169 Va. 355 | Va. | 1937
delivered the opinion of the court.
Charles A. Hammer, Jr., obtained this writ of error to a judgment of the trial court, entered in a proceeding upon an information in the nature of a writ of quo warranto, declaring that he had no title to the office of city justice of peace for the city of Harrisonburg.
In February, 1937, Lawrence H. Hoover, for and in the name of the State of Virginia, sought and obtained leave of the trial court to file his petition and an information in the nature of a writ of quo warranto against Charles A. Hammer, Jr. The material facts alleged in.the petition and information may be stated as follows: Lawrence H. Hoover in June, 1936, was duly and legally elected to the office of city justice of peace for the city of Harrisonburg, to fill an unexpired term ending December 31, 1936. Pursuant to this election he duly qualified and entered upon the discharge of his duties. He was entitled to and did receive the emoluments and privileges of the office until the end of his
The petition, and information filed therewith, further alleged that the provision of the Code, section 2703, required that every city and town officer (with certain exceptions not pertinent to this case), at the time of his election or appointment, shall have resided for one year next preceding his election or appointment in such city or town, and that Charles A. Hammer, Jr., on November 6,1936, had not resided in the city of Harrisonburg for one year preceding the date of his appointment, and therefore' did not at that time possess this required qualification for the office.
The petition upon which this writ of error was awarded contains thirty-one assignments of error. A discussion of each assignment separately would unduly prolong this opinion and serve no useful purpose. As we view the case, three main questions are presented, viz:
(1) Has Lawrence H. Hoover such an interest in the outcome of the litigation as entitles him to institute the proceeding in the name of the Commonwealth without alleging and proving that he had applied to the Attorney General or the Commonwealth’s attorney to institute a quo warranto proceeding, and that both of these officers had failed or refused to comply with his request?
(2) Did the recorded yea and nay vote of the council and mayor for the city of Harrisonburg at the meeting held on November 6, 1936, constitute a legal appointment or election of Charles A. Hammer, Jr., to the office of city justice?
(3) On the issues presented, was either party entitled to a trial by jury?
The right of Lawrence H. Hoover to institute the proceeding in the name of the State of Virginia is attacked on two grounds: (a) that the pleadings and proof failed to show, as a condition precedent to the presentation of the petition and the filing of the information, that the Attorney General or the Commonwealth’s attorney had failed or refused to apply for the writ on application of the relator; (b) that Hoover, as relator, was not a proper person to prosecute this proceeding, because he was not a person having sufficient personal or public interest therein.
Plaintiff in error, in his reply brief states, “We respectfully submit that the following words should be interpolated in section 5844 between the word ‘or’ and the word ‘any,’ ‘if either refuse or fail to do so.’ ” This statement is an admission that the statute as it now reads does not require “any person interested” to request the Attorney General or the Commonwealth’s attorney to apply for the writ as a condition precedent for such a person to present
The statute contemplates that the court should be satisfied that the person seeking its permission to file the information is “a person interested” before such permission is granted. Hoover did this, by alleging that he had been legally elected to the office of city justice for the city of Harrisonburg, and that he had duly qualified, performed the duties and received the emoluments of office, and was entitled to continue in office until his successor had been legally elected to succeed him in the office of city justice, but that under a color of a void election, the defendant named in the information had unlawfully ousted him from office. If Hoover has shown himself to be a bona fide claimant to the office and has made out a prima facie case, it would seem that he has brought himself within the definition of “a person interested.”
In Commonwealth v. Rouse, 163 Va. 841, 847, 178 S. E. 37, 40, it appeared that one J. E. Kelly instituted proceedings to try title to the office of Commonwealth’s attorney for the city of Bristol. The only interest that he had in the case was that he was a citizen and taxpayer. Mr. Justice Chinn, speaking for the court, said: “It also appears, so far as the record discloses, that there is no one claiming the office as Commonwealth’s attorney for the city of Bristol in opposition to the respondent, and that the relator has only a remote or slight interest in the question presented for determination. Under these circumstances we do not feel that any practical benefit would result to the relator or to the general public to award the writ, and such being the case we are of the opinion that in exercise of the judicial discretion with which this court is vested, the writ should be denied, and the judgment of the lower court affirmed.”
“We are of the opinion that the petition presented to the circuit judge made a clear prima fade case for the writ, and that it should have been awarded.”
While, in the last-cited case, the proceeding was instituted by the Commonwealth’s attorney for Prince Edward county, at the relation of a claimant to the office of clerk of the circuit court, the language of this court clearly shows that it thought that a bona fide claimant to a public office who had alleged facts which made a prima fade case came within the provisions of the statute. Any other construction of the words, “or any person interested, may in the name of the State of Virginia apply,” etc., would require the court, as suggested by counsel for plaintiff in error, to interpolate words in the statute which the legislature did not use.
