Hummelshime v. Hirsch

79 A. 38, 114 Md. 39, 1910 Md. LEXIS 17
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 30, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 79 A. 38 (Hummelshime v. Hirsch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hummelshime v. Hirsch, 79 A. 38, 114 Md. 39, 1910 Md. LEXIS 17 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By the Act of 1910, Chapter 306, a new Charter was enacted for the City of Cumberland. Section 97 of this Charter provides that candidates- for Mayor and City Council shall -be nominated at a primary election “to be held on the second Tuesday preceding the general municipal election,” and that “any person desiring to become a candidate for Mayor or City Council shall, at least ten days prior to said primary election, file, or there shall be filed for him, a statement of such candidacy” under oath, giving his place of residence in said city, stating that he is a qualified voter therein, that he is qualified, to hold and is a candidate for a nomination for the office, and that he requests his name to be printed upon the primary ballot, “and shall at the same time file therewith the petition of at least one hundred qualified voters, requesting such candidacy,” and stating that they know the candidate to be a man of good moral character and'qualified, in their judgment, for the duties of such office. This section further provides that “the two candidates receiving the highest number of votes for Mayor shall be the candidates, and the only candidates, whose names shall be placed upon the ballot for Mayor at the following general municipal election, eight candidates receiving the highest number of votes, or *42 all such candidates, if less than eight, shall be the candidates, and the only candidates, whose names shall be placed upon the ballot for councilmen at such municipal election.” By section 98 the Board of Election Supervisors of Allegany County are required to order an election to be held on the sixteenth day of May, 1910, and it provides that the manner of holding such election shall be governed by the laws of the State of Maryland regulating general elections, and that the Mayor and Councilmen elected at said election “shall hold office from the first Monday in June, 1910, until the first Monday in April, 1912, and until their successors shall have been duly elected and qualified.”

On the 7th of June, 1910, the appellee, Joseph Hirsch, filed in the Circuit Court for Allegany County a petition for a mandamus against the appellant, in which he alleged that he was, and had been for many years, a citizen of and a voter and tax payer in the City of Cumberland, and as such was interested in having the affairs of said city “managed In an orderly and lawful manner, and by officers duly qualified to manage the same;” that by the terms of the Charter of Cumberland “Each Councilmen of said city must be the bona fide owner of property to the value of $500.00, and be assessed for the same on the tax books of said city at the time of his election, and for two years next prior thereto, the taxes on which shall not be in arrears;” that at the election held on May 16th, 1910, the appellant, Theodore A. K. Hummelshime, “was returned as having been elected a member of said Mayor and City Council, to wit, as a Councilman, and is now assuming to act and is acting as such Councilman;” that at the time of said election the appellant was assessed on the tax books of the city with property of the value of $500.00, but “that at the time of said election the taxes so assessed against” the appellant'“were in arrears and unpaid, and remained so in arrears and unpaid for some days thereafter, and that by reason thereof said Hummelshime was not qualified at the time of his election, and is nor now qualified *43 to act as Councilman, of the City of Cumberland.” The petition further alleges “that the newly elected body of Mayor and City Council convened for organization on the morning of June 6th, 1910,” and that the petitioner, by his counsel, on that day “appeared before said body and the said Theodore K. Hummelshime—and stated that he wished to protest against said Hummelshime’s acting as Councilman, for the reason that he was disqualified at the time of his election;” that said body as a whole declined to hear any statement in reference to the matter “at that time and place, and said Hummelshime then and there stated that he had been duly elected and that he intended to and would act as Councilman.” The petition then charges that by reason of the fact that the appellant was disqualified at the time of his election, the election of the appellant was void, and that it was his “duty to refrain from entering upon the discharge of the powers, privileges and functions of said office,” and that it is now his duty to vacate said office, but that the appellant, wholly disregarding his duty in the premises, refuses to vacate said office, and continues to exercise the functions thereof, and the petitioner prays that a writ of mandamus may issue commanding the appellant to vacate the office of Councilman and to cease from, exercising the functions thereof. On the 11th of June, 1910, the appellee, J. Semmes Devecmon, was made a party plaintiff in the case, and on the same day the Court passed an order requiring the appellant to show cause why the writ should not issue.

The appellant demurred to the petition, and the demurrer having been overruled, he filed his answer, in which he admits the facts alleged in the petition but denies that he was disqualified at the time of the election, and says that at the time of the election he was a bona fide owner of property to the value of $500.00, and was assessed for the same on the tax books of the city at the time of his election and for two years prior thereto; “that, on the said sixteenth day of May before the hour of three o’clock in the afternoon, he, the *44 said Hummelshime, went to the office of Anthony Minke,,the tax collector for said city; to pay any and all taxes which he at that time owed to the .City of Cumberland for the fiscal year 1909-1010; that it was the custom and the duty of the said Minke to be at his office, which was then and is provided for him at the Water Works Building, on Green street, in the said city, from about the hour of nine o’clock in the morning until five in the afternoon, except for about an hour from twelve o’clock on, to receive the taxes from the taxpayers of the City of Cumberland and to give receipts therefor, which duty'and custom was well known to this respondent at that time and for a long period of time prior thereto; that the said Minke was not at his office of tax collector, as aforesaid, nor at the Water Works of the City of Cumberland, which is near thereto, and the said Hummelshime'could not find him and did not know where he was, though the said 'Hummelshime inquired of city employees' near said office who informed him that they did not know where the said Minke was and that, from their knowledge, he had not been around his office during that day, except once very early in the morning, but they believed he could be.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 A. 38, 114 Md. 39, 1910 Md. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hummelshime-v-hirsch-md-1910.