134 P. 670 | Mont. | 1913
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
According to the complaint, the appellant, plaintiff below, and Moses Quintín, George Farnam and William F. Bossier were on June 1, 1908, members of the police force of the city of Helena; on that day the respondent “wrongfully, unlawfully, maliciously and oppressively, and under color of his pretended authority as mayor of said city, did without right or jurisdiction or authority, and contrary to the provisions of the statute in that behalf enacted,” cause their dismissal and exclusion from office; and although they at all times and by all proper means protested against this exclusion and repeatedly reported for duty and tendered their services as members of the police force, they were by the act of respondent deprived of “all the insignia, ■badges, privileges and emoluments” of office until their restoration by judicial mandate on February 11, 1910. The personal .claims of Quintín, Farnam and Bossier are alleged to have been assigned to the appellant, and he prays damages measured by
Several questions are presented by the assignment of errors, but they are all resolvable into one, viz.: whether the trial court correctly granted respondent’s motion for nonsuit. The order of nonsuit, to be sustained, must find support in one or the other of the following grounds: (1) That the appellant is barred and concluded from maintaining this action on principles of res judicata; (2) that the evidence does not show any damages suffered, by plaintiff which are recoverable in this action.
1. It seems advisable to first dispose of the question presented by the pleas in the answer, to the effect that the appellant is
It is disclosed by the reply that the fact-basis for the relief now sought is essentially the same as that for relief in the
The loss of emoluments as a matter of special damage was not raised by the pleadings in the mandamus proceedings; but it is
The question is not free from perplexity. In the Chapter of. our Codes relating to mandmius, we find provisions for a verified answer; for traversing the answer; for trial by jury of certain questions of fact; for judgment; and “if judgment be given
And this conclusion finds collateral support in the further fact that in a mandamus proceeding a jury is not a matter of right but of discretion. Any and all of the questions arising therein, whether of law or of fact, may be tried by the court without a jury, with or without a reference (sec. 7219, Rev. Codes; Chumasero v. Potts, supra). If the relator must litigate therein any private right to damages which he may have against the respondent personally, arising out of the wrong to which the mandate itself is directed, perforce the adversary must submit; so that a cause of action at law becomes summarily justiciable without a jury, notwithstanding the fact that as to such causes of action both parties are entitled to a jury and cannot be compelled to submit to a summary adjudication. (U. S. Const., 7th Amendment; Basey v. Gallagher, 20 Wall. (U. S.) 670, 22 L. Ed. 452, 1 Morr. Min. Rep. 683; Const. Mont., Art. III, sec. 23; Chessman v. Hale, 31 Mont. 577, 581 et seq., 3 Ann. Cas. 1038, 68 L. R. A. 410, 79 Pac. 254.) But the statute clears itself of any such absurdity. It says, the applicant,,if he prevail, may have “the damages he has sustained” as found by the jury, etc. Sustained by what? Surely, by those circumstances upon which a jury may, but need not be, called to pronounce. These are questions of fact raised by the answer, “essential to the determination of the motion and affecting the substantial rights of the parties, and upon the supposed truth of the allegation of
The foregoing, and other considerations, as we think, justify our opinion that section 7224 is not to be interpreted as
2. We are constrained, however, to agree with the contention of respondent that the evidence presented to the trial court was
At the close of appellant’s case the state of the proof as regards any causal connection between the respondent’s acts and the damages claimed! was this: Bailey and his associates had been kept out of their offices from June 1, 1908, to February 10, 1910, as the result of orders of the respondent under an ordinance judicially held) to be void; during that time they drew no pay; upon their restoration they presented, in due form, to the mayor and city council their verified claims for the accrued salary, and these claims, for some reason, not made to appear, were rejected. There was an offer of proof that the city had exceeded the constitutional limit of indebtedness, but this was rejected, and properly so, for lack of an allegation in the pleadings.
The various decisions of this court relative to the status of the plaintiff and his associates establish that their dismissal and preclusion from office were without legal effect. (State ex rel. Quintin v. Edwards, 38 Mont. 250, 99 Pac. 940; State ex rel. Quintin v. Edwards, 40 Mont. 287, 20 Ann. Cas. 239, 106 Pac. 695; State ex rel. Bailey v. Edwards, 40 Mont. 313, 106 Pac. 703; State ex rel. Edwards v. District Court, 41 Mont. 369, 109 Pac. 434.) In contemplation of law, therefore, they were never dismissed, but were, during the entire period of their unlawful preclusion, police officers of the city, entitled to be paid as such, and, upon making good their claim to the office, in position to assert their right as against the city to the salary accrued. (Peterson v. City of Butte; 44 Mont. 401, Ann. Cas. 1913B, 538, 120 Pac. 483; Wynne v. City of Butte, 45 Mont. 417, 123 Pac. 531.)
“But it does not lie in the mouth of defendant to say that another person — Helena—is liable for the salaries”; so say appellant’s counsel, and Lumley v. Gye, 2 El. & Bl. 216, is cited in support of this position. That case, which was for damages directly due to the malicious act of Gye in procuring an opera singer to abandon her contract with Lumley, was decided upon principles wholly foreign to the case at bar; and without indicating whether we should, under appropriate circumstances, care to follow it, we note in the opinion of Compton, J., this language: “The damages occasioned by such malicious injury might be calculated upon a very different principle from the amount of the debt which might be the only sum recoverable on the contract. * * * The servant or contractor may be utterly unable to pay anything like the amount of the damage sustained entirely from the wrongful act of the defendant. ’ ’ In the case at bar damage might have been claimed upon a different basis and therefore calculated upon a different principle and upon the amount of the unpaid salary; but it was not. The.city of Helena may be utterly unable to pay the salary arrears, and the damage sustained by appellant may be due entirely to the wrongful act of respondent; but, if so, these facts have not been made to appear. This being true, there was a lack of proof; and for this reason the judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Rehearing
On Rehearing.
delivered the opinion of the court.
After a careful consideration of the propositions submitted on rehearing by counsel for appellant, we are convinced that the result reached in the opinion heretofore announced is the right one. Much contention is based upon the use in the opinion of the following language: “There was an offer of proof that the city had exceeded the constitutional limit of indebtedness, but this was rejected, and properly so, for lack of an allegation in the pleadings.” This statement is not literally correct. The trial court did reject the evidence referred to in the first instance for the reason stated, but later caused the record to show that evidence had been received of the fact that the indebtedness of the city was beyond the constitutional limit. However, the remark quoted was made merely in passing. The presence in the record of the fact referred to is not decisive of this appeal. The record) still falls short of establishing a causal connection between the unlawful preclusion alleged, and the loss of emoluments. It still fails to show by competent evidence how the utterly void act of Edwards could produce the result complained of or that the city could not have been made to pay the salaries of appellant and his associates as they accrued. We do not feel that the judgment-roll in the mandamus suits presented in evidence can be considered for any purpose, save that for which they were pleaded, to-wit: that there was adjudicated therein the right of appellant and his associates to the offices in question.
Judgment affirmed.
Affirmed.