5 Wend. 231 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1830
The principle is well settled, that the acts of officers de facto are as valid and effectual when they concern the public or the rights of third persons, as though they were officers de jure. The affairs of society could not be carried on upon any other principle.
In The People v. Collins, 7 Johns. R. 549, the town clerk of Turin refused to record the survey of a road, because one of the commissioners who signed the survey had not taken the oath of office and filed it with the clerk, as was required by la%v„ The court held that the clerk, a mere ministerial officer, had no right to inquire into the authority of the commissioners and to adjudge their acts to be void; that, acting as commissioners under colour of an election, their acts were valid, and their title could not be inquired into collaterally. In M’Insiry v. Tanner, 9 Johns. R. 125 upon certiorari, it was contended that the judgment was void, on the ground that the justice who rendered it was a minister of the gospel, and incapacitated by the constitution from holding any office. The court held that the title of the magistrate could not be drawn in question in this manner; that they were to intend that he acted under a regular commission, and being an officer de facto, his acts in relation to the public and third persons were valid. Vid. also Potter v. Luther, 3 Johns. Rep. 486. Reed v. Gillet, 12 id. 296. 4 T. R. 366. 16 Vines, 114. 2 Campb. 131.
In Fowler v. Bebee and another, 9 Mass. R, 231, the defendant pleaded in abatement, that the sheriff whose deputy served the writ was not sheriff de jure, he having been appointed and commissioned some months before the law erecting the county for which he was appointed, by its own terms, went into operation. The plea was overruled on the ground that, being sheriff de facto, his acts and those of his deputies were valid as to third persons, and that his title to the office could not be collaterally tried. An information was subsequently filed against the officers of this county by the solicitor general, and their appointments were decided by the court to have been made without constitutional and legal authority. 10 Mass. R. 290.
Independently of the certificate of the clerk of the county of Genesee, (which I think was properly exclued by the court below,) there is no direct evidence that Justus Ingersoll came into office under colour of an election; but it is shewn that he was an acting justice of the town of Shelby, in the county of Genesee, for at least two years before the county of Orleans Was erected, in April, 1825; and that he continued to act as such justice in the same town, after it became a part of Orleans county, down to December, 1826. This evidence warrants the presumption that he was elected a justice while his town was a part of the county of Gene-see, and that he continued to act by virtue of that authority in the county of Orleans; and it has been judicially determined, that the transfer of a town from one county to another does not terminate or affect the offices or powers of its magistrates. 6 Cowen, 642. 9 Cowen, 640. The proof on the part of the plaintiff, therefore, that Ingersoll had never been appointed a justice of the county of Orleans since its organization, did not, when taken in connection with the other evidence in the case, impeach his title to the .office, or rebut the prima fade evidence, if it is to be considered but prima facie, which had been given by the defendant.
I apprehend an inquiry into the title of the surrogate to his office, after an unquestioned exercise of its powers for twenty years, would not have been permitted. The court below therefore erred, and the judgment must be reversed.