77 S.W. 946 | Tex. | 1904
This is a certified question from the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third Supreme Judicial District. The statement and questions are as follows:
"This is a mandamus suit brought by J.W. Riggins against the *233 members of the city council of the city of Waco and Allan D. Sanford, the acting mayor of said city, by which Riggins seeks to be restored to the office of mayor, from which he has been removed by the city council.
"The District Court rendered judgment refusing to grant the relief sought, and Riggins has appealed. Among other questions presented for decision are two material questions, which the Court of Civil Appeals desires to certify to the Supreme Court for decision, and by way of explanation the following statement is made:
"The city of Waco is a municipal corporation, chartered by a special law enacted by the Legislature, which charter contains the following, among other articles:
"`Art. 4. The municipal government of the city shall consist of a city council, composed of the mayor and two aldermen from each ward, a majority of whom shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business, except at call meetings for the imposition of taxes, when two-thirds of a full board shall be required, unless herein otherwise specified.'
"`Art. 7. The above named officers (except City Treasurer, who shall not be considered within the meaning of this act an officer) shall be elected by the qualified electors of said city, as hereinafter provided, and shall hold their offices for two years, and until the election and qualification of their successors. * * *'
"`Art. 35. The city council shall be composed of the mayor and aldermen provided for by this act. The mayor shall be president of the council, and in case of a tie on any question, he shall give the casting vote.'
"`Art. 36. At the first meeting of each new council, or as soon thereafter as practicable, one of the aldermen shall be elected president pro tem., who shall hold this office for one year.'
"`Art. 37. In case of the failure, inability or refusal of the mayor to act, the president pro tem. shall perform the duties and receive the compensation of the mayor.'
"`Art. 87. The city council shall have power, from time to time, to require other and further duties of all officers whose duties are herein prescribed, and to define and prescribe the powers and duties of all officers appointed or elected to any office under this act whose duties are not herein specially mentioned, and fix their compensation.'
"`Art. 273. The city council shall have power to remove any officer for incompetency, corruption, misconduct or malfeasance in office, after due notice and an opportunity to be heard in his defense.'
"`Art. 274. In addition to the foregoing power of removal, the city council shall have power, at any time, to remove any officer of the corporation elected by them, by resolution declaratory of its want of confidence in said officer, provided that two-thirds of the aldermen elected vote in favor of said resolution.'
"In September, 1902, while J.W. Riggins was occupying the office *234 of mayor of the city of Waco, to which he had been duly elected, seven of the ten members of the city council signed and presented to the council written charges against said Riggins, embracing nine specifications, some of which, in the judgment of this court, charge him with corruption, misconduct and malfeasance in office. The charges referred to were in the form of a resolution, declaring Mayor Riggins guilty of incompetency, corruption, misconduct and malfeasance in office in the several particulars specified in the nine separate charges and specifications contained in the resolution. The resolution was so framed as that its adoption would operate as a removal of Riggins from the office of mayor.
"After due notice and the appearance of Mayor Riggins in person and by attorneys, the council proceeded to try him upon the charges so preferred, Ben C. Richards, the mayor pro tem., presiding; and, by a vote of seven to two, found him guilty of all the charges and removed him from the office of mayor. However, all this was done over the objection and protest of Riggins, who then presented the same objections that are presented here and involved in the questions hereinafter certified.
"We also deem it proper to state that the same members of the city council who preferred the charges against Riggins voted to sustain them, and the other members who were present voted against his removal. It was not shown that the city council, by ordinance or otherwise, prescribed any mode of procedure for the removal of officers.
"The questions hereby certified are properly raised and presented for decision, are material, and their decision is necessary for the final disposition of the appeal.
"With the foregoing explanation and statement, the following questions are certified to the Supreme Court for decision:
"1. As against officers elected by the people, and not by the city council, is article 273 of the city charter self-executing, and did the city council, by force of that article or the common law, have authority and jurisdiction to try and remove appellant from the office of mayor? If it be held that the council had jurisdiction, then,
"2. Were the seven aldermen who preferred the charges against the mayor qualified to sit as members of the council and try him upon the charges? Or, by reason of having prepared and filed the charges, were such members of the council disqualified from trying him, and if so, was their action in finding him guilty and removing him from office absolutely void?
"In addition to the authorities cited in the briefs, the following are referred to as having some bearing:
"On the first question: Odell v. Wharton,
"On the second question: Stockwell v. Township Board of White Lake,
We answer the first question in the affirmative.
The appellant claims that under article 273 of the charter of Waco the city council had no jurisdiction to try the mayor, for the following reasons:
First. Because the phrase, "any officer," as used in said article, means the same as "any officer" in article 274; that each of them refer to officers elected by the city council and do not embrace officers elected by the voters of the city. The following clause of article 274 clearly distinguishes the officers mentioned therein from those named in the preceding article: "In addition to the foregoing power of removal, the city council shall have power, at any time, to remove any officer of the corporation elected by them." The terms of article 273 embrace all officers of the city, whether elected by the people or by the council, but by its provisions no officer can be removed by the council, except for one of the causes named and after trial; but article 274 of the charter confers authority upon the council to remove officers elected by it by a resolution declaring want of confidence in such officer, which differences show that article 273 embraces officers elected by the voters of the city.
