This is a petition for the issuance of a writ of certiorari for the purpose of quashing a record setting out the action of the board of aldermen of the city of Central Falls, on September 23, 1915, wherein by a resolution then passed by them they found the petitioner guilty of certain charges before that time preferred against him by the mayor of said city and dismissed him as chief of police and as a member of the paid police department of said city.
*387 The writ was issued October 14, and made returnable October 25, 1915. The respondents have appeared and have moved to dismiss the petition. The motion and petition have been heard and considered together.
The authority of the board of aldermen to remove members of the paid police department is contained in the proviso of clause 2 of § 4 of the charter of said city, which is Chapter 1421 of the Public Laws of Rhode Island, passed February 21, 1895.
The proviso is as follows: “Provided, however, that the members of the paid police department of said city shall not be subject to removal from office at any time except for misconduct or incapacity of such a character, as the board of aldermen may deem a disqualification for said office, and all such removals shall be by the board of aldermen, upon charges made in writing, and of which the officer complained of shall have had notice and an opportunity to be heard thereon.”
The charges against the petitioner are contained in a communication from the mayor to said board, dated September 15, 1915, wherein he states that on September 13, 1915, he had suspended “James McCarthy as chief of police of said city and also as a member of the paid police department of said city for conduct unbecoming an officer and for failure to enforce the law in this, viz.:” (1) that he “wilfully and negligently failed to arrest or cause to be arrested, one William T. Mitchell for following his usual occupation, on Sunday;” (2) that he “wilfully and negligently failed' to arrest or cause to be arrested and to be brought before the court” six persons (whose names and addresses are given and who are described as “the owners and holders of licenses for the sale of intoxicating liquors”) “for having their several and respective places of business open for business on the sixth day of September, 1915, said day being known as Labor Day,” . . . “none of said persons . . . being the owner or holder of a tavern license;” (3) that he “wilfully and negligently failed to arrest or cause to *388 be arrested and brought before the court the persons in charge of certain club rooms which were raided by the police of said city on the fifth day of September, 1915, said day being Sunday, none of said clubs having a license as by law provided. ”
The mayor’s communication also requested the board of aldermen to appoint a time and place for the hearing of the charges. The evening of September 21, 1915, was fixed by them as the time for such hearing, and a copy of the charges with a notice of the time and place of hearing was served on the chief of police. The hearing was had on the evening of the twenty-first and twenty-second days of September, 1915, at which the mayor was represented by counsel, as was the chief of police, and seventeen witnesses were examined. The substance of their testimony set out in the records of these meetings of the board as kept by the city clerk is part of the record certified to this court. A verbatim report of the entire testimony taken by an official stenographer of the Superior Court, certified and sworn to by him and by the city clerk has also been sent to this court.
Early in the morning of September 23 a majority of the board of aldermen voted that the charges made by the mayor against the chief of police be sustained and that "said James McCarthy be removed from the office of chief of police and dismissed as a member of the paid police department of the city of Central Falls. ”
*389
In O’Brien v. Mayor and Aldermen, 20 R. I. 49, the evidence was not before the court and the court said that if it was it could not be reviewed “no question of jurisdiction being raised.” In Lowrey v. Mayor of Central Falls, 23 R. I. 354, 358, it was held “that certiorari does not he to review findings of fact when any competent evidence is introduced to support the charges, ” which plainly implies that absence of such testimony would furnish ground for review.
In all of these cases the necessity of examining the evidence •on questions of jurisdiction is recognized and in some of them a similar necessity to see if there be any competent ■evidence to sustain the charges.
In the recent case of Chase v. City Council of Providence, 36 R. I. 331, the evidence taken having been returned with the record, the court on page 371 says: “We have not ■examined said testimony with ally purpose to review findings of fact. . . .We have looked into the proceedings so far as to assure ourselves that the city council in exercising its jurisdiction of removal acted upon serious and substantial *392 grounds supported by competent evidence and that there was just and reasonable cause for their action. ”
In Keenan v. Goodwin, supra, the first of the above cited cases taken chronologically, the court says: “The general rules relating to certiorari are, that it does not lie to review findings of fact, where any competent evidence is introduced to support them; nor to correct mere irregularities of proceeding; that it will lie to inquire whether there is any evidence to establish some essential fact; and also to review rulings upon the admission of evidence, where no other and competent evidence was introduced tending to prove a. necessary finding. ”
*393
As to the third charge, if it be assumed that the evidence shows clearly, as it does not, what persons were in charge of the two Polish club rooms raided on Sunday, September 5th, there is no evidence justifying the arrest of anyone or on which it could reasonably be expected to convict the persons-supposed to be in charge of said rooms either of keeping, intoxicating liquors for sale or of selling the same or of any other offence. It does appear that after the seizure of *394 liquors in the club rooms on search warrants issued on petitioner’s application, he instituted proceedings for the forfeiture of the liquors so seized, caused one man from each club room to be summoned upon the forfeiture proceedings, that both personally and by instructions to officers he endeavored to ascertain the persons responsible in the management of the clubs and was awaiting the result of the trials in the forfeiture cases to determine what, if any, further action could be taken. This was stated to be the ordinary-procedure in such cases which had been followed in Central Falls and elsewhere in the State during petitioner’s sixteen years connection with the police force. This testimony stands without contradiction. The forfeiture cases were assigned for trial on September 16. The petitioner was suspended, as already stated, on September 13. Upon this evidence we are of the opinion that there “were no serious and substantial grounds, supported by competent evidence, .and no just and reasonable cause” for the board of aldermen to find that at the time of his suspension the petitioner had “wilfully and negligently failed to arrest or cause to be .arrested” the persons referred to in the third charge.
In conformity with this opinion the respondents’ motion to dismiss is denied, and it is ordered that the record of said board of aldermen of September 23, 1915, whereby they .sustain certain charges of the mayor of Central Falls and removed said petitioner from the office of chief of police and from membership in the paid police department of said city be quashed.
