74 N.J.L. 455 | N.J. | 1907
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff in error, by this proceeding, seeks to obtain a peremptory mandamus against the defendants in error, compelling them to restore him to his position as a member of the municipal police force.
It appears from the alternative writ, which was allowed by the Supreme Court, and from the return thereto that, by the charter of the city of Bayonne, granted by the legislature in 1869, the board of councilmen of the city were authorized to establish a police force, and to regulate and define the manner of the appointment and removal of its members, and their duties and compensation; that the mayor was made the head of the police force when it should be created; that shortly after the incorporation of the municipality a police department was created under the provisions of the charter, and that on the 3d of July, 1893, the plaintiff in error was appointed a member of the force. It further appears that a
At the term at which the ■ hearing of this cause was had before the Supreme Court, that tribunal had before it for consideration and determination the case of State v. Nealon, 44 Vroom 100, which was a quo warranto proceeding, attacking the right of the members of the board of police commissioners of Bayonne to hold their respective offices, on the ground that the supplement of 1905, above referred to, was unconstitutional, and the conclusion reached by the Supreme Court in that case was in favor of this contention.
Notwithstanding the conclusion reached by it in the Nealon case, however, the court considered that upon the facts set out in the alternative writ and the return thereto, herein-before recited, the board of police commissioners, at the time when it dismissed the relator from his position as a member of the police force, was a de facto body, exercising a public function under color .of right, and that therefore its action in dismissing the relator could not be successfully challenged, resting its conclusion upon its earlier decisions in the cases of Mitchell v. Tolan, 4 Vroom 195; Bownes v. Meehan, 16 Id. 189; and Dugan v. Farrier, 18 Id. 383. As a result of this
Plaintiff in error rests his,right to a reversal of the judgment against him upon the ground that the conclusion of the Supreme Court that the board of police commissioners of Bayonne, appointed under authority of the supplement of 1905, was a de facto body, notwithstanding the fact that the statute is unconstitutional, is unsound in law, and is not supported by the cases relied upon by that tribunal as justifying its decision. Pie points out that Mitchell v. Tolan was a quo warranto proceeding, challenging the right of Tolan to hold the office of alderman of the city of blew Brunswick, upon the ground that he was not legally elected to the office; that in Bownes v. Meehan the question presented was whether a de facto board of freeholders, the members of which body had not been lawfully elected, could fill the office of keeper of the county jail and workhouse; and that in Dugan v. Farrier the question was whether the action of a board of freeholders which was presided over by an officer styled a “director,” after that office had been abolished, was valid, and that the decision in the latter case was rested upon the ground that, notwithstanding the abolition of the office of director, there still remained the position of presiding officer of the board, and that, as the former director had assumed to act as such presiding officer with the acquiescence of the board, he was its de faclo president. Having called our attention to the question presented in the cited cases, he then ¡joints out that what was held by the court in each of them was that the official act of a de facto incumbent of a legally existing office is valid, so far as the rights of the public or third persons are concerned. PTe then argues that the question which the present case presents is an entirely different one, namely, whether there can be a de, facto incumbent of an office which has no legal existence, and cites the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Flaucher v. Camden, 27 Vroom 244, as an authority in support of his contention that this question must be answered in the negative. An examination of the opinion in the Flaucher case discloses not only that the legal
The vice of the doctrine of Norton v. Shelby County, as it seems to me, is that it fails to recognize the right of the citizen, which is to accept the law as it is written, and not to be required to determine its validity. The latter is no more the function of the citizen than is the making of the law. Each of these functions has been delegated by the constitution, the one to the judicial and the other to the legislative branch of the government. And it is to be observed that the judicial function of determining the validity of statutes is confined within a very narrow scope. Courts are not vested with the general supervision of legislation. They have received no authority from the people to inspect each statute, as it comes from the hands of the legislature, and declare whether or not it infringes constitutional limitations. The function of the judicial de
This excerpt not only demonstrates that the learned Chief Justice intended to lay down his proposition as broadly as he stated it, but is convincing of its soundness. So necessary to the successful carrying on of a republican form of government is the principle which I understand the Chief Justice to have laid down, namely, that a statute which creates an office and provides an officer to perform its duties must have the force of law until condemned as unconstitutional by the courts, and that in the meantime the officer so provided is an officer cle facto, that it is impliedly recognized and acted on, almost universally (so far as my examination has disclosed), in the case of municipal corporations which have been created by unconstitutional laws. Such corporations are declared to be de facto corporations. Dill. Mun. Corp., § 43a; Burt v. Winona, &c., Railroad Co., 31 Minn. 472, and cases cited. And not only so, but courts refuse to permit the legality of their existence to be called into question, except by the state itself,' through its attorney-general, and hold that, so long as the state does not see fit to interfere and terminate the existence thereof by direct proceeding brought by the attorney-general, a municipal corporation which has been created by an unconstitutional statute may exercise upon the citizen, through its officers, the powers conferred upon it 'by the statute as fully and completely as if it was created by a law valid in every particular.
■ And yet, if it be true that there cannot be such a thing as a de facto officer unless there be a de jure office, on what
In my judgment, the same public policy which requires obedience from the citizen to the provisions of a public statute which creates a municipality, and provides for its government, even though unconstitutional, so long as it has not received judicial condemnation, equally justifies his obedience to every other law which the legislature has seen fit to enact until such law has been judicially declared to be invalid.
I conclude that an officer appointed under authority of a statute to fill an office created by the statute is at least a de facto officer, and that acts done by him antecedent to a judicial declaration that the statute is unconstitutional are valid, so far as they involve the interests of the public and of third persons; that the doctrine promulgated by the Supreme Court in Flaucher v. Camden rests upon an unsound basis and should not be followed.
The judgment under review must be affirmed for the reason stated in the opinion delivered in the court below, namely, that the board of police commissioners of Bayonne, at the time of its dismissal of the plaintiff in error from the municipal police force, was a de facto body and its action, therefore, valid as against him.
For reversal — None.