74 N.J.L. 418 | N.J. | 1907
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is on return to a rule to show cause why a writ of mandamus should not issue to Mark M. Fagan, mayor of Jersey City, commanding him to sign a certificate for license purporting to have been granted to Morris Dienstag, the relator, by the board of excise of Jersey Citjr, and commanding George M. McCarthy, the city clerk of Jersey City, to deliver said license to the relator.
The facts upon which the writ is prayed are embodied in a stipulation signed by the counsel of the respective parties. The material facts displayed by this stipulation are these: Before July 24th, 1906, the excise board of Jersey City consisted of members appointed by the mayor, by virtue of the act of 1903. Pamph. L., p. 369. On July 24th, 1906, the Court of Common Pleas of Hudson county, acting under color of the act of 1906 (Pamph. L., p. 199), appointed members of the board of excise for Jersey City. The members of the latter board were recognized by the city clerk and chief of police, but not recognized by the mayor or by the previous
It is stipulated that from the time the second board was appointed on July 24th, 1906, to the day when- the before-mentioned decision of the Supreme Court was rendered, both boards were meeting in Jersey City; that during the pend-ency of the writ of certiorari no licenses were granted by the second board.
It is further stipulated that before the appointment of the second board by the Court of Common Pleas the relator had applied to the old board — the mayor’s board — for a license to do business as a saloonkeeper, and his application was refused. Two days after the appointment of the new board, namely, on July 26th, the relator applied to that board for a similar license. The application was in the regular form. It was received by the city clerk, together with the sum of $500, which sum is still retained by the city. The application was duly advertised, and at a meeting of the board, held on August 2d, the board adopted a resolution licensing the relator to keep a restaurant and sell spirituous and malt liquors. This resolution the mayor vetoed, and no action has been taken by the board since the veto.
It is also stipulated that it has been the practice for some ■years past that all resolutions of the excise board of Jersey City granting licenses shall be certified to the mayor for approval, and for the city clerk not to issue any licenses without such approval. •
It is also stipulated that, although demanded by the relator, no certificate of license has been signed and delivered to him.
The ground upon which the counsel for the relator puts his right to a writ is that the board which granted the license was at the time a de facto licensing body. It is pointed out that there were offices existing previous to the act of 1906; that all the act of 1906 attempted to accomplish was to change the method of appointing the officers to fill these preexisting offices, and that the act did not attempt to create new offices. It is thereupon insisted that where there is an office legally existing, and a person is appointed or elected to fill such office, his acts will be held valid as those of a de facto officer, although the statute has prescribed an unconstitutional method for the appointment or election of such officer. The doctrine thus stated as a general proposition is undoubtedly sound.
It is entirely settled that the lawful acts of an officer, so far as the rights of a third person are concerned, are, if done within the scope and by the- apparent authority of the office, as valid and binding as if he were the officer legally elected and qualified for the office and in full possession of it. State, ex rel. Mitchell, v. Tolan, 4 Vroom. 195; Unwin v. Jersey City, 31 Id. 141; Oliver v. Jersey City, 34 Id. 634, 639.
This doctrine is upheld,- not in the interest of the officer in fact, but is permitted to exist for the advantage of those who have dealt with such an official without knowing or being expected to know of his defective title.
It is, however, not every person who assumes to execute official functions who is to be classed as an officer de facto, and whose acts can be successfully invoked by a third person. If there is an officer or board of officers having legal title to the office, and claiming to be in possession of the office, and being present ready to exercise its functions, no other officer or board of officers can, during the same period, by any colorable appointment to such office, or by any acts in professed execution of the office, acquire a de facto character. Such person
In the words of Judge Ira Harris, employed in Morgan v. Quackenbush, 22 Barb. 72, 80, there cannot be an officer de jure and another officer de facto in possession of the same office at the same time.
Similar language was used by Chancellor Walworth in Boardman v. Halliday, 10 Paige 223, 232.
In Cronin v. Stoddard, 10 Hun 524; S. C., on appeal, 97 N. Y. 271, a person named Bellaye was elected an excise commissioner, and failed to have his bond approved. Assuming' that a vacancy thereby existed, one Kinne was elected to fill the assumed vacancy. Kinne joined in granting a license, he making a majority. It was held that there was no vacancy to be filled ; that the Kinne appointment was a nullit3r, and that Bellaye was a de jure officer, and was performing the duties of his office, and therefore there was no place in which another could act.
