Burch v. Hardwicke

71 Gratt. 24
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 14, 1878
StatusPublished

This text of 71 Gratt. 24 (Burch v. Hardwicke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burch v. Hardwicke, 71 Gratt. 24 (Va. 1878).

Opinion

Staples, J.

The questions presented by the demurrer to the declaration may be more satisfactorily disposed of in passing Upon the instructions and the motion for a new trial. Two of the instructions were given on the motion of the defendant, and of course there is no complaint with respect to them. The third was given by the court in answer to a question propounded by the jury. In order properly to understand the heaping of this instruction, it will be necessary to recur briefly to the facts upon which it was based. It seems that one of the charges preferred by the defendant, as mayor, against the plaintiff. as chief of police, and upon which the removal of the latter was partly founded, was, that the plaintiff “ had continued to act as agent for Dr. W. O. Owen, contrary to the express written and verbal order of the defendant, as mayor.” When this charge was under investigation before the defendant, the plaintiff was examined on oath by the defendant, and admitted that he “was agent of Dr. Owen, to collect his medical accounts and keep his. books;” hut he also proved that he had not neglected any of his duties as chief of police by reason of his being such [27]*27ascent, and that he had not been occupied more than five minutes of his time any day in a year in attending to Dr. Owen’s business;- nor was there any evidence that he had ever neglected any of his duties as chief of police in consequence of such employment. The plaintiff also proved that he had been told by James W. Cobbs, the former mayor, John W. Carroll, president of the council, and Janees Garland, judge of the hustings court, members of the former police board, that he might act as such agent for Dr. Owen when it did not interfere with his official duties as chief of police, and that he had a like permission from two of the present hoard of police commissioners. It further appeared that while under Examination before the mayor the plaintiff said that he had acted, and would continue to act, as agent of Dr. Owen, notwithstanding the order of the mayor. These matters, as they occurred before the mayor, were proved during the progress of the trial in the court below. The jury having retired to consult of their verdict, came into court and enquired of the court whether or no the mayor had a right to prevent the plaintiff from acting as agent of Dr. Owen. To this, the following answer was made by the judge in writing: “If the chief of police had a license by an order or permission from the board of police commissioners to act as collector or agent of Dr. Owen, or if by so acting his official duties as such chief of police were or could in nowise be interfered with, and his efficiency as a public officer in nowise impaired thereby, then the mayor had no right to inhibit him from so acting as collector or agent. But on the other hand, if he had no such license or permission from the police board, and his so acting did in any wise interfere with his duties as chief of police, or render him in any way less efficient as a public officer, then the mayor had a right to inhibit him from so acting, if he in good faith [28]*28believed that the public interest would be promoted by so prohibiting him.”

The main objection to this instruction is based upon the idea that the mayor is the chief executive officer of the city of Lynchburg, and as such has the supervision and control of the chief of police; that the propriety of his orders to that officer, or to any other subordinate, cannot be called in question in any other tribunal; that this rule is essential to the enforcement of discipline and the preservation of order; that the judge of the circuit court ought so to have told the jury, and that his answer in the form in which it was given was calculated to lead the jury to the erroneous conclusion that they had the right to pass upon the propriety of the order in question.

Without undertaking now to concede or to controvert the soundness of this proposition, I think it is sufficient to say that the learned judge of the circuit court, on the motion of the defendant’s counsel, and in the very language selected by him, had already fully stated the law applicable to this branch of the case. He had declared that the gist of the action is want of probable cause; and although the jury should believe the defendant was hostile to the plaintiff', and was actuated by malice, still, unless each one of the charges of the defendant was unsupported by any evidence tending to prove it, or the charge was in itself so frivolous that the defendant did not and could not reasonably regard it as a real offence, they must find for the defendant; provided the matter so charged related to the official duty of the plaintiff', and was a misconduct in office or a neglect of official duty, or such as the defendant might reasonably believe, and did honestly believe, w-as such misconduct or neglect of official duty.

And the judge further told the jury, that if they believed from the evidence that any one of the specifications on which the defendant found the plaintiff' guilty [29]*29was a misconduct in office or neglect of official duty, proved to the reasonable satisfaction of the defendant, and being so proved, was, in his opinion, just cause for the removal of the'plaintiff from office, they must find for the defendant.

How, if these instructions, instead of preceding, had followed the answer given by the judge to the enquiry made by the jury, it is impossible there could have been any ground for misapprehension. The court gave the defendant all he asked. It laid down the law in his favor in the most liberal manner; and we must suppose the jury had the intelligence to comprehend and to remember what was said in the first as in the last instruction. Taking them all together, how are they to be construed? Plainly, as declaring that, although the jury might believe the plaintiff was not guilty of any neglect of duty in collecting Dr. Owen’s accounts, and although the defendant had no right to prohibit him from so acting, and although the defendant may have removed the plaintiff for a violation of his orders in that particular, the defendant could not be held liable if the conduct of the plaintiff was such as the defendant might reasonably believe, and did honestly believe, was a neglect of duty. In other words, however erroneous may have been the orders of the defendant, and however malicious his motives, he is exempt from all liability if the alleged mis•conduct or neglect of official duty was proved to his reasonable satisfaction,' and being so proved, was, in his opinion, just cause for the removal of the plaintiff from office.

It is rarely that a case occurs in which the law is so fully and favorably expounded for one of the parties upon a question of this character.

Under such instructions it might well be supposed that the jury would have found a verdict for the defendant, and it is very probable they would have so found, but [30]*30that the plaintiff produced evidence tending to show that before any of the charges were preferred against him the defendant had determined to remove him from office, under color of his authority as mayor, in consequence of personal enmity and dislike, whether there was any cause for removal or not; and he also offered to show that the said charges were false and malicious, but was stopped by the court upon objections made by the defendant. Under all these circumstances, it is plain that the defendant did not and could not sustain any injury by the instruction given in answer to the question propounded by the jury.

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104 Mass. 87 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1870)

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Bluebook (online)
71 Gratt. 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burch-v-hardwicke-va-1878.