33 N.Y.S. 165 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
The relator was first appointed city attorney by the common council of the city of Auburn in April, 1891, to fill a vacancy. In March, 1892, he was again appointed for a full term of two years, and in March, 1894, reappointed. ' The common council is composed of the mayor and 10 aldermen, whose terms of office are two years, commencing the first Tuesday of March after their election. In September, 1892, one Maude Marie V. Parcells commenced an action in the supreme court against the city to recover damages for a personal injury sustained by her by reason of stepping into a hole in a defective sidewalk. The relator, as city attorney, appeared for the city, it defending. The action was tried in May, 1893, at the Cayuga circuit, and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for $9,000, besides costs. The relator appealed, for the city, to the general term. The trial of the cause occupied several days, and the evidence was voluminous, amounting to about 400 pages of typewritten matter. The relator was unable to get a copy
“An appeal to the court of appeals means only additional cost and expense. The city will be beaten, without question. I have heard rumors that the city could not appeal.- It has been my policy to pay but little attention to street gossip or the newspapers, whose correspondents have personal reasons to misrepresent and distort the truth; and I will only say, if your honorable body sees fit to direct that an appeal from the judgment of the general term be taken in this case, there is no reason why the same should not be done. Nothing I have done can prevent the same.”
By section 44 of the charter of the city, it was provided:
“That the city attorney shall be the legal advisor of the common council and of the several departments of the corporation; shall prepare all legal papers for the city; have the management of all its law business, and perform such other duties as the common council may require.”
The twenty-seventh section of the charter provides as follows:
“No person appointed under the provisions of this act shall be removed from office except by the concurring vote of two thirds of all the members of said council; unless for malfeasance or misfeasance in office when, after an opportunity to be heard before said council upon a notice of two weeks,*168 such persons may be removed by a concurring vote of a majority of said members.”
The relator answered denying these charges, and proceedings were had thereon before the common council in the summer of 1894, and testimony was given under oath of witnesses, documentary evidence introduced, and the relator sworn in his own behalf. Counsel appeared for the prosecution and for the relator before the common council, and the forms of trial in courts were observed as to the proceedings, and the relator had full opportunity of being heard in his defense. The mayor presided, and the common council made rulings as to- the admission or rejection of evidence. The relator was found guilty by the common council, by a majority vote, of the charges, and removed from office, and upon his application a writ of certiorari brings the subject before us.
The relator attacks the jurisdiction of the common council, in this: that he had not received the notice required by statute, of 14 days, of the charges against him. This contention is not well founded, as the proof shows that he had the 14-days notice of the substance of the charges upon which he was ultimately convicted. The amendments of one or two of the charges, which occurred during the progress of the investigation, were but an amplification of the original charges, and made in his presence, and an adjournment of several days was taken by the common council to give him an opportunity to meet the amended charges, and the relator had every reasonable opportunity to do so.
He further assails the jurisdiction because two of the common council (Firth and Chedwell) who voted upon the charges and took part in the proceedings, had made a report to the common council, upon an investigation made by them, substantially preferring the charges that the council subsequently made. The common council is created, by statute, the only tribunal that can take proceedings against the relator for the matter alleged against him. It is therefore absolutely necessary that this body take this action, or it cannot be taken at all. Consequently the duty that devolved upon each member of the common council, to take part in the proceeding, was absolute, notwithstanding he may have formed such an opinion or taken such action in the premises as would disqualify him if he were a judge or juror in an action at law. In Re Ryers, 72 N. Y. 1, 11-13, the county judge of Richmond county had made an order appointing commissioners in a proceeding to drain lands under a statute, and lands in which the judge was interested; he being the only authority, under the statute, that could appoint such commissioners. The point was made that the judge was disqualified from making the appointment, on account of being an interested party; and the court of appeals, after citing many authorities, reaches the conclusion “that it must be the law, from these cases, that where the judicial power has been confided to one judge, and if he should fail to act there would be no means of proceeding in the matter, though interested, he may take such cognizance of the ease as is absolutely necessary, so far that the party shall not be without remedy.” This we understand to be confined to cases where the judicial officer has not such an interest in the cause or mat
The remaining questions are whether, under section 2140 of the Code of Civil Procedure, in making their determination, any rule of law affecting the rights of the relator has been violated, to his prejudice, and whether there was any competent proof of all the facts necessary to be proved to authorize the making of the determination, and, if there was such proof, whether there was, upon all the evidence, such a preponderance of proof against the existence of the fact alleged against the relator as constituting malfeasance or misfeasance, or both, as that a verdict of a jury affirming the existence thereof, in the supreme court, would be set aside as against the weight of evidence. The relator claims that, assuming that the acts charged against him have been shown by competent evidence, they constitute neither malfeasance nor misfeasance. What do these terms mean, when considered in connection with the relation of attorney and client, and the purpose of the statute in clothing the common council with the power of removal? Light can be gathered upon this subject from the reciprocal duties and obligations of the client and attorney. “Malfeasance” has been defined in Bouvier’s Law Dictionary to be “the unjust performance of some act which the party had no right, or which he had contracted not, to do.” And the same authority defines “misfeasance” as the performance of an act which might lawfully be done, in an improper manner, in which another person receives an injury. And the Imperial Dictionary defines “malfeasance” as: “In law, the doing of an act which a person ought not to do; evil doing; wrong; illegal deed,”—and defines “misfeasance” to be: “In law, a trespass or wrong done; also an improper performance of some lawful act,”—and cites Wharton.
