The following dissenting opinions were filed October 31, 1899:
Marshall, T.There is no governmental policy more generally adopted than that which absolutely prohibits, by legislative enactments, changes in the compensation of a public ■officer during his term .of office, more frequently violated by the recklessness or ignorance of executive bodies concurring with .the ignorance or greed of their beneficiaries, the abuse of which if tolerated will lead to greater mischiefs, and none ffihat courts generally have more rigorously enforced aud that “this court has more consistently and firmly upheld. In Quaw v. Paff, 98 Wis. 586, summarizing many previous decisions, it was said: •“ Such wholesome provisions of law cannot be •evaded so as to be beyond remedy by an allowance for the performance of some .specific act really belonging to the duties of the office, . . . or by any other of the many ■ways that have been resorted to by officers to obtain possession of public money, ostensibly as compensation for some .public service-outside '©f their official duties. Officers take their offices cum on&re, and can acquire no right, legal or equitable, to a salary in excess of that provided and fixed by law before they enter upon their official duties. Whether 'the.salary incident to an office be adequate or inadequate is entirely immaterial. The officer accepting an office has no ■right to demand more for the performance of its duties, or *200the performance of any duty, as such officer, not required by law, but which may be required of him by the governing body of the corporation and voluntarily performed. All services performed, which are within the scope of his official duties, . . . are, in contemplation of law, covered by his official salary. Though he may by some means obtain possession of public funds as additional compensation and by permission of the governing body of the corporation, the title of the money thus obtained does not thereby change, but a liability of the possessor is thereby created to return such money to its rightful owner, which the courts will enforce at the suit of a taxpayer.” That states the law plainly as it has been many times announced and applied by this, court. Frederick v. Douglas Co. 96 Wis. 411; Land, L. & L. Co. v. McIntyre, 100 Wis. 245; Rooney v. Milwaukee Co. 40 Wis. 23; Jones v. Grant Co. 14 Wis. 518; Crocker v. Brown Co. 35 Wis. 284. No member of this court intends to invade-in the slightest degree the wholesome principle mentioned, but rather to increase, if possible, its significance; yet, in the-judgment of the writer of this opinion, by the decision in this case it is violated in letter- and spirit, and so decidedly that how different minds can come to such diverse conclusions on a plain question of law is of itself food for reflection. It demonstrates the fallibility of human reasoning, even in matters that- are almost, it would be supposed, susceptible of demonstration. It is unfortunate that such division of judgment exists, but it cannot, be avoided without a surrender of convictions, that will not do when important legal principles are involved.
From, what has been said it may reasonably be expected that strong reasons are supposed to exist for dissent from-the conclusion to which the court has arrived. We will briefly endeavor to satisfy that expectation.
In the first place it seems proper to review, for a moment,, the reasoning of the court. It is prefaced by a history of *201the steps taken in regard to the alleged violation of the charter provisions prohibiting an increase of an officer’s compensation during his term of office, and of the importance and extraordinary character of the work the defendant was called upon to do, and the practice of previous administrations to farm out the duties of the office for special compensation in addition to the regular salary incident to it. We shall take no time to demonstrate that all said in that regard constitutes no justification for the acts complained of. The council had the power to give the defendants extra compensation over and above the salary, or did not possess the power. If the. latter be true, no matter what the importance of the work which the defendant performed, and no matter what has been the practice of the city council, the situation is yet the same. Transgressions, however numerous or long continued, or to fit emergencies however great, do not count at all to supply a clear want of power in the common council to do the acts complained of. Like reasons have been repeatedly pressed upon the attention of this and other courts to justify wrongs of the kind under consideration. In Frederick v. Douglas Co., supra, the facts were that there was an extraordinary volume of legal business for the district attorney to attend to,— an amount utterly impossible for him to attend to without assistance-. The salary of the office was fixed without regard to such a situation, yet the court held that such circumstances furnished no excuse whatever for any expenditure in addition to the regular salary incident to the district attorney’s office at the time he entered upon the discharge of his duties. The reference by the court here to previous changes in the city surveyor’s compensation, in considering the question of the legality of the extra payments complained of, would seem to conflict with what was so decided, if it were not that after such reference, such purpose was expressly repudiated and the various acts referred to held to be of themselves no justification for such *202payment. Being repudiated, we take it tbat, though they are recited together with a suggestion that the officer would not have accepted his position had he not expected and had a -right to expect, from the past administration of the city government, that the salary incident to his office was not to be considered as the measure of his compensation, such matters are not intended to be regarded as of any particular significance,— none whatever, other than to exhibit a supposed equity of defendant’s position, while, under the principles of law governing the subject, he is not entitled to any such consideration.
