Hornung v. State ex rel. Gamble

2 L.R.A. 510, 19 N.E. 151, 116 Ind. 458, 1888 Ind. LEXIS 161
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1888
DocketNo. 14,564
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2 L.R.A. 510 (Hornung v. State ex rel. Gamble) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hornung v. State ex rel. Gamble, 2 L.R.A. 510, 19 N.E. 151, 116 Ind. 458, 1888 Ind. LEXIS 161 (Ind. 1888).

Opinion

Niblack, J.

The proceedings in this case were based upon an information in the name of the State, on the relation of Josiah S. Gamble, and against Frank G. Hornung, which caused the court below to be informed that, on the first Monday in June, in the year 1885, the trustees of the several townships of the county of Fayette met at the office of the county auditor for the purpose of appointing a superintendent of public schools for that county, and thereupon appointed [459]*459the relator such superintendent; that the relator, who was’ at the time a citizen of the county, immediately qualified and entered upon the duties of the office ; that, on the 6th day of June, 1887, which was the first Monday of that month, the trustees of the several townships of said county of Fayette again met at the office of the county auditor for the purpose of appointing a superintendent of public schools as the successor of the relator; that there were, at the time, nine, and only nine, townships in said county of Fayette, the trustees of all which were present; that the defendant, Hornung, was then the duly elected and acting trustee of Connersville township, one of the townships of said county, 'and as such trustee was present at the last named meeting, being, also, at the same time an applicant for the office of superintendent of public schools to succeed the relator; that the trustees proceeded on the same day to determine by ballot who should be appointed to the office in question; that in casting then-ballots four of such trustees voted in favor of the relator, and that the remaining four trustees, other than the defendant, voted for him, the defendant; that in casting his ballot the defendant voted for himself; that the ballot so cast for himself by the defendant was counted for. him by the trustees, which gave him an apparent majority of one vote; that the ballot thus cast by the defendant was an illegal vote, and ought not to have been counted for any purpose whatever; that the county auditor did not give the casting vote in favor of either one of the parties so voted for by the trustees; that the trustees thereafter adjourned without taking any further action in the matter of the appointment of a superintendent of public schools; that, by reason of the foregoing facts, the defendant assumed that he had been appointed such superintendent of public schools, known as county superintendent, for said county of Fayette, and took an oath of office and executed an official bond as the law required of persons appointed to that position ; that, on the 13th day of June, 1887, the defendant demanded the possession of the office of such [460]*460superintendent, and deforced him, the relator, from the same ; that the defendant had ever since intruded himself into said office, and wrongfully usurped the powers and duties pertaining thereto. Wherefore the defendant was required to answer by what authority he claimed to hold the possession of such office, and all other appropriate relief was invoked.

A demurrer to the information being first overruled, the defendant answered: First. In general denial. Secondly. Giving a history of the cause substantially the same as stated in the information up to the time when the township trustees were about to commence to ballot for a county superintendent of schools, on the first Monday in June, 1887, and then averring that such trustees, before proceeding to ballot, selected Richard W. Sipe, one of their number, to act as chairman of their meeting, who acted accordingly; that the county auditor attended the meeting and acted as the clerk of the election; that the relator and the defendant and one other person were all applicants for the office which the trustees had met to fill; that, without any formal agreement as to the manner of conducting the election, the trustees-proceeded to express their individual choice as between the several applicants for the office of county superintendent of schools by voting written ballots; that, throughout thirty-five ballots, the chairman, Sipe, and three others of such trustees voted for the relator, and that the defendant and three other of such trustees voted for him, the defendant; that the remaining trustee voted all the time for the other applicant above referred to; that on the thirty-sixth ballot all of the trustees voted as they had before, except that such remaining trustee voted for the defendant; that during all of the balloting the chairman and other trustees, including the county auditor, had full knowledge that the defendant was voting for himself; that after such thirty-sixth ballot was taken, Sipe, as chairman of the meeting, in the presence and hearing of all the other trustees, announced that the defendant was duly elected and appointed to said office of [461]*461county superintendent of schools; that none of the trustees made any objection to this announcement, and all acquiesced in, and consented to, the same; that said meeting thereupon adjourned without day; that immediately after such adjournment, the county auditor, in a book kept for that purpose, made a proper record of the proceedings had by such trustees, showing that the defendant had been duly elected and appointed as such superintendent; that pursuant to such election and appointment, the defendant, on the 13th day of June, 1887, and after resigning the office of township trustee, took and subscribed the oath required by law and executed an official bond with approved freehold security in the penal sum of one thousand dollars conditioned as the law prescribes; that immediately thereafter the county auditor reported to the superintendent of public instruction that the defendant had been appointed county superintendent of schools for Fayette county; that the defendant has ever since been recognized as such last named superintendent by the superintendent of public instruction; that after executing a bond and qualifying as above stated, the defendant entered upon the discharge of his duties as such county superintendent and has since continued in the discharge of such duties.

A demurrer was sustained to this second paragraph of answer, and a trial resulted in a finding in favor of the relator, assessing his damages at $425, and in the award of judgment accordingly.

The errors assigned upon the proceedings below, and the argument submitted in favor of the reversal of the judgment, present two questions for our decision :

First. Had Hornung, while acting as a township trustee, the lawful right to vote for himself for the office of county superintendent of schools, and to have his vote counted - for himself in determining the result of the ballotings ? If not, was there such an acquiescence in, and tacit consent to, the announcement by the chairman of the meeting that he, [462]*462Hornung, had been duly elected as such county superintendent, as amounted in law to an appointment to that office ?

A township trustee is the agent of his township in the transaction of its business, and hence, in the performance of his duties, he acts in a fiduciary, as well as an official, capacity. Therefore the rule which requires fair dealings and disinterested conduct on the part of an agent or trustee towards those he represents, applies, with full force, to a township trustee.

The law will not allow an agent or a trustee to place himself in such an attitude toward his principal, or his cestui que trust, as to have his interest conflict with his duty, and a township trustee is as much amenable to that rule as any other agent or trustee.

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Bluebook (online)
2 L.R.A. 510, 19 N.E. 151, 116 Ind. 458, 1888 Ind. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hornung-v-state-ex-rel-gamble-ind-1888.