The objection that the failure of Stiles to file his official bond caused the acts of the commissioners to be nugatory and void, is untenable. He must be vested with the office in order to file the official bond or take the official oath. The two acts are coupled together in the statute. Its language is: “ If any person shall execute any of the duties or functions of any office without having taken and subscribed the oath of office, or without having executed and filed in the proper office any bond required by law, he shall forfeit the office to which he may have been elected or appointed.” (1 R. S., 121, § 31.) Other sections require the officer with whom the official bond should be filed to give notice of neglect to file the same to the governor. (§§ 26, 27, 28.) It is plain, that the failure to file the bond is a cause of forfeiture. The office in that case, does not become
ipso facto
vacant, but thеre must be a direct judicial or other authorized
*402
proceeding on the part of the proper authority to enforce the forfeiture. The act resembles a cause of forfeiture of a franchise or corporate charter, which is only enforceable by a proсeeding in the nature of a
quo warranta.
That this rule applies to a forfeiture of an office is maintained in
Hall
v.
Lather
(
Weeks v. Ellis is thus a direct authority for the proposition that the defendant Bassett cannot be treated as a trespasser. It does not, however, decide that Stiles cannot be, as that point was not involved. I think, however, that the course of reasoning there employed is applicable to this case. The com *403 missioner of highways in the present case, as the justice in the case cited, was not, in terms, prohibited from holding the office before filing the official bond. He was only required to file the bond before entering on his official duties, and his failure to file it does not make his act void, but subjects him to а forfeiture of his office.
There are many loose expressions in the law books concerning an officer
de facto
and
de jure.
Hnder the former term, judges have frequently grouped together persons who were mere usurpers, with those who had a colorable title, and even with those who were regularly inductеd into office, and yet, had committed some act which would justify a forfeiture. This last case is, however, not properly a case of an officer
defacto.
It is an instance of a rightful officer holding by a defeasible title. His acts are in all respects lawful, until the State interferes by a proceeding in the nature of a
quo warranta.
It only tends to confusion to style him an officer
defacto,
whose acts are only valid as to the public and third persons, and cannot be sustained as to himself. Such works as Viner’s Abridgment collect a large number of instances in which persons rightfully in office have committed acts of forfeiture, either by mis-user or non-user, and quite analogous to thе failure, under the Hew York statutes, to take an official oath. The persons having committed these acts remain officers until the forfeiture is declared, just as a corporation or a franchise continues to exist until sentence of forfeiture is, in like manner, judicially declared. Section 432 of the Code clearly distinguishes between the case of an usurpation of an office, or an unlawful holding of it, and a forfeiture of an office once lawfully held by the performance of some prohibited act. It is held in
Sprowl
v.
Lawrence
(
These views do not conflict with
People
v.
Nostrand
(
The next question is whether there was any such interest in the subject-matter of the litigation, on the part of Stiles, as to disqualify him from acting as commissioner. It is claimed by the plaintiff that the duties which Stiles performed were judicial, and'that he was thus disqualified from acting as such commissioner, еither by reason of statute provisions, referring to the disqualifications of judges, or on general principles of common law. There is no plausible ground for contending that the case falls within the terms of the Revised Statutes. Their language is: “ Ho judge of any court can sit as such in any cause in which he is а party, or in which he is interested, or in which he would be excluded from being a juror by reason of consanguinity or affinity to either of the parties,” etc. (2 R. S. [4th ed.], 463, § 2.) The words “judge,” “ court,” “ cause” and “.parties” as here used, plainly show the intent of the legislature. The ordinary sense of the words must be adopted, аnd the phraseology held applicable to judges
eo nomine.
It cannot be extended to administrative officers who happen to perform an act requiring deliberation and sound judgment. It is clear that an act may call for such qualities and not be, in the technical sgnse, a judicial act, and that thе person exercising them will not necessarily be a judge. Burrill, in his Law Dictionary, defines a judge as “ a person whose office is to administer justice in courts held for that purpose, a public officer authorized by law to hear and determine causes and who holds courts statedly for that purpose.” Bouvier’s definition is: “A public officer appointed to decide litigated questions according to law. An officer so named in his commission and who presides in some court.” Reference may also be made to the case of
People
v.