The real question is, Does the city charter of the city of Madison provide that the compensation incident to the office of city surveyor shall not be changed during the term of office -of any person elected to it, and if so, was the law in that regard violated as claimed by the appellant? The court seems to have come to that conclusion as stated, notwithstanding the many collateral suggestions made, as if entitled to -some consideration, in reaching the final result. At the close of the opinion it is said: “We base this decision squarely upon the propositions that the legislature has delegated to the council the power to prescribe the duties of the city surveyor and to fix the fee and compensation for any services performed by him, and that the council has determined that the services in question are not official services.” That is to say, as we understand it, that there is no justification for the acts complained of, except upon the theory that defendant’s services were unofficial, — work done by him as a mere employee of the city; and that the determination of the council as to the nature of the services is binding on the court. That really fences the matter under consideration within very narrow limits and requires a reference to those portions of the charter of the city bearing on the subject.
Sec. 1, subch. Ill, of the charter empowers the common *203council to appoint such, officers as may be necessary to carry out its provisions, and to fix their compensation at the time of the creation of the offices or the commencement of the year, and prohibits any change of such compensation while the officers remain in office.
Secs. 11 and 12 provide for the election of a street commissioner, surveyor, attorney, board of education, and assessor.
Sec. 13 prescribes the duties of the assessor in general language and provides that he shall have such compensation as may be determined by the council, not exceeding $500 for his term of office.
Sec. 14 provides that the street superintendent shall perform the duties prescribed in sec. Y and for the compensation there named, and such other duties as may be required of him pursuant to the charter or ordinances of the city and not inconsistent with such charter.
Sec. 15 provides that the city surveyor shall be a practical engmeer cmd surveyor and that the common council shall prescribe his duties and fix the fee and compensation for any of the services performed by him.
Row while it is true, as stated by the court, that if there is a conflict between a special provision covering a particular subject and a general provision in the same law covering ' that and other subjects, the latter must give way to the former, such rule of construction does not apply at all till the rule fails to solve the ambiguity which calls for judicial construction, that where two acts or parts of acts are apparently in conflict, they should, if possible, be so construed as to reach such harmony as will give effect to each act or part of an act without doing violence to either. Attorney General ex rel. Taylor v. Brown, 1 Wis. 513. In State ex rel. M., T. & W. R. Co. v. Tomahawk, 96 Wis. 73, it was said that “ in all cases of apparent conflicts between laws or parts of laws on the same subject, we ought to seek such a *204construction as will reconcile them together.” To the same effect, it was said in Mason v. Ashland, 98 Wis. 540, that “ when two acts or provisions are susceptible of a construction which will give operation to both and all of the words of each without doing violence to either, it is incumbent on the court to search for some reasonable ground for such construction, and not reach the conclusion that a fatal conflict exists, unless the meaning of the words and the manner of their' use he such as to render it impossible to reconcile them on any reasonable theory, whereby all may be given force and effect.” It seems to us that such fundamental principle of statutory construction was overlooked in this case, and an apparent conflict was treated at once by that rule of necessity which rejects one part of an act, only, after every reasonable effort to harmonize it with all other parts, upon some reasonable theory, has failed.
It is said that sec. 15 authorizes the common council to say, from time to time, what services the surveyor shall render, and to fix his fees and compensation therefor; that it is in conflict with sec. Y, which provides that such officer’s compensation shall be fixed at the commencement of the year, therefore that, the latter being general, the former must prevail. Now obviously, as indicated, such is not the case unless the two provisions of the act cannot be reasonably reconciled with each other.
Sec. Y is a plain declaration of express power to the common council to fix the compensation of all officers elected or appointed by it,- — -not some officers, but all officers,— and a plain declaration that power shall not exist to change the compensation incident to an office, during the occupancy thereof, of any person elected or appointed thereto. There is no need to stop a moment at this point. So far, the premises upon which our position is based are conceded. Keeping in mind the principle heretofore discussed, that the plain meaning of sec. Y is not to be departed from for the *205purpose of giving effect to tbe special provision in sec. 15, unless necessary, we proceed.
