94 Vt. 91 | Vt. | 1920
This is a petition for a writ of certiorari. The petitioner was duly elected street commissioner of the city of Burlington by the city council, for a term of three years from April 25, 1918, and Charles L. Dolan, another petitioner, who has also brought a petition for a writ of certiorari against the same petitionees, returnable at the same time, and, by agreement of parties to be heard at the same time with this case, and to be followed by the same result, was also duly elected a street commissioner by the city council for the term of three years from the 25th day of April, 1917. The petitionees are the mayor and aldermen of the city, and constitute the city council, who, by virtue of the city charter, were vested with power to suspend or remove from office all subordinate officers, including street commissioners, for incapacity, negligence, or bad conduct.
On May 5, 1919, the city council passed a resolution that the city attorney prepare charges against Bergeron and Dolan, and to each of the charges should be attached a citation requiring the petitioners to appear before the city council at the city clerk’s office at 8 p. m. May 9, 1919, to answer those charges. In accordance with that resolution the city attorney on May 7, 1919, prepared such charges and caused them to be served as directed. The charges against Bergeron, in substance, were that the firm of John L. Bergeron & Son, consisting of the father and son, the father being a street commissioner, and the son, Victor Bergeron, being an alderman of the city, furnished material and performed labor on certain bridges and a stairway for the city, costing more than $25 in each case, and in the aggregate costing several thousand dollars, for which the firm was paid from the city funds on bills approved by the street commissioners, of which Bergeron was a member, without a contract awarded upon bids advertised by publication as required by section 124 of the city charter, and performed the labor without the supervision of the city engineer, in violation of an order of the board of aldermen of the city. The charges against Dolan varied from those against Bergeron, in that he was not charged with performing the labor or furnishing the material, but was charged in other respects as Bergeron was charged.
On May 31, 1919, the parties met at the place designated in-the last adjournment and a further adjournment was taken to June 4, 1919, at which time and place the parties met and by a majority vote of the city council the additional charges were adopted. At that meeting it was arranged by consent of all parties that the evidence should be taken stenographieally. The petitioners at that meeting moved to dismiss all the charges for the reason that the city attorney had no authority to prefer such charges. The motion was put to vote and was denied. By agreement that meeting was adjourned to June 17, 1919. Just before adjournment counsel for the petitioner's stated: “We won’t require you to file additional charges. We will consider these charges as duly made and served upon us, and we waive further service and notice; the pending motion may be withdrawn.”
The parties met at the time and place named in the last adjournment, and the petitioners' filed five motions, numbered, second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth, and also filed answers in
This petition is brought to review that action of the city •council, and the cases stand for hearing upon the questions raised by the several motions above stated, except the first and fifth, which are not insisted upon in the petitioners’ briefs.
No claim is made that the work was done under a contract ■awarded upon bids advertised for; but the claim under the second motion is that the petitioners are not charged with having done the work and furnished the material under any contract, and that in fact the firm did not do it under any contract.
It was there objected that the city council as then constituted was without jurisdiction, because part of its members had prejudged the case on a former hearing, and because of the active part taken by the mayor. But this Court held that the constitution of the city council, its exclusive jurisdiction as a trier, and the diversity of duties imposed upon it, precluded the idea that impartiality can be made the test of the right of its members to sit in a hearing affecting the subordinate officers of the city government. It must be admitted that a much stronger case was there presented for holding the city council disqualified because of the dual position of prosecutor and trier, than is here presented. Here the proceedings were begun by the city attorney under the direction of the city council, by vote of that body, and, with the assistance of other counsel, prosecuted the case from beginning to end without the city council taking any further part in it, except to hear the evidence and pass upon the questions arising before it.
JLs this holding disposes of the case, it is unnecessary to pass upon the other questions raised and discussed in the briefs of counsel. The decision in this case applies alike in both cases, and the petition is dismissed in both cases, with costs to the petitionees.