26 F.2d 161 | 5th Cir. | 1928
This was an action or proceeding brought by the government of the Canal Zohe, on the relation of Charles L. Parker, against Frank T. Hamlin, the appellant, and Irvin M. Lieser, the relief sought including that granted by the judgment appealed from, which adjudged that the relator is entitled to and may exercise the powers and duties of deputy marshal of the Canal Zone, and that the appellant, Hamlin, be ousted and excluded from the office of deputy marshal for the Canal Zone. The District Judge of the Canal Zone certified his disqualification, and the case was tried by the Special District Judge, appointed to act in case of the absence, dis
The pleadings and proofs show the following: .For several years prior to March 1, 1927, appellant was deputy marshal of the Canal Zone, having been appointed to the position by the Governor of the Panama Canal. After the making by the District Judge of the Canal Zone to the Governor of the Panama Canal of representations as to the failure or refusal of the appellant as deputy marshal to comply with orders of the court as to process issued by the court; including orders as to the disposition of bonds taken under process in admiralty eases pending in the court, the Governor, on February 24, 1927, removed the appellant from the position of deputy marshal, and appointed appellee Parker to that position, after Lieser, the marshal, who then was physically incapacitated from performing the duties of his office, had refused to submit a nomination for a successor to the appellant. After appellee’s appointment by the Governor, the marshal refused to recognize him as deputy marshal, the appellant continued to use the office or quarters assigned for use of .the marshal and his deputy, and appellee was excluded from the use of those quarters. The assignments of errors raise the questions of the propriety of the overruling of the objection made to the Special. District Judge sitting in the ease, as to the power or authority, of the Governor of the Panama Canal to dismiss a deputy marshal without the consent of the marshal, and as to the right or jurisdiction of the court below to entertain an action or proceeding to oust a deputy marshal after his dismissal by the Governor.
The objection to the Special Judge sitting in the case was based on the grounds that, the Governor of the Panama Canal being a real party in interest in the case, and the Special Judge being the holder of a permanent office or position, that of Magistrate of the Balboa Division of the Canal Zone, to which position he was appointed by the Governor, and from which he may be removed by the Governor, the conditions of the Special Judge’s regular ‘employment and his tenure of office are such as to cause bias and prejudice in favor of the real party in interest, the Governor of the Panama Canal, whose appointee the relator is, with the result that the Special Judge may be subjected to such conscious or unconscious influence or suggestion as will serve to prevent a fair and impartial trial of the issues in this cause. Following the filing of that objection, the Special Judge made and feaused to be filed an affidavit, which stated as follows:
“That he is not pecuniarily interested in this action or proceeding, nor related to any party thereto within the sixth degree of consanguinity or affinity, computed according to the rules of the civil law, nor in which, nor in the matter out of which the litigation arises has he been counsel, nor. in which has he at any time presided in any inferior judicature.
“Affiant further says that he has expressed no opinion as to the facts of this ease.
“Affiant further says the statement to the effect that the conditions of his employment and the tenure of his office as magistrate are such as to cause bias and prejudice in favor of the real party at interest herein, and that affiant may be subjected to such conscious or unconscious influence or suggestion as will serve to prevent a fair and impartial trial of the issues in this cause, is wholly untrue.”
That affidavit negatived the existence of each of the grounds of disqualification prescribed by the applicable statute dealing with the subject of disqualification of judges. Code of Civil Procedure of Canal Zone, § 8. That affidavit was not rebutted by any evidence of the existence of a prescribed ground for disqualifying the Special Judge. The fact that a' judge is the appointee of an official who appointed to a public office or employment another person whose right to exercise the functions of that office or employment is brought into question in a suit or judicial proceeding does not have the effect of disqualifying such judge to act in that suit or proceeding. It was not made to appear that the Governor of th& Panama Canal was a party in interest in this suit, nor that the Special Judge had any disqualifying interest in this suit or on any other ground was legally incompetent to act as a judge therein. This being so, the objection under consideration was properly overruled.
Except in the eases of designated officials or employees of the Panama Canal and of the Government of the Canal Zone, whose appointment or employment is specially provided for, “all other persons necessary
No provision of the Panama Canal Act or of any other act of Congress authorizes the marshal of the Canal Zone to appoint a deputy marshal. Under the quoted provisions, the Governor of the Panama Canal has authority to appoint a deputy marshal when the services of such a deputy are required, and to discharge a deputy marshal for cause. Fullerton v. Government of Canal Zone (C. C. A.) 8 F.(2d) 968; De Jan v. De Jan (C. C. A.) 18 F.(2d) 690. It is not to be doubted that the services of a deputy marshal are required and the appointment of one is warranted where the marshal is physically incapable of performing the duties of his office and has no deputy who is obedient to lawful orders of the court with regard to process issued out of the court, or that a deputy marshal’s refusal or failure to conform to legal orders of the court constitutes cause for his removal or discharge. The power conferred on the Governor to appoint a deputy marshal to render required public services is not dependent upon the appointee being acceptable to the marshal, and the Governor’s power to remove or discharge a deputy marshal is not made subject to the marshal’s veto.
It was disclosed that the appellant failed or refused to obey orders of the court directing the deposit with the clerk or in the registry of the court of bonds taken by the marshal or by the appellant as his deputy in the execution of process issued in admiralty causes pending in the court, and otherwise was insubordinate, in that he disobeyed orders of the court with reference to its process handled by the marshal’s office. Such conduct is incompatible with the duty of a deputy marshal as a ministerial officer of the court. Being a ministerial officer of the court, whose process is received by him for execution, a deputy marshal is subject to the orders of that court, made in a ease within its jurisdiction as to parties and subject-matter, and such orders are sufficient to protect him in complying therewith. Matthews v. Densmore, 109 U. S. 216, 3 S. Ct. 126, 27 L. Ed. 912. A deputy marshal’s failure or refusal to comply with such orders is not excused by the fact that the marshal does not approve of those orders or forbids compliance therewith. We conclude that the acts of the Governor of the Panama Canal in removing the appellant from the position of deputy marshal and in appointing appellee to that position were valid.
“A civil action may be brought in the name of the government of the Canal Zone: 1. Against a person who usurps, intrudes into, or unlawfully holds or exercises a public civil office”; and “a person claiming to be entitled to a public office, unlawfully held and exercised by another, may bring an action therefor.” Code of Civil Procedure of the Canal Zone, §§ 208, 212. The position of deputy marshal of the Canal Zone is a public civil office, as it is a public station or employment in a civil capacity, conferred by the appointment of government. United States v. Hartwell, 6 Wall. 385, 393, 18 L. Ed. 830. The contention that the instant action or proceeding was not maintainable in the court below is without merit.
The record discloses that appellant was in the classified civil service of the Canal Zone up to the time of his appointment to the position of deputy marshal. His status as a classified civil servant did not affect the power of the Governor of the Panama Canal to remove him from the position of deputy marshal. No question as to the appellant’s rights under the Civil Service Act (22 Stat. 403) is presented by the record in this case.
Pursuant to the prayer of a petition, which alleged that the decree under review in effect removed said Lieser from the office of marshal and placed appellee in that office, this court entered a rule or order prohibiting the Special Judge from proceeding
The record shows no reversible error. The decree is modified to make it without prejudice to the right of the appellant to claim benefits to which he may be entitled under the Civil Service Act; and, as so modified, the decree is affirmed.