Attorney General v. Stratton

79 N.E. 1073, 194 Mass. 51, 1907 Mass. LEXIS 914
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 79 N.E. 1073 (Attorney General v. Stratton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Attorney General v. Stratton, 79 N.E. 1073, 194 Mass. 51, 1907 Mass. LEXIS 914 (Mass. 1907).

Opinion

Knowlton, C. J.

This is an information in the nature of a quo warranta to require the respondents to show by what warrant and authority they exercise the office of members of the board of health of the town of Swampscott.

It appears that the inhabitants of the town, at the annual town meeting in March, 1906, which was called for many purposes, and among others to hear and act upon the reports of numerous town officers, including the report of the board of health, appointed a committee of five voters to investigate the doings of the board of health for the three municipal years then ending, with authority to call for persons, books and papers, and to employ counsel and a stenographer. At an adjourned meeting this committee made a report, with charges against the board of health, which was accepted and adopted. At this meeting another committee was appointed to hear evidence upon the charges against the board, and to report their findings of fact and recommendations at an adjourned town meeting. This committee were authorized to employ counsel and engage a stenographer, and were empowered to summon witnesses, and call for an inspection of public records and private documents and papers. The committee made a report at an adjourned meeting, finding the charges proved, and recommending the adoption of resolutions removing the respondents from their respective offices as members of the board of health, for maladministration and misfeasance in office. The report was accepted and adopted, and resolutions were adopted in accordance [52]*52with its recommendations. The respondents did not recognize the authority of either of these committees, and did not appear before them, although each of the committees met the respondents at their office, and interrogated them in regard to their books, records and memoranda, which were there inspected.

The respondents also offered to show, at the hearing upon the information, that the committees were affected by bias and prejudice against them, such that their proceedings were not fairly conducted, and that the attempted removal of the respondents from their office was illegal by reason of other specified irregularities in connection with the meeting at which the vote of removal was passed. This offer of proof was rejected by the justice who heard the case. He ordered that the petition be dismissed, and reported the case to the full court. The justice made a memorandum of his findings and rulings as follows: “The members of the board of health are public agents invested with great public powers. Their term of office is prescribed by the Legislature. Each member holds his office for three years from the day following the meeting at which he is elected and until another is chosen and qualified in his stead. R. L. c. 11, § 338. I rule as matter of law that the power to shorten this term even for misconduct, official or otherwise, is not vested in the voters of the town in town meeting assembled, and, having so ruled, order that this petition be dismissed.”

The question whether this ruling was correct is the only question presented in terms by the report. Although the general language of the reservation may be broad enough to authorize a dismissal of the petition on the ground that the vote of removal was void, because there was no article in the warrant which gave notice to the voters that such a subject was to be acted upon at the meeting, (see Wood v. Quincy, 11 Cush. 487, 495, Matthews v. Westborough, 131 Mass. 521,) we think it better not to dispose of the case on this ground, inasmuch as the term of office of neither of the respondents has yet expired. The three terms for which they were respectively elected will end in March, 1907, March, 1908, and March, 1909. The question expressly reserved has been fully argued, and, if not decided in this case, it may arise in subsequent proceedings against these respondents for the causes now existing.

[53]*53It is contended by the informant that, at the common law, municipal corporations have an inherent power of amotion of their officers for misconduct. This rule has been laid down in cases relating to certain municipal corporations in England. Rex v. Richardson, 1 Burr. 517. Lord Bruce's case, Stra. 819. Regina v. Ipswich Corp. 2 Ld. Raym. 1232. Imperial Hydropathic Hotel Co. v. Hampson, 23 Ch. D. 1,7. In this country the subject is generally regulated by legislation, although there are cases in which the above rule has been stated as applying to officers of municipal corporations, in the absence of statutory provision touching the subject. State v. Jersey City, 1 Dutch. 536, 539. Richards v. Clarksburg, 30 W. Va. 491. Ellison v. Raleigh, 89 N. C. 125. Mayor of Savannah v. Grayson, 104 Ga. 105. State v. New Orleans, 107 La. 632. In other cases relating to corporations aggregate, not municipal, but having authority for their own government, the rule has been stated in general terms, although the decisions well might have been put on the ground of an original implied authority, given by the statute creating the corporations. See Fawcett v. Charles, 13 Wend. 473, 476; People v. Chicago Board of Trade, 45 Ill. 114. Whatever the rule may be in reference to municipal corporations in other parts of the country, we are of opinion that, in the cities and towns of Massachusetts, there is no power to remove public officers except that which is given by the statutes. The difference between municipal corporations in England and towns in New England has been recognized in many cases. The former often have many prescriptive rights, as well as special powers expressly or impliedly given in their charters, while the latter have only the powers conferred by statutes. In Stetson v. Kempton, 13 Mass. 272, 278, Chief Justice Parker, referring to towns, said: “ Their corporate powers depend upon legislative charter or grant; or upon prescription, where they may have exercised the powers anciently without any particular act of incorporation. But, in all cases, the powers of towns are defined by the statute of 1785, c. 75.” In Hooper v. Emery, 14 Maine, 375, the court said: “ ‘ The inhabitants of every town in this State are declared to be a body politic and corporate ’ by the statute; but these corporations derive none of their powers from, nor are any duties imposed upon them by, the common law.” In the opinion [54]*54by Mr. Justice Gray in Bloomfield v. Charter Oak Bank, 121 U. S. 121, 129, we find these words: “ Towns in Connecticut, and in the other New England States, differ from trading companies, and even from municipal corporations elsewhere. They are territorial corporations, into which the State is divided by the Legislature, from time to time, at its discretion, for political purposes and the convenient administration of government; they have those powers only, which have been expressly conferred upon them by statute, or which are necessary for conducting municipal affairs; and all the inhabitants of a town are members of the quasi corporation.” Similar language was used by the same judge in Hill v. Boston, 122 Mass. 344, 354, and in Agawam v. Hampden, 130 Mass. 528, 530, when Chief Justice of this court. See statements to the same effect in Eastman v. Meredith, 36 N. H. 284, and in Ottawa v. Carey,

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Bluebook (online)
79 N.E. 1073, 194 Mass. 51, 1907 Mass. LEXIS 914, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-general-v-stratton-mass-1907.