Wheeler
(
The only other point to be considered is, whether commissioners of highways would be disqualified by the common-law rules, concerning judicial officers, in such a manner as to make their acts nugatory. It is unnecessary for the decision of the present question to consider whether, as is strоngly insisted upon by the plaintiff, under the Bevised Statutes and amendatory acts, the powers of such commissioners in laying out roads are judicial in their nature. If it be conceded for the time being that they are, it still becomes necessary to inquire whether the rules of the common law do not, like the statutes, apply solely to judges eo nomine, and also, whether the disqualification, where it exists, renders the acts of the judge a nullity, so that the plaintiff may bring his action of trespass.
In respect to the first of these questions, the rule appears to have been that the person must be a judge in the usual sense of the word, with power to hear and determine litigated questions. The leading English cases are the following: In re Hammersmith, Rent Charge (4 Exch., 87; Roll. Abr., Judges, pl. 11); Bridgman v. Holt (2 Shower’s P. Cases, 126); Gorham v. Bishop of Exeter (15 Ad. & El. N. R. [Q. B.], 52); Ex parte Medwin (1 E. & B., 609); R. v. Hoseason (14 East, 606); Dimes v. Proprietors, etc.. (3 H. Lord’s Cases, 759). See also Broom’s Legal Maxims, under the rule, “ No man can be a judge in his own case,” where many eases are collated. The cases collated by Mr. Broom have been examined, аs well as many found in Dimes v. Proprietors (supra), and with scarcely an exception, they refer to judges or justices or other persons holding a court eo nomine. Where the persons are not judges or justices in name, then the inquiry is, whether they are acting judicially in the proper sense, that is *407 whether they are, substantially, a court. A good illustration is Regina v. Aberdare Canal Co. (14 Ad. & El. N. R. [Q. B.], 854). In that case, there were commissioners to settle questions between a canal company and land owners, growing out of taking land for the company’s purposes. They had power to take evidence on oath, to assess compensation, and to render determinatiоns on hearing counsel. Their decisions were deposited among the records of the Court of Sessions, entered in a book and were deemed to be originals and received as evidence. Under these circumstances, it appeared that a land owner had applied to the commissioners for their sanction to the act of building a bridge. Their decision rendered upon evidence, and after argument, was declared to be a judicial act. It accordingly fell within the rule that one of the commissioners could not be pecuniarily interested, though the court also laid stress on the fact that the statute creating the commission provided that no commissioners should be interested in the result. There is no case in England that goes further than this, and Mr. Broom places the decision upon the statute rather than on the common law.
The facts, however, are much strongеr than in the present case. The commissioners of highways, under our statutes, have no power to assess damages, but can only apply to other authority to summon a jury, cannot take evidence, do not make up any judicial record of their proceedings, nor enter them in any court оffice. They simply meet at a specified time and hea/r reasons that may be offered for or against laying out the highway, and then determine what to do. The papers' on which they act, and their determination are filed with the town clerk, instead of with the clerk of a court.
The facts of the case serve to justify the remark of Denio, J., in
People
v.
Wheeler
(
Should I be wrong in these views, it is very clear that the plaintiff cannot, by the common law, treat the proceeding as a nullity and bring an action of trespass as he has done. Where a member of an inferior tribunal is interested at common law, the only remedy is to set the proceeding aside. This point underwent great examination in a carefully considered case in the House of Lords, in 1852. (Dimes v. Grand Junction Canal, 3 H. L. C., 759.) The question was of sufficient importance to submit to the fifteen judges, who answered through Parke, B. (Lord Wensleydale), that the order or decree of the lord chancellor (the judge interеsted) was voidable and not void. A writ of prohibition may, in some instances, be granted. Where that has not been resorted to, the proper course is to bring a writ of error, for error in fact, and to assign or set forth the interest as cause of error. It was expressly said by the judges that, until the one or the оther of these steps were taken, the action of the court in which the interested judge had taken part was valid, and the persons acting under its authority could not be treated as trespassers. It was added that, “ the' many cases in which the Court of King’s Bench has interfered where interested parties have acted as magistrates, and quashеd the orders of the court of which they formed a part, after they had been removed by certiorari, afford- an analogy. Hone of these orders is absolutely void; it would create great confusion and inconvenience if they were:” (Pp. 785, 786.)
This exposition of the common law, having so much in authority as well as reason to commend it, must be accepted as final.
On these grounds the judgment of the Supreme Court should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.