In close connection with sec. 7, and with plain intent to devise a plain, harmonious system, power is conferred upon-the council to elect certain officers, and immediately following that are provisions ini regard to the duties and compensation incident to each such office. First is the assessor, whose duties are prescribed by mere reference to the general law, and it is said, his compensation shall be such as the common council shall determine, not exceeding $500. That is a special provision, and without the rule that it must be made to harmonize with sec. 7 if practicable, we might easily say it is in conflict with it, for there is given a broad, general power, within a limitation stated, that has no reference to the general section in its literal sense. The incident of compensation attached to the office is subject to the unrestrained power of the council as to the time when it shall be fixed and as to change, but it is obviously reasonable to say that the specific grant of power must be exercised in harmony with sec. 7, because that does not take from it any essential, and it is in accord with the general scheme of the charter.
The street superintendent is required to perform the duties prescribed in sec. 7, and for the compensation therein prescribed, and such other duties as may be required by the charter or ordinances. Here the literal sense makes the office an exception to sec. 7, because no duties are prescribed,' nor any compensation fixed, in such section. Power is merely given by such section to prescribe duties and fix compensations. So we might say that the street superintendent is not required to take a stated compensation for his services, fixed before entering upon the duties of his office, but that, by implication, it is left to the council to contract with him under its general welfare powers. But assuming, as we must, so long- as it is reasonable to do so, that the *206plain language of seo. Y means what it clearly indicates,, that the legislative intent was that all other parts of the-charter should be in harmony with it in respect to the power of the council to change the compensation of an officer during his term of office, the meaning of sec. 14, regarding the street superintendent, is that he shall perform all duties lawfully required of him for the compensation determined under sec. Y.
Thus far we are in accord with the court. It is assigned as reason for the latter’s change at this point that the duties, of the officers mentioned are fixed by special provisions in, the charter, while those of the surveyor are entirely left to-the council. On the contrary, as we have seen, the duties, of such officers are left to be regulated by ordinance from time to time, where their nature cannot be readily specifically prescribed in the charter or by ordinance in advance. It is said the street superintendent shall perform such duties as are required of him by the charter and also by the ordinances of the city, and express power is given-to-the council to require duties of any of its officers outside of those prescribed in the charter.
Now, when we come to the city surveyor it, must be noticed that the plain purpose of having a special provision for each of the officers named was to> outline the general scope of the duties of each office, not, as the court seems to suppose, to prescribe the special duties- of it. Opposite each special provision in the official publication, there is a designation, indicating that the subject of it is the “ duties of the office.” The provision as to the assessor is, in effect, that, he shall perform the duties of an assessor under the general laws of the state; as to the street commissioner, that he¡ shall perform the duties required by the charter and the-ordinances of the city. The general scope of the duties of such office are a matter of common knowledge, so nothing on that point is needed. The same, would be true of city *207surveyor if the purpose of the charter were not to malee’ its duties other than that of running street, alley, and other lines, and to fix points in the field, within the city limits, in which the city might be interested. That is the extent of the vocation of a mere surveyor. But it was intended that the duties of the office should include those having a close relation to duties of a surveyor, so, in the opening lines of sec. 15, it is said: “He shall be a practical surveyor and engineer.” The purpose of that was- to outline the general scope of the duties of the position, so- as to cover practical engineering as well as surveying. That was important, because the settled law is that, under- a scheme prohibiting a change in the compensation of an officer during his term of office, the fixed compensation covers every duty within the scope of the position in any reasonable view of it, and every act outside of it as well, required ©f the officer and yoluntarily performed by him. Quaw v. Paff, 98 Wis. 586. Only such services as- are wholly foreign to the office can be the subject of special contract under such a system. Love v. Baehr, 47 Cal. 364; Mechem, Public Officers, § 863; Adams Co. v. Hunter, 78 Iowa, 328.
It would be digressing here to- take up the subject of the scope of the duties necessarily belonging to and germane t©' the office of surveyor and engineer, within the proper meaning of those designations. It is only referred to at this point to show that the purpose of the section is- in harmony with those which precede it, that is, to indicate the- general character of the officer’s duties, leaving their particular- nature, so far as necessary, to be prescribed as occasion might arise. To that end, though the name of the office was “ city surveyor,” it was said that the officer shall be a “ practical surveyor and engineer,” and that the common council shall-prescribe his duties, using almost the identical language-contained in sec. Y. The first part of such section reads t “ The common council shall have power, from time to time,. *208to require other and further duties to be performed by any officer whose duties are here prescribed.” Those are not words of limitation, but were inserted to prevent any construction tying the hands of the council against calling upon an officer to perform some service' within the scope of his office because specific duties devolve upon him by the charter. The words follow, “and to appoint such other officers as may be necessary to carry into effect the provisions of this act.” That clause points unmistakably to sec. 11, which provides for the street superintendent, city attorney, surveyor, assessor, and board of education. Then come the words, “and to prescribe the duties,” in exact harmony with the opening lines of the section, and with sec. 15, relating to the surveyor. Then follow the words, “ and fix the compensation of all officers elected -or appointed by it.” The words of sec. 15 are, “ and fix the fee and compensation for any service performed by him.” It will be noted that there is a substantial identity between the two expressions. Certainly under the rule that they must be considered in harmony if possible without doing violence to either, there is no difficulty in so considering them.