The true relation of client and attorney has been defined to be as follows: “The principal duties of an attorney are to be true to the court and to his client; to keep the client informed as to the
The relator testified before the common council, and produced two or three witnesses to confirm his statement, that, at an executive session of the common council, authority was given him to take suoh action with reference to appeals in the case as he saw fit. This was disputed by other evidence, and was therefore a question of fact, for the common council to determine; and it was upon this question that affidavits prepared by the relator, or under his supervision, and his own affidavit, showing that no such authority was given, were introduced, properly, in evidence. If he had such authority, why did he deny it in his affidavit? When he made his report to the common council as to the condition of the action of Maude v. Parcells, he was directly called upon to state whether he had taken any step in that action to prevent the city from appealing to the court of appeals. It was his duty to have frankly reported that fact to the common council. Instead of so doing, he avoids the question, and distinctly says he had done no act that would prevent the city appealing to the 'court of appeals. We find nothing in the evidence to excuse or even palliate this feature of his report; and his wrongdoing lies more in the fact that he sought to suppress from his client, the city, the knowledge of the important fact of the execution of this stipulation, than to induce them to act
The relator makes the point that the common council had no authority to try him because the acts charged as malfeasance and misfeasance were committed by him during a former term oí office. It is true that the stipulation not to appeal to the court of appeals was made during the term of the relator’s office that expired in March, 1894; but the report made by him as to his proceedings in the case, and the suppression of facts and false statements in relation to the same, was made after the commencement of the term from which he was removed, and the whole matter was thus carried into that term. This question arose upon the impeachment trial of Judge Barnard before the court of impeachments at Saratoga upon a motion to strike out the charges of certain offenses alleged to have been committed by the judge during a prior term of office. The judge had been re-elected, and his counsel claimed that such re-election had condoned all prior offenses, and that he had come anew into the possession of his office, approved by the judgment of the people, and certified as capable and worthy to occupy the position and discharge the duties of a justice of the supreme court. 1 Trial of Barnard in Court of Impeachment, p. 147 et seq. .The point was overruled by the court, and he was convicted as well of offenses committed during a prior term as during the term then existing.
The relator strongly urges that grave errors were made by the common council in admitting and rejecting evidence, to his injury. We will not attempt °to pass over the rulings in detail, but will notice some of the most important ones, that our position may not be misunderstood in regard to them.
In the proceedings of the common council, a resolution appears, and was adopted under objection, whereby the council resolved to take judicial notice of, and to consider, all statements made by the relator, in both open and executive sessions, with reference to this stipulation, and matters connected therewith, and particularly to certain statements, enumerated, which, as appears above, the relator substantially admitted. This proceeding was error. The common council could not act upon their own knowledge. People v. French, 119 N. Y. 502, 23 N. E. 1058. And had it not been substantially cured by the admissions of the relator, when sworn, that he had made those statements, substantially, a grave question would arise as to our duty with regard to this error. The proceeding of the common council also shows that the report of the two aldermen above referred to was received, under objection, in
This court held in People v. Hair, 29 Hun, 125, that decisions as to the admission and rejection of evidence cannot be reviewed by certiorari, under section 2140. To the same effect is People v. State Board of Assessors, 22 Wkly. Dig. 453; being both general term decisions of the old Fourth department. In People v. State Assessors, 47 Hun, 451, the general term of the Third department, speaking through Judge Parker, in referring to the rule laid down in last case cited, say:
“I am not prepared to adopt fully the rule laid down by the court in that case. Such a rule would render a court powerless to review the arbitrary action of a board like the state assessors in refusing to receive competent and material evidence bearing upon the issue to be determined. * * * And after an examination of the decisions of the court of appeals which resulted in establishing the rule which the framers of the Code of Civil Procedure incorporated in subdivision 3 of section 2140 leads me to the conclusion that a refusal to receive evidence absolutely essential to the protection of either of the parties would constitute an erroneous ruling of law, affecting the rights of the parties, within such subdivision.”
In People v. Board of Sup’rs of Fulton Co., 74 Hun, 251, 253, 26 N. Y. Supp. 610, the court say:
“Although the court may review the action of supervisors, in extreme cases, in receiving or rejecting evidence offered on the audit of a claim against the county [citing the last case (47 Hun, 450)], yet ordinarily an error of the board of supervisors, or its committee, in receiving incompetent evidence, will cause a reversal of its determination”; citing the cases in 29 and 74 Hun, 26 N. Y. Supp., and in 22 Wkly. Dig., supra.
The true rule to be gleaned from these cases, and which is consistent with the purposes and spirit of section 2140 of the Code, is that errors in the reception or rejection of evidence should be disregarded, if the tribunal had jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the investigation, and had conducted its proceedings in the mode required by law in order to authorize it to make the determination, and whether there was sufficient competent evidence in the case upon which the tribunal would be authorized to reach the determination which it made. The competent proof to sustain the charges given upon the hearing before the common council was clear and conclusive, and was so, independent of, and notwithstanding the errors committed as to, the reception of evidence. Had none of the errors with regard to reception or rejection of evidence occurred, the result must have been the same, and consequently the relator was not prejudiced by any such errors.
The misconduct of the relator does not seem to have been corrupt, nor does it appear that he obtained any pecuniary advantage from it Mistakes occurred during the progress of preparing the appeal, of a serious nature, such as omitting the statement that the case contained all the evidence and proceedings, and in permitting the city to be in default in serving the printed cases in time, and