42 Conn. 13 | Conn. | 1875
The common council of the city of Bridgeport ■ is authorized by the city charter to elect four police commis. sioners, who, with the mayor, constitute the board of police commissioners, the duty of which board it is to nominate to the common council suitable persons to fill vacancies occurring in the police department. Both the relator and the respondent were members of the board of police commissioners on the 24th of May, 1873.
The relator alleges that on that day the respondent was, and ever since has been, the clerk of the board of police commissioners, and that it was his duty as such clerk to make and keep a true and correct record of their doings; that as such clerk the respondent, by error and mistake, failed to make a correct record of certain votes passed by the board on that day, and made an incorrect and untrue record thereof, “ in this, to witinstead of causing the record to state that "William Anderson was nominated by said board a policeman in the place of Patrick Bracken, and that Norman Starr was nominated by said board as police
The relator asks the Court of Common Pleas to issue a writ of mandamus, requiring the respondent to correct the record in the matter above referred to. The respondent demurs to the petition, and the case is reserved for the advice of this court.
The city charter does not prescribe the form or manner in which the board of police commissioners shall make known their nominations of persons to fill vacancies in the police department.- They may appear in person before each of the two branches of the common council when in session, and orally make the nominations; or they may send to the same body a written communication signed by themselves, containing the list of nominees. The law has not created the office of clerk of the board of police commissioners; it does not compel them to have a clerk for the purpose of recording their acts.
The respondent, himself one of the police commissioners, upon request from his associate members, undertook to make a memorandum of certain nominations made by the board and transmit a list thereof to the common council. He did not thereby become the incumbent of an office known to the law; he did not enter upon the discharge of any duty imposed upon him by law; he voluntarily assumed the performance of a service. He could lay down the burden when
The writ of mandamus lies to compel a public officer to perform a duty concerning which he is vested with no discretionary power and which is either imposed upon him by some express enactment or necessarily results from the office which he holds. The respondent’s undertaking being private and unofficial in its character, this writ does not concern itself as to the manner in which he performs it.
Again, inasmuch as the law has not clothed him with power, to the exclusion of all others, to make a record of the proceedings of said board and to communicate their nominations to the common council, there would seem to be no necessity for this extraordinary writ; a majority of the board can at any time notify the common council that the respondent has inaccurately performed that which he had undertaken to do ; they 1 can present a corrected list of nominees; the council can receive it; his error in no manner fetters the action of either body in the premises; he cannot conclude them by anything which he has done or omitted to do.
In Samis v. King, 40 Conn., 804, which case arose from a difference between the police commissioners on one side and the council on the other, this court, speaking of the record now under consideration, said, for the purposes of that case, that it was duly certified by the clerk of the board and was properly admitted by the. Superior Court as evidence of the doings of the police commissioners. The relator argues that this remark lifts the respondent to the rank of a public ministerial officer and places him within reach of this writ. But we think it goes to this extent only: that, as he made a record of the nominations and transmitted a list of them to the common council at the request and as the agent of his associate members of the board, it might under certain cir-, cumstances be admitted in evidence against them as tending to prove what they did, not intending thereby to declare it to be a record of so high and solemn a character as to import absolute verity and be conclusive. Many entries and memoranda are in a certain sense records and are admissible in evidence, and yet are not subject to correction by mandamus.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.