In School District v. Smith, 67 Vt. 566, the expiration of the term of one Smith as treasurer of the school district was terminated upon the election of his successor. The court held that the election of Huse to succeed him was irregular. It was contended that' Huse was nevertheless treasurer de facto, but the court held that Smith, being the officer de jure and in possession of the office, Huse could not be the officer de facto, as both could not be in possession at the same time.
In City of Somerset v. Somerset Banking Co., 109 Ky. 549, a member of common council who failed to attend its meetings, and whose place was, because of his non-attendance, illegally filled by the remaining members, was held to remain a de facto as well as a de jure member, although he still failed to attend. It was held that a tax levied by said board would be set aside for want of a quorum, the appointee not being a de facto officer.
In Powers v. Commonwealth, 110 Ky. 386, it was-held that when two persons were present at the seat of government, each claiming to be the governor de jure, and each assuming to
In Steinbach et al. v. State, 38 Ind. 483, it was held that When a new township trustee was elected and qualified, the former trustee was no longer in office de jure or de facto. The court said where there is one office there cannot be an officer de jure and. one de facto in possession of such office at the same time.
In McCohen v. Commissioners of Leavenworth, 8 Kan. 437, there were two boards of commissioners. There was an old board, who were the de jure body, who had never been ousted or ceased to be de facto officers. A new board at the same time attempted to exercise the functions of the office. It was held ■that the new board could not thus become de facto officers.
In Cohn v. Beale, 61 Miss. 398, it was held that a warrant purporting to have been issued by a school superintendent was bad, because there was another de jure superintendent in possession of the office at the same time.
The rule illustrated in these cases is thoroughly and satisfactorily discussed in the case of State v. Blossom, 19 Nev. 312. In that case there was a contest between two boards of school trustees. Each board claimed to be the lawful officers, and each board proceeded as though the other board did not exist. It was held that the old board was the de jure board, and that the acts of the new board, before the statute under which they were elected had been declared unconstitutional, were invalid. The court said: "If the office is filled and the duties appertaining thereto performed by the officers 'de jure, another person, although claiming the office under color of title,.cannot become an officer de facto."
This rule has become incorporated in the text of the works of authority upon the subject of public officers. Mech. Pub. Off., § 322; 5 Am. & Eng. Encycl. L. (1st ed.) 106.
The point now 'mooted has not been the subject of direct decision in our own courts, but the doctrine now declared, illustrated by the cases already cited from the decisions in other states, was here indirectly recognized by the Court of
In a previous case, namely, Erwin v. Jersey City, 31 Vroom 141, Erwin had been appointed corporation attorney for Jersey City, and took upon himself the performance of the duties of that office. He brought an action to recover compensation for his official services. Weart, his predecessor had, under the statute, the right to hold over until a successor was appointed. Weart claimed that Erwin had not received a legal appointment, and so that he, Weart, remained the de jure city attorney. He also claimed that he had performed the duties of the office..
The court found as a fact that Weart had abandoned the office, and so was not an officer de facto. It found also that Brinkerhoff performed the duties of the office. The court did not pass upon the de jure character of either, inasmuch as Erwin, being the only de facto officer, was entitled to the salary attached to the office under the rule established in Stuhr v. Curran, 15 Vroom 1.
In the case of Brinkerhoff v. Jersey City, supra, Brinkerhoff had been appointed by the board of finance of J ersey City to the office of corporation counsel, and had proceeded to perform such official duties as were required of him. Edwards, his predecessor, was entitled to hold over until a successor was legally appointed. EdAvards claimed that Brinkerhoff was not legally appointed. He also claimed that he himself had continued to fill the office. The court, upon the assumption that both Edwards and Brinkerhoff had performed official duties, and were officers in fact, passed upon the legality of the appointment of Brinkerhoff, which of course involved the de jure character of each claimant. The court found that Brinkerhoff had a de jure title, and so sustained the verdict in his favor for the amount of the salary of the office.
The theory upon which this decision went was, inferentially, that notwithstanding that both Edwards and Brinkerhoff may have in fact executed such official duties as were required of each, yet Brinkerhoff, being also the officer de jure, was by reason of that fact the only officer de facto.
A query is suggested arising out of another phase of the relator’s case. By the form and fact of the information, it is assumed by the relator that his right to sell liquor is not complete until a delivery to him of a signed license. The query is whether this court would issue its prerogative writ to compel the execution of certain acts designed to perfect and complete a grant, when it appears that the body which voted for a license was utterly without legal authority to do so.
The rule to show cause is dismissed.