174 Ind. 181 | Ind. | 1910
Appellant, as a, taxpayer of Montgomery county, and as the owner of a saloon of the value of $2,000. which it is alleged would be injured by a vote under the local option temperance law approved September 26, 1908 (Acts 1908 [s. s.] p. 4), in favor of prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors as a beverage in Montgomery county, brought
It is urged (a) that ho man can be a judge in his own cause, (b) that it follows that the statute prohibits persons from acting when they are required to be disinterested or indifferent within certain degrees of consanguinity or affinity within the sixth degree, or within the degree of second cousin, and (c) that proceedings under a petition for a local option election are judicial.
It has been settled in other jurisdictions that signing a petition for a local option election does not disqualify the signers from acting upon it in ordering an election. Lemon v. Peyton (1886), 64 Miss. 161, 8 South. 235; Hunter v. Senn (1901), 61 S. C. 44, 39 S. E. 235.
We are aware that in Nebraska a different conclusion has been reached and adhered to, of holding that the signing of a petition for a license to sell intoxicating liquors disqualifies a petitioner, whose duty as supervisor it is to pass upon the question of license or no license. Rosenberg v. Rohrer (1909), 83 Neb. 469, 120 N. W. 159, and cases cited.
We are not able to agree with the unqualified rule as laid down in Nebraska, in the absence of any showing that there is no other tribunal authorized to dispose of the matter, or no other persons authorized to take the place .of the official, for the reason that it is against public policy that one charged with a public duty should be permitted to disqualify himself from the discharge of that duty.
In the case of State v. Crane (1873), 36 N. J. L. 394, it was held that the action of the board of commissioners, charged with the duty of making assesments, is void where one of the commissioners who was interested in the assessment, other than as a general taxpayer, took part in the assessment, though a majority without him acted. We cannot refrain from observing that the conceded fact — that he would have been competent as a taxpayer — renders the question one of degree only, and that no necessity for his action existed. Besides, our court has held that action by one member of a board of commissioners, in a matter in which he was a petitioner for a gravel road and had a general interest as a taxpayer, where the other two members acted,
We have fully enforced the maxim that no one shall be a judge in his own cause in this State, and the rule here announced is not in conflict with our own cases. The nearest approach to a conflict is in the case of Winters v. Coons (1904), 162 Ind. 26, but it will be noted by reference to that ease that the question arose more particularly over the fact that one who had been an attorney in a cause, and had succeeded as judge, had, without the knowledge of counsel on the other side, settled and signed a bill of exceptions, but the rule of necessity, as here pointed out, was not invoked or adverted to, and was not applied, for the reason that it seemed to the court to be a case, under the facts, in which the maxim ought to be invoked.
The court below did not err in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint, and the judgment is affirmed.