41 W. Va. 471 | W. Va. | 1895
George Arkle, a justice of the peace of Ohio county, was summoned to appear before the Board of Commissioners who constitute the County Court of Ohio county, to answer charges preferred against him in writing, charging him with misconduct in office. Said county court proceeded with the investigation of each of the charges brought against him, and during the pendency of said investigation said George Arkle obtained a rule in prohibition from one of the judges of the Circuit Court of said county, requiring a cessation of said proceedings against him until the further order of the court. The said board of commissioners then moved the court to discharge the rule, which motion was overruled, and said rule was made absolute.
In the affidavit relied on by said Arkle in support of the rule, he bases said application upon the alleged ground that section 7 of chapter 7 of the Code of West Virginia, under which said investigation was ordered and entered into, is unconstitutional and void.
On the 12th day of September, 1894, the case was heard upon the petition, the charges mentioned therein and filed therewith, and upon the rule in prohibition awarded by the judge of said circuit court in vacation, which had been served upon the president of the said board of commissioners of Ohio county, and upon the motion of said board of commissioners to discharge said rule, upon the ground that the said petition and charges filed do not disclose sufficient cause to warrant the issuing of a writ of prohibition as prayed for, which' motion, upon consideration, was overruled by the court, and said board of commissioners by its counsel excepted, and it was ordered that the said rule so awarded be made absolute, and that a writ of prohibition be awarded, directed to said board of commissioners, commanding it to cease all other and further proceedings upon the charges aforesaid made against said George Arkle, justice of the peace of said county, and said board of commissioners again excepted, and applied for and obtained this writ of error.
The sole question we are to determine in this case is
Section 6 of Article IY of the Constitution provides that “all officers elected or appointed under this constitution may, unless in cases herein otherwise provided for, be removed from office for official misconduct, incompetence, neglect of duty or gross immorality in such manner as may be prescribed by general laws,” etc. But we find that in section 24 of article 8 of the Constitution this limitation is placed upon the powers of the county court, after enumerating various powers of said court: “Such courts may exercise such other powers and perform such other duties not of ajudicial nature as may be prescribed by law.” The question, then, which we encounter at once is whether this proceeding for the removal of said George Arkle from the office of justice of the peace of said county was a judicial proceeding. Charges wmre preferred against him, he was cited to appear and answer the same, and the court was proceeding to hear and determine the question of his amotion from oflice, when the rule in prohibition was awarded against said county court. In the third volume of the American & English Encyclopedia of Law, at page 693, under the head of “Legislation Tiegu-lating Courts, Judges, and Jurisdiction,” it is said: “Where the constitution establishes a particular court and fixes its jurisdiction, it is not competent for the legislature to pass any statute abolishing the court or either enlarging or abridging its jurisdiction.” In the case of Montross v. State, 61 Miss. 429, it was hold that “the legislature can not confer, upon courts established by it, jurisdiction exclusive of that which by the constitution is given to courts established by the constitution itself, nor can it delegate to such courts the power to declare what shall be the punishment for offenses against the laws of the state.” Wells, Jur. p. 55, says: “The essential distinction between constitutional and
We are aware of no right which is clung to with more tenacity, and about which more feeling is engendered, than in regard to the tenure of public office; and in determining the questions arising upon these contests, intricate questions of law 'must frequently present themselves for determination. An officer has a right to an office to which he has been fairly and legally elected, and to the emoluments arising therefrom, and he should not be deprived of them
From what has been held in the authorities above quoted and others which might be referred to, my conclusion is that in order that an incumbent may be removed from office, charges must be preferred, the party must be summoned and have an opportunity of interposing a defense if he so desires, and there must be a judgment of amotion, and that when any court entertains such proceedings, and pronounces such judgment, it must lie regarded as performing a judicial function, and in rendering such judgment such court or board of commissioners must be regarded as passing upon the rights and property of the individual, and oftentimes depriving him of his only means of support. Such proceedings we must regard as judicial, and, as such, they are forbidden to be exercised by the county court by the plain letter of our constitution.
I reach this conclusion, fully aware of the fact that in the case of State v. Hawkins, 44 Ohio St. 98 (5 N. E. 228) it was held that the power conferred on the governor of the state to remove any members of the board of police commissioners was administrative and not judicial, and in the case of Stern v. People, 102 Ill. 541, it was held that “the power to remove a county treasurer, conferred upon the county board, is not a judicial power, but. a ministerial or executive power.” Anderson, in his Dictionary of the Law, defines a judicial act as follows: “An act done in the exercise of judicial power; an act performed by a court, touching the rights of parties, or property brought before it by voluntary appearance or by prior action of ministerial officers.” See Flournoy v. City of Jeffersonville, 17 Ind. 170.
Our statute (section 7, chapter 7) provides for the removal from office of county and district officers, and, after pro
The Circuit Court, therefore, as we conclude, committed no error in making the rule absolute, and the judgment complained of is affirmed, with costs, etc.
The question whether, on the offense here alleged and specified, there must be indictment and conviction before amotion, I do not consider. In a broader sense, the question here invol ved is one, in the main, of method of procedure.
When a judge, as such, or a court, has the parties before him, the one making complaint and asking judgment, and the other denying and defending, in the judicial mode, and the judge, in the same method, ascertains the facts, determines and applies the law, and renders judgment, and causes it to be executed, he has administered justice, he has exercised judicial power, and, in such exercise, has performed a judicial act, in form or method of procedure, which is here, the important part, and by such method sees to it that the law in the concrete case is obeyed, executed, enforced.
The executive and judicial branches are therefore close akin. Their respective functions shade into each other imperceptibly. The administrative branch of the executive power can not wait to pursue judicial methods. Public convenience does not admit of such delay. It must therefore, in some essential parts, follow another method in ascertaining the facts and applying the law. We may, for distinction, founded on partial resemblance, term this act of his quasi judicial. A court of police and fiscal affairs may, and does to some extent, follow the same method. The case is concrete, and the point of law arises out of the facts found,
I have said thus much to show that in the practial affair of making, declaring and enforcing the law, it will not do to insist upon any hard and fast line of determination between these three governmental powers, but mainly to show that it is the method of procedure which must in the main determine the question.