119 P. 1103 | Mont. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the court.
Application for writ of mandamus. On November 11, 1911, the relator herein, a resident and taxpayer of the city of Butte, presented to the district court of Silver Bow county a written accusation against Thomas J. Booher, police judge of said city, asking for his removal from office. The accusation, after alleging the corporate capacity of the city and the official character of said Booher, charges:
“Fourth. That on or about the 21st day of June, 1911, the said Thomas J. Booher did willfully, intentionally, and corruptly charge to the county of Silver Bow certain illegal fees for services rendered by the said Thomas J. Booher, in certain criminal actions and proceedings arising under the criminal laws of the state of Montana, police judge of the said city of Butte, when acting as a justice of the peace, a full and itemized statement of which said charges more fully appears from the account of the said Thomas J. Booher, filed in the office of the county clerk and recorder of Silver Bow county, Montana, a true copy of which is hereto attached and marked ‘Exhibit No. 1,’ and made a part hereof. That the said Thomas J. Booher did, on or about the 22d day of June, 1911, willfully and intentionally and corruptly collect from the said county of Silver
“Fifth. That each and all of the fees charged and collected, as above set out, were and are illegal, and that the said Thomas J. Booher well knew the same to be illegal, and did willfully and intentionally and corruptly charge and collect the same.”
On November 20th, in obedience to a citation issued to him, the said Booher appeared before Honorable Michael Donlan, the judge presiding in department 3 of said court, to which the proceeding was assigned under the rules distributing the business pending therein. Judge Donlan being disqualified, the hearing was postponed until the following day. On the following day, Judge Donlan entered an order postponing the hearing until November 25, and called in Honorable J. Miller Smith, one of the judges of the district court of Lewis and Clark county, to preside in his stead. On November 25 and 27 the hearing was had before Judge Smith; the accused having entered his plea of not guilty, both orally and in writing. It was admitted by the accused that he had demanded and received from the county of Silver Bow, for services rendered during the month of May, 1911, the sum of $41.6-5, as charged, upon claims presented by him, in his official capacity as police judge of the city of Butte, to the .board of commissioners of the county, as compensation which he deemed to be due him for his services as justice of the peace in proceedings arising under the criminal laws of the state. It was admitted by counsel for the relator that the claims were presented to the commissioners by the accused in good faith, in the belief that .under the provisions of law applicable the board of county commissioners was authorized to allow them, and that he was entitled to collect them from the county for the services so rendered; that theretofore the predecessor of the present board of commissioners, having been advised by Hon. James Donovan, at that time attorney general of the state, that a police judge, when acting in the capacity of justice of the peace or committing magistrate, was entitled to compensation from the county for his services in that behalf, had made an order allowing the police judge of the city of Butte
The sections of the statute invoked by the proceedings in the district court are the following:
“Sec. 3241. The annual salary and compensation of police judges must be fixed by ordinance, and in a city of the first class .must not exceed, for all services rendered, two thousand dollars; in a city of the second class, must not exceed one thousand dollars, and in a city of the third class must not exceed four hundred dollars, and, in addition, a police judge is entitled to receive in all civil cases the fees which are now, or may hereafter be, allowed justices of the peace. In all criminal actions or proceedings arising under the criminal laws of the state when acting as a justice of the peace or committing magistrate, he must receive no compensation whatever.”
