154 A.2d 526 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1959
This is an action of quo warranto to require the defendant to answer to this court by what warrant he claims to hold the office of chief of police of the town of Wolcott. The parties have stipulated to most of the facts but a hearing was required to present evidence on matters wherein the stipulation was inconclusive. In this proceeding the burden of proof is upon the defendant to establish his legal right to the office. State ex rel. Jewett v.Satti,
The defendant is forty-one years of age and has been a resident of the town of Wolcott for twenty-one years. In 1939 he was appointed a policeman, and he served as a regular member of the Wolcott police department on a part-time basis for eighteen years. In February, 1957, he tendered his resignation as a policeman to the chairman of the board of police commissioners. Despite the fact that the minutes of the board do not show its acceptance, he did no further work as a policeman, and there can be no doubt that he had terminated his service with the department. On or about July 1, 1958, he was appointed a member of the board of police commissioners and was elected its chairman. Thereafter he performed all the duties required of him as chairman and as a member of the board. On November 6, 1958, there was a meeting of the board which was called by the defendant and attended by all three members of the board. At the meeting Wabuda, the secretary, nominated the defendant for the position of chief of police, which nomination was seconded by the defendant. Upon the vote on the nomination, Wabuda voted for the defendant, and the defendant voted for himself. There was conflicting evidence as to whether Kenney, the plaintiff, refrained from voting or voted against the nomination. I find that Kenney declined to vote and that he was physically present throughout the entire meeting. This is supported by the minutes of the meeting and by the testimony of Ranslow and Wabuda.
One of the questions which must be answered is whether by such vote the defendant was properly chosen chief of police. When a member of an appointing body is appointed to an office by his own vote, if his own vote is necessary to give him a majority, such appointment is void. State ex rel. Oakey
v. Fowler,
In the city of Bridgeport, by its charter, the board of police commissioners, by whom policemen were to be appointed, consisted of the mayor and two members from each of the two great political parties, the mayor to preside and have a vote only in case of a tie and any action requiring a concurrence of three members. There being policemen to be appointed, a resolution was offered at a regular meeting of the board, when all were present, appointing certain persons named. Thereupon two members announced that they should not vote, but remained in the room. The mayor put the resolution to a vote, and two members voted for it; the other two refrained from voting and the mayor thereupon declared the resolution passed. The two nonvoting members protested against this ruling. It was held by our Supreme Court of Errors that the silence of *298
the nonvoting members when the vote was put was a concurrence in the passage of the resolution and that it was legally passed. "On the face of the record they appear as obstructionists, and as such we must treat them. As it was the duty of the board to appoint, it was their duty to act. By their refusal to vote they neglected their duty. . . . But they did not vote although present. Their presence made a quorum. A quorum was present, and all who voted, voted in the affirmative. . . . The silence of the nonvoting members was acquiesence, and acquiesence was concurrence. . . . The legal effect of their silence was an affirmative vote." Somers v. Bridgeport,
A majority of votes actually cast is sufficient, even though the number of such votes may be less than a quorum, provided there are sufficient members present, whether voting or not, to constitute a quorum. People ex rel. Woods v. Crissey,
Both under Robert's Rules of Order and the judicial precedent of Connecticut and other jurisdictions, I find that the defendant received a majority vote for the office of chief of police. Obviously, his vote cannot be counted in his own behalf. Under Robert's Rules of Order he had more than half the votes cast, ignoring blanks. Under the view taken in Somers v. Bridgeport, supra, there were two votes cast for the defendant — Wabuda's affirmatively and Kenney's by his silence. Had Kenney voted against the nomination, Ranslow could not have received a majority vote. By refusing to vote, Kenney acquiesced in the appointment of Ranslow.
No. 199 of the Special Acts of 1957 (28 Spec. Laws 233) provides as follows concerning the Wolcott board of police commissioners: "Said board shall fix the number and designation of all members of the police department, one of whom shall be a chief of police who shall be the chief administrative officer in the department." The plaintiff claims that since the defendant was not a member of the police force on November 6, 1958, he could not be appointed chief of police. The act does not so provide. Obviously, a chief of police is a member of the police department with all the statutory powers conferred on policemen. It is not required that he be a policeman at the time of his appointment as chief. Had the legislature so intended, it could have set it forth in unequivocal language.
Section 6 of No. 525 of the Special Acts of 1937 (22 Spec. Laws 945) provides as follows: "No person shall be appointed a policeman in the town of *300 Wolcott until such person shall have passed an examination prescribed by said board as to his educational, physical and general qualifications, including a test of his knowledge of the motor vehicle laws of this state and the powers and duties of constables." The defendant presented a medical certificate to the board and was given a very informal oral examination by the secretary of the board, with all members present. Having in mind that Ranslow was a regular member of the department for eighteen years as a policeman on a part-time basis, it cannot be said to be inadequate. In any event, § 6 refers to the examination of a policeman and has no application to the appointment of a chief of police. The act contains no such requirement.
The decisions of some states hold that it is contrary to public policy to permit an officer having an appointing power to use such power as a means to confer an office upon himself or to permit an appointing body to appoint one of its own members.Bradley v. City Council,
The plaintiff claims that the office of police commissioner and chief of police are incompatible. There can be no doubt that this is so. State ex rel.Schenck v. Barrett,
Judgment may enter for the defendant.