196 Mass. 365 | Mass. | 1907
The respondents constitute the police commission of the city of Springfield. On July 16, 1907, that commission passed a vote in effect removing the plaintiff from the office of city marshal to which he had been appointed by the commission in the preceding January, “ for the term of the current municipal year ... to continue in office until his successor is appointed and qualified, unless sooner removed.” This is a petition by him for a writ" of mandamus to compel the commission to reinstate him in the office from which he was thus removed. The case was heard by a single justice “ upon the petition and answer and the agreement that the city marshal of Springfield is not within the descriptive words of the statutes
We think that the ruling was right. The city charter of Springfield provides, so far as now material, that “ . . . the administration of police . . . shall be vested in the mayor and aldermen. . . . The mayor and aldermen shall have full and exclusive power to appoint a constable and assistants, or a city marshal and assistants, with the powers and duties of constables, and all other police officers, and the same to remove at pleasure.” St. 1852, c. 94, § 8. Under this provision the mayor and aldermen had an absolute power to remove the city marshal and his assistants without any notice or hearing. Williams v. Gloucester, 148 Mass. 256. This is conceded by the plaintiff. By St. 1902, c. 134, § 1, it was provided that, “ The powers and duties conferred and imposed by chapter ninety-four of the acts of the year eighteen hundred and fifty-two [the city charter] upon the mayor and aldermen of the city of Springfield in relation to the establishment and maintenance of a police department, the appointment of a constable, or a city marshal and assistants, and all other police officers, may be exercised and performed by the city council, in such manner as it may from time to time prescribe, and wholly or in part through the agency of any persons acting as a board whom it may from time to time designate, and with such limitations of power as it may by ordinance determine.” By virtue of this statute the powers and duties conferred by the charter upon the mayor and aldermen in regard to the police department were transferred to the city council. Acting under the authority thus conferred the city council passed an ordinance in 1902 establishing a police commission. This ordinance was revised and re-enacted in 1904 and it was under and by virtue of the provisions of the ordinance as thus revised and re-enacted
It is agreed that the office of city marshal of Springfield does
The conclusion to which we have come in regard to the power of the commission to remove the plaintiff renders it unnecessary to consider other questions that have been argued, further than to observe that there is nothing in the plaintiff’s contention that his acceptance of the office constituted a contract between him and the city of Springfield for a year, or in his contention that as a police officer he was entitled to a hearing under § 13 of the ordinance.
Petition dismissed.
The provision referred to contained in § 13 of the ordinances is as follows:
“Such commission may for cause, after due hearing and except as provided in chapter nineteen of the Revised Laws, punish any night and day watchman, reserve or police officer for insubordination, breach of the rules of the department, or neglect of duty, by fine, reprimand, suspension with or without loss of pay, or discharge, and said marshal may suspend from office for cause any night and day watchman, reserve or police officer, provided, that whenever he shall so suspend any such officer he shall forthwith report the fact and cause thereof to such commission, who shall forthwith • proceed to investigate said charge, and within two weeks shall make known the result of their investigation, and shall continue such suspension, reprimand, discharge from, or reinstate in office, with or without pay during such suspension, the person so suspended.”