“Sec. 9006. When an accusation in writing, verified by the oath of any person, is presented in a district court, alleging that any officer within the jurisdiction of the court has been guilty of charging and collecting illegal fees for services rendered, or to be rendered in his office, or has refused or neglected to per
Some contention was made at the hearing in this court that, in view of the provisions of section 3176, Revised Codes, which fixes a schedule of fees which justices of the peace may charge in criminal cases and proceedings, a police judge, who is, with some exceptions, clothed with concurrent criminal jurisdiction (Rev. Codes, secs. 3297, 3300), may demand and receive the compensation to which justices of the peace are entitled. At least, it is said, the various provisions involve an ambiguity which requires a construction of them, in order to determine what compensation a police judge is entitled to under them; and that, since this is so, and since the accused claimed in good faith and was allowed the compensation received by him under the advice of the attorney general, he is not subject to the penalty prescribed by the statute. There is no ambiguity in these provisions. Sections 3297 and 3300 merely confer jurisdiction upon the police court or judge in the cases and proceedings enumerated. Notwithstanding the language, “when acting as justice of the peace or committing magistrate,” loosely used in section 3241, when this section is read in connection with sections 3297 and 3300, supra, it is entirely clear that in exercising the jurisdiction conferred by the latter the police judge does not abdicate his office as such, and act in a. different official capacity. He performs all acts which he may perform in this behalf by virtue' of his office as police judge, and not otherwise. The compensation to which he is entitled is provided for in section 3241. No
It is competent for the legislature to exact extra duties of a
The question then arises: Do the facts admitted bring the accused within the penalty prescribed by section 9006, supra, it appearing that both he and the board acted in good faith under the advice of the attorney general? This query must be answered in the affirmative. Under the Constitution, the governor and other state and judicial officers, except justices of the peace, are removable from office by impeachment. (Constitution, Art. Y, sec. 17.) “AH officers not liable to impeachment shall be subject to removal for misconduct or malfeasance in office, in such manner as may be provided by law.” (Id., sec. 18.) In pursuance of this provision, the legislature enacted
When an act is in general terms made indictable, a criminal
In Coates v. Wallace, 17 Serg. & R. (Pa.) 75, the court, through Chief Justice Gibson, stated the rule thus: “Ignorance of the law will not excuse in any case; and this principle is applicable, and with irresistible force, to the ease of an officer selected for his capacity, and in whom ignorance is unpardonable. The very acceptance of the office carries with it an assertion of a sufficient share of intelligence to enable the party to follow a guide provided for him, with an unusual attention to clearness and precision. On any other principle, a conviction would seldom take place, even in cases of the most flagrant abuse"; for pretexts would never be wanting. Sound policy, therefore, requires that the officer should be held to act at his peril, and we are of opinion that the absence of a corrupt motive, or the existence of an agreement by the party injured, furnishes no justification for doing what the law forbids.” This case and Leggatt v. Prideaux, supra, were both civil actions to recover penalties from public officers for the collection of illegal fees, but the principle involved in each of them is none the less
The ignorance of the accused being, therefore, no excuse or justification, the fact that he was acting upon the advice given to the board by the attorney general does not put him in any more favorable position. If, as we have said, he must act at
This brings us to the question whether mandamus will issue to compel the entry of a judgment of removal. In civil cases circumstances often arise calling for the issuance of mandamus to a judicial officer or tribunal to put into motion the power of such officer or tribunal, or to compel the performance of an act which, being ministerial in character, does not involve the exercise of judicial discretion. But the writ will not in any case direct how an officer or tribunal shall act, or to what effect they shall exercise their power. Even when the proper performance of an act, ministerial in character, involves discretion, the writ will not direct a decision in a particular way. (Spelling on Injunction and Extraordinary Remedies, secs. 1394, 1395.) In the notes this author cites many illustrative cases. The following, decided by this court, are pertinent: State ex rel. Independent Pub. Co. v. Smith, 23 Mont. 329, 58 Pac. 867; Raleigh v. District Court, 24 Mont. 306, 81 Am. St. Rep. 431,
But though, as has been said, the violation of the statute by the accused was established by uncontroverted evidence,
The relator relies with confidence upon State ex rel. Davis v. District Court, supra, and Hensley v. Superior Court, 111 Cal. 541, 44 Pac. 232. These were both civil cases. Besides, the facts out of which each of them arose present a ease in which the defendant court, in refusing to make the particular order demanded, refused to perform a plain legal duty which involved no discretion whatever.
The alternative writ is set aside, and the proceeding is dismissed.
Dismissed.