Plaintiff in error contends that the mayor had a right to break the tie in the attempted election held on November 6, 1936, and that his action in so doing constituted a legal election to the office in question. In support of this contention he cites section 4 of the town charter as adopted in 1849. This section provides, in express terms, that the mayor may vote when the council is equally divided on questions before it. It is argued that while this provision of the charter is not found in the subsequent Acts of the General Assembly repealing and re-enacting sections of the charter, the provision has never been expressly repealed and hence is in full force and effect. Numerous other authorities are cited to. sustain the contention that the mayor generally has a right to vote in case of a tie.
As we view the case, the authorities cited are not relevant, because the legislature has in express terms set forth the method of election and the number of votes required to
A similar question was before this court in Smiley v. Commonwealth, 116 Va. 979, 83 S. E. 406. The Act of 1908 (Acts 1908, ch. 280, p. 411), there under consideration provided that, “There shall be appointed biennially during the month of January, by the board of supervisors by the vote of a majority of all the supervisors of the county, a superintendent of roads, if in the opinion of said board such superintendent is necessary * * *.” Six members composed the board of supervisors of Augusta county. At a meeting of this board, two candidates were nominated for the office of superintendent of roads for Augusta county. Each received three votes. Thereupon, under the provisions of section 832 of Pollard’s Code, the “tie-breaker” for Augusta county was called into the meeting and cast his vote for Smiley, one of the candidates. The board declared him duly elected superintendent of roads. A proceeding upon an information in the nature of a writ of quo warranto was instituted to test Smiley’s title to the office. This court held that the “tie-breaker” was not a member of the board of supervisors, and that the “vote of a majority of all the supervisors of the county” meant a majority of those duly elected to the office, and that in that particular county it meant a majority of six votes.
The language now under consideration is “a majority of all the members” of the council of the city of Harrison-burg. There are nine members of the council, hence there can never be a tie vote in the election of appointment to fill the office of a city justice. There is no ambiguity in the provision. There is no reason to give.the words contained therein other than their usual and plain meaning. Mr. Justice Holt, speaking for the court in Norfolk Motor Exchange, Inc. v. Grubb, 152 Va. 471, 478, 147 S. E. 214, 216, 63 A. L. R. 310, said: “ ‘The province of construction lies
The provision of section 34 of the charter of the city of Harrisonburg delegating to the municipality the power to create and fill the office of city justice was the only amendment to this section as it existed prior to the act of 1932 (Acts 1895-96, ch. 576, section 34, as amended by Acts 1932, ch. 322). This addition to the charter is complete in itself and is clear and specific upon the subject. The conclusion is inevitable that by using the language it did, the legislature intended that there should be no valid election, unless five councilmen voted in favor of one nominee. The functions, powers and duties of the mayor of a city, as well as other municipal officers, are derived from and are dependent upon constitutional, statutory, and charter provisions. He takes nothing beyond the powers expressly conferred or necessarily implied from the language used.
Plaintiff in error contends that the trial court committed error in refusing him a trial by jury. After the court had rejected a plea alleging non-joinder of parties defendant, and overruled a demurrer, Charles A. Hammer, Jr., filed an answer entitled “A Special Plea-Answer.” In this answer the facts heretofore stated were, in effect, admitted to be correct, but it was charged that the attempted election to fill the office of city justice held on November 6, 1936, constituted a valid and legal election of Charles A. Hammer, Jr. The fourth count in the answer alleged that at a called meeting of the council held on December 29,1936, the members of the council had discussed and concluded that the election of November 6, 1936, was a valid and legal election. The court sustained' a motion to strike this count in the answer, on the ground that it was too indefinite and uncertain in statement to give adequate information, of the defense relied upon and that it was a mere conclusion of law, and not statements of fact. To this ruling of the
These rulings of the trial court on the pleadings and the rejection of evidence were plainly right. This being true, there was no issue of fact to be submitted to a jury, even if a defendant summoned to answer information filed in a quo warranto proceeding is entitled to a trial by jury. “The province of the jury is to settle questions of fact, and when the facts are ascertained, the law determines the rights of the parties.” Forbes & Co. v. Southern Cotton Oil Co., 130 Va. 245, 260, 108 S. E. 15, 20.
After the court had exercised its discretion in permitting the information to be filed, the defendant was summoned to show by what title he held the office in controversy. As stated by Judge Lewis, in Shumate v. Supervisors, 84 Va. 574, 579, 5 S. E. 570, 573: “For in such a proceeding, the defendant being called on by the Commonwealth to show by what title (quo warranto) he holds the office in controversy, the burden of proof is not, as in ordinary actions, upon the plaintiff, but upon the defend
The defendant named in the information having failed to prove a valid legal title to the office of city justice of peace for the city of Harrisonburg, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.