Now let us place the language of the essential parts of the two sections in parallel lines for greater certainty in making comparison:
“ Sec. 7. . . . and appoint such other officers as may he necessary to carry into effect the provisions of this act,
“ And to prescribe their duties,
“And fix the compensation of all officers elected or appointed by it,
“ Such compensation . . . shall not be increased or diminished during the term such officers shall remain in office.”
“Sec. 11. On the third Tuesday of April in each year, or within ten days thereafter, the common council may elect ... a city surveyor.”
“Sec. 15. . . . and the common council shall prescribe the duties “ And fix the fee and compensation for any services performed by him.”
*209Row we apprehend it will not be claimed seriously but that we have shown to a demonstration that the legislative intent was to devise a scheme of government for the city of Madison that would not contain any power whatever to change the compensation of a public officer during his term of office; also that we have shown just as clearly that there is no good ground for saying that sec. 15, in all its parts, cannot be read in perfect harmony with sec. 7. If so, our duty at this point is ended. It supports what has been heretofore said, that the principle of construction which rejects a part of a law when in conflict with another part was adopted by the court in reaching its conclusion before the ■station in judicial investigation was reached rendering that •course proper.
Any other result than what is reached in the foregoing leads to this absurd situation: A salary may be provided for the office of city surveyor under sec. 7, which cannot be. ■changed during the term of office of any occupant thereof, but, by the arbitrary will of the council, they can contract with the officer from time to time for everything appertaining to the office, leaving the salary as compensation for wearing the honor of the position, the actual work being paid for by special contract or contracts made from time to time. Such a monstrosity in legislation as that could not be attributed to any body of sane men. Notwithstanding ■such a situation of the charter seems to be suggested in the judicial reasoning that resulted in the decision from which we dissent, its untenable character seems to have been thoroughly perceived later, and the decision finally made to rest upon the theory that the services in controversy were not official services at all; and to that point we must now address ourselves.
Vere the services in question official? That is the remaining. question. It must be determined with reference to what was the legislative intent in prescribing the qualifica-*210tious of the officer to be that of a “ practical surveyor and engineer.” Within the scope of such qualifications no discretion was left by the charter for the common council to say what was and what was not official. The one power delegated was to say what the officer shall do within the scope of his official qualifications. Every such service was covered by the compensation fixed before he assumed the duties of the office. The idea that it is left to the caprice of the common council to say from time to time what is required of the officer as official duties, and what he may do under contract, the same as if he were a private individual,, without regard to whether he might be required to perform the same services as a part of his official duties, we may safely say has no reason to support it, and that, though there are some things said in the opinion of the court indicating that such an idea was in mind as a ground for the decisions at some time during the determination of the case, it was not thought to be sufficient to base such a decision u]ion, hence was left as a mere suggestion, and the decision made to rest on the sole ground that the services were not official.
A sure test of whether the services of the officer were official or not is, Oould the officer have been compelled to perform them by virtue of his office, or held liable for official mis-cohdicct ? Whatever he could have been compelled to do by reason of his official position the council were powerless to bind the city to pay him for as official work. Many illustrations of this are found in the books. A mayor of the city has been held competent to recover for legal services performed for his city under a special contract, because he owed no official, duty to the municipality to perform services of that nature. Niles v. Muzzy, 33 Mich. 61. In Love v. Baehr, 47 Cal. 364, it was held that the official duties of an officer are limited by the nature of his office, and that if services be required of him entirely outside such nature, he is not obliged to perform them for his official salary. The principle *211was applied in Evans v. Trenton, 24 N. J. Law, 764, it being there held that though extra compensation be promised an officer for services, within the general nature of, or germane to, his office, it cannot be recovered because such a contract is ultra vires; that an officer may make a valid contract with his municipality for service entirely outside his official duties, hut not for services within the general scope of the office or which are germane thereto. See, also, Mechem, Public Officers, § 863, for further illustrations.
