53 Minn. 238 | Minn. | 1893
By the charter of the city of Duluth, all powers and duties connected with, and incident to, the government and .discipline of the fire deportment of the city are vested in' three commissioners, called the -Board of Fire Commissioners,” who have entire control of the department, including the appointment and discharge of all employes connected with it, and making their own -rules and regulations for the government of the same. These commissioners are, “on nomination of the mayor,” “appointed by the common council,” and hold their office for the term of three years. The charter provides that:
“Any member of said board may at any time be removed by a vote of two thirds of all the members elect of the common council of said city for sufficient cause: * * * provided, that the said common council shall previously cause a copy of the charges preferred against such member sought to be removed, and notice of the time- and place of hearing the same, to be served on him at least ten days previous to the day so assigned, and opportunity be given him to make his defense or counsel.”
1. It is urged by respondents that the power of removal from office conferred on the common council is purely administrative and quasi political, and therefore that their proceedings cannot be reviewed on certiorari.
Thát this power may not be “judicial,” in the sense that it can offiy be conferred upon the courts, in whom all judicial power is vested under the constitution, has nothing to do with the question; for there is nothing now better settled than that certiorari will'lie to review the quasi judicial acts and proceedings of municipal officers and bodies. Neither is there anything better settled than that while the incumbent has no vested right of property, as against the state, in a public office, yet his right to it has always been recognized by the courts as a privilege entitled to the protection of the law, and that proceedings, in all cases where the amotion from office is for cause, upon notice and hearing, are adversary and judicial in their nature, and may be reviewed on certiorari. We think there is practically no conflict in the authorities on this point, the only difference among them being merely as to what they will review on such a writ. Some courts, restricting the writ to its original common-law office, hold that it brings up for review only the record, and not the evidence, and hence that they will not look into the evidence at all, but merely inspect the record, to see whether the inferior tribunal had jurisdiction, and had not exceeded it, and had proceeded according to law, or, as expressed in one case, whether the tribunal “had kept within its jurisdiction, ■or whether the cause assigned was a cause for removal under the statute.” Other courts hold that the evidence may be brought up, not for the purpose of weighing it, to ascertain the preponderance, but merely to ascertain whether there was any evidence at all to sustain the decision of the inferior tribunal, — whether it furnished any legal and substantial basis for the decision. The latter is the doctrine of this court as to the office of the writ of certiorari. But, while this is so, we recognize the prime importance of each department of government avoiding anything like improper inter
2. The first contention of relators is that the common council never acquired jurisdiction, because the notice of hearing and the copy of the charges were not served on them as required by the charter. The particular objection is that, when the service was made on them, the resolution of the common council preferring, these charges against them had neither been approved by the mayor, nor passed over his veto, as required by the city charter. Sp. Laws 1887, ch. 2, subch. 3, § 1. There is no merit in this point. Under the charter the power of removal from office is vested solely in the common council, and the mayor has no power over, or control of, their proceedings in presenting or investigating charges against a city official with a view to removal from office. Their action in preferring charges against relators was not such an ordinance or resolution as comes within the purview of subch. 3, § 1, and did not require the approval of the mayor before it took effect.
Whilé the charges need not be stated with the technical nicety or formal exactness required in pleadings in courts, yet they must be specifically stated with substantial certainty. The specifications of the alleged causes should be formulated with such reasonable detail and precision as shall inform the incumbent what dereliction of duty is urged against him. There should be a statement of charges with a specification of facts constituting a sufficient cause for removal, sufficiently distinct to apprise the officer of the grounds upon which the charges are based. Andrews v. King, 77 Me. 224; People v. Thompson, supra; Dillon, Mun. Corp. § 255.
The sufficiency and reasonableness of the cause of removal are questions for the.courts. Dillon, Mun. Corp. § 252, and cases cited. This has been the settled law ever since Bagg’s Case, supra, and. we are not aware of any respectable authority to the contrary. Of course, cases (many of which are cited by respondents) where an officer or body was vested with an absolute power of removal at discretion are not in point.
Some of the charges, such as that “the reasonable recommendations and requests of the common council are treated with the utmost contempt,” have no relation, whatever to the administration of the office of fire commissioner, and remind us of some of the charges in Bagg’s Case.
The first part of the fifth charge, viz. failure to make monthly reports to the common council, as required by the charter, was virtually abandoned, no attempt having been made to substantiate it, and hence may be left out of account altogether. The only charges that even attempt to state any specific cause for removal are the fourth and the last part of the fifth. Indeed, these are the only ones which counsel for respondents seriously attempts to support. The fourth relates to the discharge of officers of the fire department without cause, or from improper motives, but is entirely lacking in specifications of either dates or names.
As the board of fire commissioners has, under the charter, absolute power to discharge any of the employes or officers of the department at their discretion, and may, in the performance of their duties, have had occasion to exercise this power frequently, so
This renders it unnecessary to consider the evidence at all. We may say, however, that a perusal of it impresses us with the feeling that it furnished no reasonable basis for the action of the council in removing the relators from office. It is perfectly apparent that this whole trouble grew out of a foolish quarrel between the common council and the board of fire commissioners, over the suspension by the latter of a fireman by the name of Twaddle.
The proceedings of the common council in the matter are quashed.
(Opinion published 55 N. W Hep. 118.)