Second. Because article 273 of the city charter confers the power of removal upon the city council as a body, which was composed of a mayor and aldermen, all of whom must act in the execution of the power; that the mayor could not act in the trial of himself and the council could not act without him, therefore the council could not try the mayor. There is authority to sustain the contention, but it is unnecessary for us to discuss the question, because it is determined by the charter and by subdivision 5 of article 3268, Revised Statutes: "The following rules shall govern the construction of all civil statutory enactments * * *: 5. A joint authority given to any number of persons or officers may be executed by a majority of them unless it is otherwise declared." By the terms of the charter the council of the city of Waco was composed of a mayor and ten aldermen, and at the first meeting of each new council the aldermen were required to elect from their number a president pro tem., whose duty is prescribed by article 37 of the charter in the following language: "In case of the failure, inability or refusal of the mayor to act, the president pro tem. shall perform the duties and receive the compensation of the mayor." By article 4 of the charter it is provided that a majority of the council shall constitue a quorum for the transaction of business. By these provisions of the charter it will be seen that it was not contemplated by the Legislature that the city council should act as a whole in the transaction of business, or that the mayor should at all times be present and perform the duties of his office, and that he might be disqualified to preside in some cases. The term "inability," as here used, embraces disqualification, or disability, on account of interest in the subject of the action. *236 Webster's Dic., word "inability." The mayor being interested, the president pro tem. would preside in his absence, and a majority of the city council, thus organized, constituted a quorum which could transact all business that might come before the body.
Appellant contends with much earnestness that article 273 does not, of itself, furnish authority upon which the city council could proceed to try the mayor of the city, because it provides no mode of procedure. In other words, it is claimed that the article is not self-acting. This language in article 273, "after due notice and an opportunity to be heard in his defense," is very comprehensive and is pregnant with the idea of charges preferred, specifying the grounds upon which a removal is to be made, due notice to the accused, with the right to cross-examine the witness produced against him and to furnish testimony to exculpate himself from the charges, which would secure the constitutional right of a fair and impartial trial. These are strongly implied by the language of the act, and that which the law implies is as binding as if written in the body of the act. Suth. Stat. Const., sec. 334; United States v. Babbit, 1 Blk., 61.
When power to perform an act is conferred by the Legislature upon a body of officers and no procedure is specified, the law will imply authority to do whatever is proper in the execution of the power consistent with the right of the accused to a fair and impartial hearing. State v. Walbridge, 119 Mo., 383; Armatage v. Fisher, 74 Hun, 173; People v. Higgins,
It is insisted that the city council should have adopted by ordinance or resolution a method of procedure before entering upon the trial, and that, without some rules expressed in the charter or provided by the council, there was no authority for the council to make the removal. In the case of Armatage v. Fisher, before cited, the court states the law upon this point in the following terms: "Assuming that the common council has, in any event, power to remove the president, we are unable to see that any rule as to the course of procedure was necessary to be adopted prior to such removal. In other words, if the defendants have the power to remove the plaintiff, they can do so as well without the adoption of a new rule as with it."
And in the case of State v. Walker, before cited, the court say: "It is contended by relator that since the council had not passed an ordinance regulating the manner of impeachment and removals, as authorized by said section 11, it could not resolve itself into a court of impeachment. It is a sufficient answer to this to say that by the provisions of said section 11 is conferred the power to remove all elective officers for cause, and yet, while there are no means or measures whereby the removals may be accomplished as therein provided, or by any ordinance passed in pursuance thereof, yet the grant of power by the section carried with it all necessary incidental powers, without which the grant would be ineffectual. The general rule is that where a grant of *237
power is given, all the means necessary to effectuate the power pass as incidents to the grant." State v. Walbridge, 119 Mo., 396. Differently stated the contention is, that the council might have prescribed rules to govern its own action, but could not have done the same things when not formulated into rules. We do not see the force of this contention. If the council proceeded properly, without a rule, the result was the same as if the method had been embodied in an ordinance. State v. Smith,
To the second question we reply, that the aldermen who signed and presented the charges against appellant were not thereby disqualified to participate in the trial of the accused. The council when sitting for the purpose of trying the accused did not constitute a court, but was an administrative body, and the power to remove officers was administrative power to be used for the purpose of maintaining discipline and good order in the management of the business of the city. It is true that by the terms of the law the proceeding was required to be conducted in a manner judicial in character, but this does not necessarily constitute the body a judicial body, nor subject it to the rules which would be prescribed for a court, either in its procedure or as regards the qualification of its members. State v. Common Council,
In Andrews v. King, the mayor of the council having made the charges against the party to be tried, did not sit in the trial. The court held that he was not disqualified by reason of having made the charges, therefore the council could not act without him, because the authority to remove was given to it as a whole and could not be exercised by a part of the body. The court said: "It was not improper for the mayor, as a chief executive magistrate of the city, required to be vigilant and active in causing the laws of the State to be enforced, to formulate the charges, even suo motu. In his supervision over the conduct of officers, it may be his duty to do so." In State v. Council of Superior,
However, if we apply the rule prescribed by article 5, section 11, of the Constitution of this State for judges of the courts, the aldermen who made the charges would not be disqualified, because they were not interested in the proceeding in a personal or pecuniary sense. In fact, the aldermen, after making the charges, had no more interest in the proceeding, personally, than those who did not sign the charges. Taylor v. Williams,
Counsel claims that appellant was entitled to a fair and impartial trial, and enters into a discussion of the facts to show that he did not have such a trial at the hands of the council, but no such question is certified to this court, and we can only say upon the certificate that the aldermen were not disqualified merely by the act of formulating and presenting the charges against the mayor.