34 A.2d 370 | Vt. | 1943
This respondent was convicted of the crime of petit larceny in the Montpelier Municipal Court, and brought the cause before us upon exceptions. He has filed in this Court a plea to the jurisdiction on the ground that the process and warrant, upon which he was arrested and brought to trial and judgment, were issued without lawful oath or affirmation first made, in contravention of Art. II of the Declaration of Rights of the Inhabitants of the State of Vermont, as contained in Chapter 1 of our State Constitution. The plea sets forth that the complaint was made by Joseph W. Foti, upon his oath of office as City Grand Juror of the City of Montpelier; that Mr. Foti could not and did not lawfully hold and exercise that office, because at the time of his appointment and qualification, and at the time of making the complaint, he held and exercised the office of Referee in Bankruptcy for Washington County, and that the complaint was, therefore, without lawful authority and null and void. The sufficiency of this plea is the issue for our determination.
A question of jurisdiction may be raised at any stage of a case and is never out of time. State v. Barnett,
Chapter
But it does not follow that if Mr. Foti was ineligible to hold office as City Grand Juror his acts done under the color of his authority were, so far as third persons were concerned, null and void. In McGregor v. Balch,
This principle is illustrated and applied in Fancher v.Stearns,
These decisions are in accord with authorities from other jurisdictions, among which may be mentioned: Thomas Sheehan'sCase,
Although the de facto doctrine has been described, perhaps not very happily, as "exotic" it is based upon sound reasons of public policy for the protection of the interests of the public and individuals which are involved in the official acts of persons exercising the duties of an office without being lawful officers, since it is unreasonable to require the public to inquire into the title of an officer or to compel him to show title, (State v. Poulin, *378 supra,
The respondent cites Woodcock v. Bolster,
We hold that Mr. Foti was, at least, an officer de facto; that he is not a party to the present proceedings; and that the complaint signed by him as City Grand Juror and the warrant issued thereon were sufficient to confer jurisdiction upon the Montpelier Municipal Court.
Judgment that the plea to the jurisdiction is insufficient andit is dismissed. Let the cause stand for hearing upon therespondent's exceptions taken on trial.