the existing laws, until the organization of tho government under the new constitution, and the entering into office of the now officers to be appointed under said government, authorized the secretary of state and treasurer to continue to discharge the duties of members of the Board of Currency after the taking effect of the new constitution, though membership of tho hoard was a civil office of emolument, distinct from that of secretary of state or treasurer, and involved the exercise by them at tho same time, of two civil offices of emolument contrary to art. 12C of the new constitution.EotbtiS; C. J. did not sit on the trial of this case, being a stockholder in the Citizens’ Bank.