8 Colo. App. 375 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1896
delivered the opinion of the court.
This suit was brought upon the official bond of Robert Morris as justice of the peace, and resulted in a judgment against the defendants, from which they have prosecuted error to this court. The facts are not in controversy. The disagreement between parties relates to the law which should be applied to the facts.
At the general election held in Arapahoe county in November, 1888, the defendant Morris was duly elected justice of the peace for precinct No. 2, in that county. Before enter
The grounds upon which the defendants in error rely for a reversal of the judgment are, first, that the act of the leg
I.
■ The following is section 11 of article 14 of the constitution : “ There shall, at the first election at which county officers are chosen, and annually thereafter, be elected in each precinct one justice of the peace and one constable, who shall each hold his office for the term of two years; Provided, that in precincts containing five thousand or more inhabitants, the number of justices and constables may be increased as provided by law.”
The act pursuant to which the order of the board was made provides as follows: “ The boards of county commissioners of the several counties of this state shall at their July meeting, next after the passage of this act, divide their respective counties into as many justices’ precincts as the necessities of the county may require, and upon the petition of the voters
There is no obvious conflict between the constitutional provision and the statute. The constitution makes no provision concerning the creation of justices’ precincts. It contains no limitation upon the power of the legislature to provide for the division of counties into justices’ precincts, and for the creation of such new precincts as changing circumstances made from time to time demand. A precinct may become so populous that one justice is unable to transact its business, and the legislature is authorized to provide for additional justices in precincts containing more than five thousand inhabitants. On the other hand, the territorial area of a precinct containing less than five thousand people may be so large that the convenience of the inhabitants requires its division; or by unsettled portions of a county becoming occupied, new precincts may be necessary to accommodate the new population. There is a wide difference between increasing the number of justices in the same precincts, and creating new precincts; and there is no constitutional inhibition against legislation looking to the increase or alteration of precincts. The legislature has the authority to provide for the division of counties into justices’ precincts in the first instance, and by the same authority it may provide for dividing precincts, changing their boundaries, or establishing new ones. The only- constitutional limitation upon its power in the matter of justices’ precincts relates .to increasing the number of justices in the same precinct. In Commissioners v. Smith, 22 Colo. 534, Chief Justice Hayt, incidentally speaking of the statutory provision which we have quoted, said: “We know of no provision of the constitution with which the act conflicts; ” and we are unable to see how a limitation upon the power of the legislature to provide for additional justices in the same precinct affects, or can affect, its authority to provide for establishing pre
II.
The statute empowers the commissioners upon petition of the voters of a precinct to change the precinct, or create other precincts. In this ease the petitioners described themselves, not as voters, but as residents, of precinct No. 2, and hence it is contended that the board had no authority to act upon the petition. We do not think the argument sound. In our opinion it is entirely unimportant how the petitioners may have designated themselves in their petition. The statute does not empower the commissioners to act upon a petition of persons representing themselves as voters of the precinct without more. They must be voters in fact, and the commissioners must be legally satisfied that they are voters. That they style themselves voters would not relieve the commissioners of the duty of ascertaining whether they are such. No legal formality is necessary in such a petition, ■and it is immaterial whether the petitioners call themselves residents or voters, provided the petition is otherwise sufficient, and an investigation shows that they are voters. As in this case the commissioners made the order, and as ample power was conferred upon them for that purpose, we must presume that the3r satisfied themselves that the petitioners were voters of the precinct, and that all the conditions necessary to the exercise of the power existed. The presumption being •in favor of the legality of the order, without proof of facts which invalidated it, it must be upheld.
But the position taken by Morris in this litigation is at least equivocal. He submitted his claim to the office to the voters of the precinct, and they rejected it. He was a candidate against the relator; he took an active part in the election, and the result was unfavorable to him. He does not seem to have entered the contest with any intention of abiding the event, unless it should be satisfactory to him. If he was
III.
Were the fees received by Morris for official business transacted by him during the time he continued to act after Ids term had expired recoverable in this case ? It is contended that if the relator was de jure the justice, the acts of Morris were void, that all moneys collected by him could be recovered back by the parties paying them, and that there were therefore no fees or emoluments of the office for which he was liable to the relator. It is further maintained that receiving moneys after the expiration of his term, even if his acts during the time were not void, constitute no breach of any of the conditions of the bond.
We do not deem it necessary to enter into any extended discussion of the validity of Morris’s acts while wrongfully withholding from the relator the possession of the office. He continued in office, and discharged the duties and exercised the functions of a justice of the peace after he ceased in law to be a justice, claiming that no successor had been legally elected. He was not a usurper, or an intruder, but claimed the office, and continued to act in it, under a title which before that time he unquestionably had. He held by color of title from his original election. He was therefore an officer de facto within every definition of the term, and all his acts as such were valid as to the public and third persons. Hamlin v. Kassafer, 15 Ore. 456; State v. Williams, 5 Wis. 308; Petersilea v. Stone, 119 Mass. 465; State v. Car
■- “ Sec. 141. That whenever the term of office for which any justice of the peace may have been elected shall expire, it shall be the duty of such officer to deliver over his docket, statutes, and all papers relating to the business transacted before him, to his successor in office, upon demand, after such successor shall have been qualified according to law, whose duty it shall be to proceed to the completion of all unfinished business, to issue executions upon judgment remaining unsatisfied upon such docket, and to collect the same, and have the same power in respect to such docket and papers as if the same pertained to proceedings originally instituted before him.”
“Sec. 142. Any justice of the peace failing or refusing to deliver any statutes, books, dockets or papers, as required by this chapter, for the space of ten days after the same are demanded, shall forfeit and pay the sum of ten dollars, to be recovered by an action of debt in the name of the county treasurer, for the benefit of the county, besides being, together with his securities in his official bond, liable to the - county*383 and to all persons interested for all damages and losses which may be sustained by reason of such failure or refusal.” Gen. Stats., pp. 649, 650.
Now, what damages are recoverable for the failure or refusal of a justice of the peace, whose term has expired, to deliver the books, records and papers belonging to the office to his successor ? It cannot be said that the person aggrieved is confined in his recovery to the market value of the things withheld. They have no substantial value except in the hands of the person using them. The statute expressly provides for the liability of the obligors to the persons interested for all damages and losses sustained by reason of the failure or refusal to deliver them. They are the legal indicia of title, and by retaining them and continuing to act in all inspects as before, Morris withheld possession of the office from the person lawfully entitled to it. The fees and emolument which he collected were incident to the office, and if the relator had been in possession he would have received them. The retention of the books, dockets and papers after demand made was a breach of the conditions of the bond; and the damages and losses sustained by the relator were the fees belonging to him, appropriated by Morris, and which the latter was enabled to obtain by his unlawful possession of the legal indicia of title. These damages were therefore the direct result of the failure and refusal of Morris to deliver the books, dockets and papers.
In our opinion the judgment was right, and must be affirmed.
Affirmed.