after stating the facts: Chapter 590, Acts 1905, provides: Sec. 91. “That the sheriff and tax collector shall receive five per cent on all taxes, license and privileges, collected by them for State, county, township, school district or other purposes whatsoever up to the sum of fifty thousand dollars, and upon all sums so collected by him in excess *450thereof be shall receive two and one-half per cent commissions."
Section 92. “The auditor, in making the settlement of the amount due from the 'sheriff or tax collector aforesaid, shall deduct from the list returned * * * five per cent commissions on the amount collected.”
Defendant contends that section 92 is in conflict with section 91, in that while the first section fixes the commissions at five per cent on $50,000, and two and one-half per cent on the excess thereof, the next succeeding section directs the auditor, in settling with the sheriff, to deduct the five per cent on the whole amount. The point is also made, in the brief, that the rate of commission for collecting taxes cannot be reduced during the term of the incumbent, the office being of constitutional and not statutory creation. Counsel call to our attention the principle of construction, that, where two statutes or two provisions in the same statute upon the same subject conflict, the last in point of time will control, because it is the last expression of the legislative will. Conceding this to be true, the question remains whether there is a conflict, of which defendant can. avail himself. Section 91 clearly fixes the commissions to be paid to the sheriff — he can not receive any amount in excess thereof. The direction to the auditor to deduct five per cent cannot, by implication, repeal the clearly expressed limitation upon the commissions given the sheriff. It simply directs the duty of the auditor and prescribes what deductions he may make, the commissions being the third item in the enumeration. If it be conceded that there is a conflict, and that both sections are to stand as written, the amount left in the hands of the sheriff in excess of his commissions as provided in section 91 could not be applied to his own use, but would be held as public money to be accounted for. The defendant contends that as the statute fixing the sheriff’s commissions prior to 1905 gave him five per cent on the total amount collected, *451and the Act of 1905 was a revision of the Machinery Act, the same construction will, prevail as before the revision, unless the language plainly requires a change of construction. Conceding this to be true, the language of section 91 manifests a clear and well considered change in the law fixing the commissions. But for the language of section 92 there would be no reason for construction of section 91. If the language of section 91 was of doubtful meaning, we would apply the principle correctly stated by defendant. The difficulty does not arise from that quarter. Hence, the principle does not apply. The principle upon which we think the solution of the question depends is that where one provision expresses the principal purpose and object of the Legislature, the language used will control and guide in construing a section or clause providing the details by which the primary purpose is tc be effectuated. The primary purpose here is to fix the sheriff’s commissions for collecting taxes. The settlement with the auditor is a matter of detail containing directions to that officer, and must be construed with reference to the primary provision. The third sub-section of section 92 is clearly an inadvertence. We cannot attribute to the Legislature the intention to repeal a clearly expressed purpose in regard to an important matter by a provision immediately following, providing the manner of making the settlement. Section 92 must, therefore, be construed in the light of section 91, directing the reduction of the commissions pre-, scribed by that section. Fortune v. Comr’s, 140 N. C., 322.
In regard to the second point, it is true that the case of Mial v. Ellington, 134 N. C., 131, does not affect the status, or rights, of the sheriffs, — his being a constitutional .office. The regulation of his fees, however, is within the control of the General Assembly. He takes his office, not by contract, but by commission, subject to this power in the Legislature; The Constitution fixes no fees whatever. Bunting v. Gales, 77 N. C., 283. “The office is constitutional, it is true, but *452the duties are statutory. * * * The Legislature may, within reasonable limits, change the duties and diminish the emoluments of the office if the public welfare requires it to be done, and to this the incumbent must submit.” Fortune v. Comr’s, supra, in which the law is discussed and the authorities cited by Mr. Justice Walker.
The judgment must be
Affirmed.