Caba v. Probate Court

363 Mass. 132 | Mass. | 1973

Reardon, J.

The town clerk of Agawam and clerk of its town council, Edward Caba, has brought this petition for a writ of prohibition to restrain the respondent Probate Court for Hampden County from hearing, determining, or taking any further action in the case of Joseph M. Faucette against him and another, an equity proceeding brought in that court.

In 1971 the voters of Agawam adopted a home rule charter changing the form of government of that town.1 *134On June 6, 1972, an election was held for the town council taking office under the new charter and Faucette was elected, his election being certified on June 13, 1972. Faucette was, and is, chairman of the board of selectmen of Agawam under the existing frame of government. The salary for that position is payable from the town treasury.

At a meeting of the newly elected town council the question was raised whether Faucette could continue to serve as a selectman until December 31, 1972, while also sitting on the council. The town counsel gave an opinion that he could so serve but the council on August 1, 1972, voted by a majority of eight to seven to remove Faucette from the office of town councilman because of the prohibition of § 2-5 of the charter. On August 7, 1972, Faucette filed an equity petition in the Probate Court seeking a declaration that the town council’s vote was null and void, and injunctive relief preventing the respondents in the equity petition (Caba and the fourteen other members of the town council) from interfering with his right to participate in proceedings of the town council.

The probate judge issued a temporary restraining order, which was continued in effect on August 23, 1972. Caba and the other equity respondents then filed a demurrer asserting that the Probate Court lacked jurisdiction of the subject matter, which was overruled. On August 30, 1972, Caba filed this petition for a writ of prohibition, and thereafter, on September 15, 1972, filed in the Probate Court a notice of removal of the Faucette petition to the Superior Court under G. L. c. 215, § 6, notifying the register of probate at that time by letter that the notice of removal was solely to protect the rights of the respondents therein, and that he did not submit *135to the jurisdiction of the Superior Court. On September 25, 1972, Caba was permitted to amend the petition for a writ of prohibition to include the Superior Court as a respondent. The ease is before us on the reservation and report of the single justice.

We must first consider whether any court of the Commonwealth has jurisdiction over the subject matter of Faucette’s petition. Caba points out that the last sentence of § 2-1 (a) of the charter provides that the “town council shall be the judge of the election and qualification of its members,” and argues that where the local elective body is vested with this power the courts do not have jurisdiction to judge the qualifications of members of such a body. He relies heavily on Peabody v. School Comm. of Boston, 115 Mass. 383, as support for this proposition. In the Peabody case, a woman was elected to the school committee and a seat was denied her by the majority of the other members because she was a woman. Raising the issue of jurisdiction sua sponte, the court interpreted the charter as manifesting the intention of the Legislature that in Boston the question of the right of any person to a seat on the school committee should be at once and finally determined by the body of which such person claimed to be a member, reasoning that such procedure was more expeditious than judicial proceedings. If we assume we would follow the reasoning or adopt the result of the Peabody case today, the present case is distinguishable on at least two grounds.2

In the Peabody case, the charter provided that the school committee “shall have authority to decide . . . upon all questions relative to the qualifications, elections and returns of its respective members” (emphasis supplied) . P. 386.

The Agawam charter states merely that the town council shall be the “judge of the election and qualification of its members.” However, we share the opinion of the town counsel that the new Agawam charter, read as a *136whole, does not intend that the prohibition against dual office holding apply until January 1, 1973. Therefore, Faucette’s simultaneous positions as councilman and selectman could not be considered relevant to his “qualification.” We do not think that the language of § 2-1 (a) of the Agawam charter confers on the council the power to exclude or expel a member for a cause which as matter of law is not a disqualification. See Powell v. McCormack, 395 U. S. 486.

Furthermore, unlike the Peabody case, the council did not refuse to seat Faucette but attempted to remove him after he had served for a month. At that point the council was not acting as the “judge of the election and qualification of its members.”

Since the petitioner has been afforded an ample remedy by the removal of his case to the Superior Court we find no need to rule on the argument that the Probate Court lacks jurisdiction of this matter.

An order shall enter in the county court dismissing the petition.

So ordered.

The relevant sections of the new charter can be summarized as follows:

a) Section 2-1 (a) provides in part that the “town council shall be the judge of the election and qualification of its members.”

b) Section 2-1 (b) provides that only voters who at all times during their term of office are residents of the town are eligible to hold the office of councilman.

c) Section 2-5 prohibits a councilman from holding any other office or position, the salary or compensation for which is payable out of the town treasury.

d) Section 10-7 (b) provides for a special election of the first town council under the new charter. “Any incumbent official of the town may be a candidate for any office to be filled at this election.”

Section 10-7 (d) provides: “The town council elected at the said special election shall meet to organize and shall assume their office on the first secular day of July following their election.” That section goes on to provide that the powers of the council will not be effective until the first secular day of January next following, and that in the meantime the council will appoint a town manager and take other *134steps to prepare for the transition to the new form of town government.

Section 10-7 (f) provides in part: “The board of selectmen in office at the time of the special election shall continue to serve in that office until December 31 of that year.”

Our hesitancy in the premises arises from Powell v. McCormack, 395 U. S. 486.