The authorities above cited, and, we may confidently assert, all that can be found on the quéstion applicable to this case, are to the effect that the common council had no power whatever to extend .or restrict the nature of the duties which devolved upon the defendant. The idea that it may delegate some of the acts naturally pertaining to the office to the officer to perform officially, and contract with him specially for other acts of the same nature, in its discretion, is, it seems, a wrong construction of the statute; and such, to the mind of the writer, is the effect of the decision in this case, though the idea is not really advanced as a ground for it. How much more reasonable and in harmony with the authorities cited, and with reason, is the construction that the officer is bound to perform, for his fixed salary, all the duties within the nature of his official qualifications which he is directed to do at all!
It is suggested that the fact that the council may, by the terms, of the charter, employ some other engineer to do work of engineering, shows that all services germane to the office of surveyor were not intended to be official. Clearly not so. It shows merely that the intent was that if the requirements for services shall be too burdensome, or in the judgment of the council beyond the capacity of the officer at any time, the council may, in the exercise of its discretion, employ some other engineer to assist him. The idea that, because the charter authorizes assistance for the regular officer, it *212carries, by implication, power to pay such officer extra for doing services within the scope of his office, is illogical in the extreme. The charter contains a plain grant of power to elect an officer with certain qualifications, indicating the nature of the services he shall render, and power to determine the character and amount of such services, and to employ assistance when necessary, but no power to contract with the officer to perform services which he may be required to dp by the council by their commands.
But it is said that some part of the services were charged up to abutting property. Why should that make any difference ? The charge against abutting property was surely not for the benefit of the officer, but for the benefit of the city. As well might it be claimed that if I let the services of my servant to another, his earnings shall be by so much an addition to the fixed yearly compensation which I have agreed to pay him. That provision of the charter is simply a means of reimbursing the city for its expenditures in the payment of its officer’s compensation, which services are, to that extent, specially beneficial to the abutting property owners. It has no legitimate bearing whatever on the amount of the officer’s compensation for official duties.
But it is said that the action of the common council in making services pertaining to the office unofficial was not such an unwarranted abuse of power as to call for the interposition of the court, as if there were some discretion in the common council to say what are and what are not official services, within the limits fixed by their nature, or that where the judgment of the council has been exercised in determining whether services are within or without the nature of the office, reasonable doubts are to be resolved in favor of its action. To that we say: first, there is no question of discretion involved, but a question of power, the limit of the power being the limit of the nature of the office, as said in Love v. Baehr, 47 Cal. 364; second, that in determining whether *213services are within or without -the nature of the office, reasonable doubts should be résolved in favor of the former instead of the latter. So exceedingly important is the policy of the law prohibiting increasing an officer’s compensation during his term of office, so frequent -are the importunities for such an increase, so ingenious are the methods to obtain it, and so liable are legislative bodies to give way to such im-portunities, or be imposed upon by such ingenious methods, or to become in some other way a party to a violation of the wholesome law, that it has been uniformly held that a rigorous enforcement of it is demanded of the courts, and to that end that not only all services clearly within the scope of the office, but all incidental or germane thereto, should be held to be covered by the officer’s regular compensation if such services be performed by him, Decatur v. Vermillion, 77 Ill. 315; Rowe v. Kern Co. 72 Cal. 353; Mechem, Public Officers, § 862. The rule in that regard is nowhere better stated than in Evans v. Trenton, 24 N. J. Law, 764, in substantially the following language: ‘ The rule is important to the public. It should be very rigidly enforced. The statutes of the legislature and the ordinances of the municipal corporation seldom prescribe with much detail and particularity the duties annexed to public offices, and it requires but little ingenuity to run nice distinctions between what duties may and what may not be considered strictly official, and if these distinctions are much favored by courts of justice, it may lead to great abuse.’ We indorse that. All acts of a public officer for his municipality not clearly unofficial should be deemed to be official. That is demanded in order to minimize, so far as practicable, the mischiefs of the continuous efforts of officers to increase their compensation, which experience shows is a constant source of peril to the safety of public funds. The lesson should be inculcated by the courts at every opportunity, that the sole compensation of a public officer, under such a system as that written into *214the charter under consideration, .is that incident to the office when he accepts it; and that the sole relief from its burdens, if found too onerous, is resignation. Evans v. Trenton, supra; Decatur v. Vermillion, supra. So it will jiot do, either for the court to say that the common council had a discretion to decide whether the services in question were official or not, or to justify noninterference on the ground that, if there was an abuse of the charter powers, it was not a very clear abuse.
