Commonwealth Ex Rel. v. Davis

149 A. 176, 299 Pa. 276, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 600
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 6, 1930
DocketAppeal, 62
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 149 A. 176 (Commonwealth Ex Rel. v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth Ex Rel. v. Davis, 149 A. 176, 299 Pa. 276, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 600 (Pa. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Simpson,

During the term for which he was elected, Joseph Cauffiel, the mayor of the City of Johnstown, was indicted, tried and convicted, inter alia, of misbehavior in office, and a part of his sentence was that he “shall be and is hereby removed from the office of mayor of the City of Johnstown.” On appeal, this sentence was affirmed by the Superior Court (97 Pa. Superior Ct. 202), and later we dismissed an application for a writ of certiorari to review its judgment: Com. v. Cauffiel, 298 Pa. 319. It follows that the entire sentence, including the removal from office, has been finally adjudged to be effective as against Cauffiel, and probably this would be held sufficient to determine the present controversy. We prefer to decide it on a broader ground, however.

Immediately before his actual incarceration, Cauffiel gave written notice to the treasurer of the city not to *278 pay any warrants drawn upon the funds of the city, unless they were signed by him. The law expressly provides that all such warrants must be signed by the mayor, if there is one available for the purpose, and, if not, by the superintendent of accounts and finance of the city, who is declared by section 1 of the Act of April 6, 1917, P. L. 52, 54, to be the acting mayor, whenever there arises a “vacancy in the office of mayor by death, resignation or otherwise.”

Warrants for wages due the employees of the city were duly signed by all the required public officials, including the acting mayor, but not by Cauffiel; the treasurer refused to honor them because of a fear that he might be made personally responsible for any payments made by him. The Commonwealth, at the relation of the attorney general, then applied for a writ of peremptory mandamus to compel him to act. This was the appropriate remedy: Muir v. Madden, 286 Pa. 233; McKannay v. Horton, 151 Cal. 711, and note thereto in 13 L. R. A. (n. s.) 661. The treasurer admitted the facts, the court below awarded the writ, and the treasurer prosecuted the present appeal. On Cauffiel’s application, he was allowed to intervene as a party appellant, and his counsel, as well as counsel for the treasurer, argued the appeal in this court; and Cauffiel as well as the treasurer will, therefore, be conclusively bound by our judgment herein.

Both base their entire argument on section 4 of article VI of the state Constitution which provides as follows: “All officers shall hold their offices on the condition that they behave themselves well while in office, and shall be removed on conviction of misbehavior in office or of any infamous crime. Appointed officers, other than judges of the courts of record and the Superintendent of Public Instruction, may be removed at the pleasure of the power by which they shall have been appointed. All officers elected by the people, except Governor, Lieutenant-Governor, members of the General *279 Assembly, and judges of tbe courts of record learned in tbe law, shall be removed by tbe Governor for reasonable cause, after due notice and full bearing, on tbe address of two-thirds of tbe Senate.” Under this section tbe two appellants first contend that tbe sweeping language of tbe last sentence — “all officers elected by tbe people ......shall be removed by tbe governor,” etc., etc.,— means that “officers elected by tbe people” shall not be removed in any other way. To this we do not assent. If it were so, then neither impeachment nor quo warranto would be available, though tbe former is expressly provided for in tbe immediately preceding section of tbe same article of the Constitution, and it was admitted, at bar, that tbe latter was an available remedy in cases like tbe present.

Tbe two appellants next contend that, in any event, we should bold that tbe constitutional provision is not self-executing, and hence, since the legislature has not acted, Cauffiel was not legally removed by tbe sentence of tbe court. To this also we do not agree. To so bold, would be to add to tbe “shall be removed” a provision in effect saying, “if tbe legislature provides a method for accomplishing that purpose, and if also tbe legislative mandate is carried into effect by tbe authority named by it.” Tbe word “shall” cannot be so minimized, and no authority has been found which suggests that it should be.

In Houseman et al. v. Commonwealth, 100 Pa. 222, 230, we said: “Tbe fourth section of tbe sixth article of tbe new Constitution [tbe one under consideration] enlarges tbe power of removal and speaks with more certainty both as to tbe authority which shall be clothed with it, and tbe manner of its exercise. Under tbe new Constitution there are three kinds of removal, to wit, on conviction of misbehavior or crime, at tbe pleasure of tbe appointing power, and for reasonable cause on tbe address of two-thirds of tbe Senate. All officers are subject to tbe first kind, appointed officers to tbe second, *280 and elective officers to the third.” Legislation is not needed to carry into effect any of these provisions. Admittedly this is so as to the second and third; it is not less so as to the first. The people in adopting the Constitution, — and it is their normal view of its language which is controlling (Long v. Cheltenham Township School District, 269 Pa. 472; Com. v. Dabbierio, 290 Pa. 174), — when considering this section, were not dealing with matters needing future action to make them effective. When they found three provisions in one section, each of which could be carried into effect without legislative action, they must have believed that it was intended that this should be done. To them it must have seemed that “on conviction” a removal “shall” result, must have meant just what it said, and not that it meant a removal not “on conviction” but at some future time, in some other proceeding than that which resulted in the conviction, and dependent on other contingencies than those appearing in the Constitution itself.

It would seem clear, also, that the able lawyers who composed, in large part, the Constitutional Convention of 1873, must have looked at the matter in exactly the same way. A careful reading of the debates in the convention shows that this part of the section was very little considered, probably because, as will be later pointed out, it is derived from the Constitution of 1838; but it was repeatedly said that the convention was “trying to provide a speedy remedy for the removal of incompetent men”: 5 Convention Debates 373; 8 Conv. Deb. 124. Moreover, every lawyer in the convention knew that in practically all our crimes acts similar language appeared. These' statutes, after defining the crime, say that the defendant “on conviction” shall be fined and/or imprisoned, the penalty being imposed by the court before whom the defendant was convicted. Naturally they would expect, therefore, as every one else would, that the constitutional provision providing for a specified punishment “on conviction” would be inter *281 preted in exactly the same way, — the court on conviction “shall” impose the specified punishment.

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Bluebook (online)
149 A. 176, 299 Pa. 276, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-ex-rel-v-davis-pa-1930.