Dissenting Opinion by
Mr. Justice Musmanno:On September 29, 1952, after ten years faithful service as an Allegheny County outdoors policeman, the plaintiff Charles P. Jordan was stricken with a heart condition which incapacitated and hospitalized him for some six months. He returned to work in March, 1953, when, a year later, America’s most dreaded malady, struck at him again. In July, 1954, he applied for an “inside” policeman’s job under the Act of 1953, July 28, P. L. 723, which provides, inter alia: *5“In cases where a member of a county police force whose duties are those of an outside policeman is found to be physically unfit to perform such duties due to an infirmity resulting from the performance of his duties as a policeman . . ., such member, upon application to the board of county commissioners, if there is any vacancy existing in the number of building policemen, building guards or other positions, the responsibility of which is building protection or security, as set forth in the budget of the county, shall be assigned to inside work as building policeman or other special duties without any diminution in pay” (Emphasis supplied) The application was approved by the proper county authorities, but a question arose as to whether Jordan’s disability was the result of his police service. He initiated legal action to compel payment of his full salary as provided by the Act of 1953, and the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County eventually determined that his disability was service-connected.
However, in the meantime the General Assembly of Pennsylvania, in 1955, amended the Act of 1953 by deleting the words “without any diminution in pay,” and substituting therefor: “and be paid such compensation as shall be fixed by the salary board for building policemen.” The pay of an outside policeman is |357 per month, that of an inside policeman |290 per month. It is this difference in wages which the plaintiff policeman seeks. The lower Court refused the higher wage, and this Court has affirmed the lower Court. I dissent.
I dissent because the government has no more right to repudiate its obligations than a private employer. Nor is there any indication that the Legislature, in enacting the amendment of 1955, intended to deprive policemen already enjoying the benefits of the Act of *61953 of the standard of pay there stipulated. All legislation applies to the future unless a retroactive intention is clearly manifested: “No law shall be construed to be retroactive unless clearly and manifestly so intended by the Legislature.” (Sec. 58, Statutory Construction Act, 1937, May 28, P. L. 1019.)
The Majority Opinion argues that to allow the plaintiff the wage rate assured him under the Act of 1953 would be to “cause inequities, impair morale, curtail experimentation in wage and salary programming, and hence, impede the effective administration of government.”
I apprehend no such catastrophe. Charles F. Jordan is a policeman who suffered a cardiac disability in line of duty. To be injured in the heart is no less a traumatic disablement than to be shot in the lungs. And if a grateful people, through its representatives in the General Assembly, determined in 1953 to supply to anyone so disabled a pair of crutches, no one can say that two years later the Legislature intended to take away one of those crutches, unless such an inhuman seizure is spelled out in language which can admit of no doubt.
In June, 1954, this Court said: “According to the cardinal principle of justice and .fair dealings between government and man, as well as between man and man, the parties shall know prior to entering into a- business relationship the conditions which shall govern that relationship.” (Hickey v. Pittsburgh Pension Board, 378 Pa. 300, 309.)
When Jordan, in 1954, elected to take an inside policeman’s job, he had every reason to believe that he would continue to receive an outside policeman’s salary. The law so stated. The highest expression of sovereign authority so declared. If Jordan had had any reason to doubt the reliability and • durability of the law which impelled him to take the inside police*7man’s job, he might have decided to retain his outside policeman’s job. The higher wage in the latter position might have meant so much to him that he would have preferred to adhere to that position regardless of any accompanying pain and discomfort. However, having every assurance in the stability of the law and having every confidence that the decisions of our Courts are not written in the crumbling sands of an ocean-washed shore, he changed his job and adjusted his routine of life to conform to what the Legislature proclaimed in 1953. As late as August, 1954, we assured him that there would be no change in the procedure which ascertained and preserved his rights. We said: “Whether it be in the field of sports or in the halls of the legislature it is not consonant with American traditions of fairness and justice to change the ground rules in the middle of the game.” (Hickey v. Pittsburgh Pension Board, supra, 310.)
Has this Court now changed the ground rules in the middle of the game?
The Majority Opinion speaks of the power of the Legislature “to amend statutorily created rights affecting conditions of public employment . . . although changes made will affect present . . . employees.”
But the legislation in question does not treat of classification of employees. The Act of 1953 had to do with employees disabled in service. They are necessarily a small number. The Legislature conferred upon those unfortunate persons certain rights. The Legislature could, of course, change the rate of pay of those injured after the new legislation went into effect. It did, in fact, by the Act of July 27, 1955, make a chánge in that respect, but the Act, while remedial in procedure was not therapeutic in application. It did not heal Jordan’s heart disability which .occurred, while the Act of 1953- was law, and not history. • . .
*8The Act of 1955 could not change a contractual relationship which had already been entered into between Charles F. Jordan and his employers.
As late as January 17, 1957, this Court, spoke out in language intended for the centimes to come: “The general rule of construction is that amendatory statutes are not to be construed as retroactive unless such a construction is so clear as to preclude all questions as to the intention of the Legislature: (citing cases). When the language of a statute is general, and might be given both retroactive and prospective operation, it will be held to be prospective only: (citing cases). This canon of statutory construction is particularly applicable when the legislation in question interferes with existing contractual obligations or antecedent rights:” (Rupert v. Policemen’s Relief and Pension Fund, 387 Pa. 627, 631.
In April, 1957, only three months after the above pronouncement, I still adhere to what was there and then said by this Court.