A third and conclusive answer to the suggestion that the court should not intervene in this action to protect the public interests because the abuse of power complained of, if there be such, is not very clear, is that the services in question are covered by the very nature of the office and by the express requirements of the charter as well. Planning, constructing, and superintending the construction of sewers are among the most common duties pertaining to the business of civil engineering, and such the designation of the vocation clearly indicates. That is so much a matter of common knowledge that one feels hardly justified in supporting it by an appeal to reason and authority. The term “ engineer ” as applied to civil matters refers “ to the construction of fixed public works, such as . . . aqueducts, bridges, . . . sewers, etc.” Webst. Diet. “To the designing and construction of public works, such as roads, bridges, etc.” Stand. Diet. Thus it will be seen that the qualification of the office held by defendant covered the work in question, as the term “ engineering ” is defined in our standard lexicons. Nothing appearing to the contrary, it must be presumed that the legislature used such term in its plain, ordinary sense.
But the intent of the legislature is not left to be discovered by legal implication. In the amendment to the charter (Laws of 1885, ch. 195) it is said that the common council may require the city engineer to make plans for sewers con-*215formably to a general plan for sewerage'for the whole city, and that the work of construction under such plans shall be done under the direct supervision of such engineer. Thus it will be observed that though it was competent for the council to obtain the services of some other engineer to assist the regular officer, the latter was bound to act in respect to the services in dispute when commanded to do so by the council. Therefore, all services mentioned in the opinion of the court, where the council has heretofore paid its engineer in excess of his regular compensation, were performed by him because he was city surveyor, and because he could not do otherwise without being guilty of official misconduct. He was in each instance directed to act upon the theory, as the fact is, that it was his duty to obey. In the light of the foregoing, who can answer otherwise than in the affirmative to this question: If the defendant had been directed to do the work in question and refused to obey, would he have been guilty of official misconduct? This is unanswerable logic. It was the duty of the defendant to perform, as official, all services performed by him for the city that were within the scope of or were germane to the nature of his office. Every such service the officer could have been compelled to perform or be guilty of official misconduct, hence the council were powerless to make it the subject of a special contract with him. The services in question pertained to the business of civil engineering, and were within the nature of the duties which could lawfully have been required of defendant, therefore such services were official, and the contract to treat them otherwise and to pay extra for the same was void.
To recapitulate:
1. The practice of the common council in respect to violating its charter by increasing the compensation of its city surveyor during his term of office, does not change the plain letter of the charter prohibiting it; nor do such violations *216weigh at all as a justification of the illegal conduct complained of, or in determining whether the charge of illegality in that regard is sustainable.
2. The general grant of power to fix the compensation of the city officers, and prohibition of any change of such compensation during the term of office of any officer, are in perfect harmony with the special grant of power to prescribe the duties of the city surveyor and to fix his compensation.
3. If on any theory the two provisions are in conflict, and we hold there is none, they may reasonably be read in harmony, and that is sufficient for the appellant.
4. A suggestion that the council may treat services pertaining to the nature of the office of city surveyor as official or unofficial in its discretion, leaving part or none of such services to be compensated for by the fixed salary, and part- or all of such services to be treated as unofficial and paid for under special contracts, should be rejected under the familiar rule that any construction of a statute which leads, to an absurd result should not be adopted.
5. Services of the kind in question are covered by the plain ordinary meaning of the term “ practical engineering and the express requirements of the charter.
6. The fact that the .services in question are such that the defendant might have been compelled to perform them as duties incident to his office, demonstrates that the common council was powerless to make them unofficial and the subject of special contract with its officer.
This dissent from the decision and opinion of the court, might have been stated with much less labor than has been expended upon it, but the importance of the subject seems, to amply justify such labor. It is thought that a backward step has been taken where, if movement were to be made at all, it should be'in the direction of strengthening the line-against the tendency to obtain extra compensation for public services. The contrary course here is attributed to a *217misconception of tbe meaning of the charter considered, the application to it of wrong rules of statutory construction,, and an effort to construe that which is so plain as not to be-open to construction. Though the reasons for this dissent, have been given with considerable directness of statement, resulting from much study of the subject, I disclaim any higher desire that right principles should prevail than that, which I fully concede to those holding opposite views. They have most conscientiously and laboriously worked to that end, but yet reached a conclusion with which individual conceptions of judicial duty do not permit a concurrence. I think the order appealed from should be reversed.-