In Re Rogers, Rendall Pitzen

57 P.2d 342, 56 Idaho 521, 1936 Ida. LEXIS 70
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1936
DocketNo. 6339.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 57 P.2d 342 (In Re Rogers, Rendall Pitzen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Rogers, Rendall Pitzen, 57 P.2d 342, 56 Idaho 521, 1936 Ida. LEXIS 70 (Idaho 1936).

Opinion

AILSHIE, J.

This is an original application for a writ of habeas corpus. The petitioners, T. H. Rogers, John Randall and F. G. Pitzen, allege that they are being restrained of their liberties by the sheriff of Latah County under an order of the probate-judge of said county, sitting as a committing magistrate, for a preliminary examination under a complaint, charging them with violation of see. 57-701, I. C. A., known as the Anti-Nepotism Law. The writ issued, return has been waived and the sheriff admits the facts as alleged in the petition, and an issue of law has been joined as fo whether or not the complaint under which they are held charges the commission of a public offense. The complaint alleges that during the year 1935 they, being then and there commissioners of Highway District No. 2 of Latah County, State of Idaho, “did then and there wilfully, knowingly, and unlawfully furnish employment to one Cecil Rogers, a relative of the aforesaid T. H. Rogers, within the third degree to a position as road foreman of the aforesaid district, then and there knowing that his salary, wages, pay or compensation was to *523 be paid out of public funds and that the said Cecil Rogers has during the year 1935 received compensation from said district with the full knowledge and consent of the aforesaid defendants. ’ ’

The contention is made by the petitioners that the Anti-Nepotism Act does not apply to commissioners or other officers of highway districts. The statute involved reads as follows:

See. 57-701, I. C. A.:

“An executive, legislative, judicial, ministerial, or other officer of this state or of any district, county, city, or other municipal subdivision of the state, including road districts, who appoints or votes for the appointment of any person related to him or to any of his associates in office by affinity or consanguinity within the third degree, to any clerkship, office, position, employment, or duty, when the salary, wages, pay or compensation of such appointee is to be paid out of public funds or fees of office, or who appoints- or furnishes employment to any person whose salary, wages, pay, or compensation is to be paid out of public funds or fees of office, and who is related by either blood or marriage within the third degree to any other executive, legislative, judicial, ministerial, or other public officer when such appointment is made on the agreement or promise of such other officer or any other public officer to appoint or furnish employment to airy one so related to the officer making or voting for such appointment, is guilty of a misdemeanor involving official misconduct and upon conviction thereof shall be punished by fine of not less than ten dollars or more than $1000, and such officer making such appointment shall forfeit his office and be ineligible for appointment to such office for one year thereafter. ’ ’

This act was adopted in February, 1915. The first Highway District Act was adopted in 1911 (1911 Sess. Laws, chap. 55, p. 121) and the first Good Road Districts Act was adopted in 1905 (1905 Sess. Laws, p. 237). Prior to the adoption of the Good Road and the Highway District Acts it was the duty of the county commissioners to divide their respective counties into road districts and the supervision and management of these districts was left entirely to the commissioners. *524 Soon after the adoption of the. Highway District Law the Good Road Districts Act fell into disuse and was supplanted by the formation of highway districts. These districts are voluntary organizations. (Shoshone Highway Dist. v. Anderson, 22 Ida. 109, 125 Pac. 219; Strickfaden v. Greencreek Highway Dist., 42 Ida. 738, 248 Pac. 456, 49 A. L. R. 1057.) The matter of the organization and operation of good road districts and highway districts was well known to the public and the members of the legislature at the time of the adoption of the Anti-Nepotism Act. Notwithstanding that fact the legislature in enumerating the persons, boards and bodies falling within the prohibitions of the act, said:

“An executive, legislative, judicial, ministerial, or other officer of this state or of any district, county, city, or other municipal subdivision of the state, including road districts” as the persons prohibited making the employments.

Now it seems improbable that, if the legislature intended to include “good road districts” and “highway districts,” they would not have merely said: “including road districts” and stopped with that enumeration. Had the organization, control and operation of a road district been the same or similar to that of good road districts and highways districts, then there might be some reason for supposing that they intended to include all kinds of road districts when they said “including road districts.” But such was not the case. Road districts were involuntary districts, the boundaries of which were arbitrarily fixed by the county commissioners and controlled and operated by the commissioners, who are the executive officers of the entire county (see 1887 Rev. Stats., sec. 870, subd. 1; sec. 873, amended Law's 1891, p. 190) ; w'hereas a highway district has to be organized by petition of the residents in the district, regular organization proceedings are taken and an election is held, at which the electors both vote on the question as to whether or not the territory designated shall be organized into a district, and secondly, express their choice for commissioners of the district. Substantially the same procedure had to be pursued to organize a "good road district. (C.- S., secs. 1477-1489; I. C. A., secs. 39-1401 to 39-1417.)

*525 It must be conceded that there is apparently much greater need in these latter days for the application of this act to the officers of a highway district than to an ordinary road district. The answer to that, however, may lie in the fact that members of the legislature when they passed the Anti-Nepotism Act had observed the favoritism that was often shown by commissioners in the appointment of “road overseers,” the purchase of road materials and hiring of workmen; and that highway districts and good road districts were self-governing bodies and had not, up to that time, advanced very far in the issuance of bonds and building and construction of highways, or taken on some of the more recent evils with which they are periodically charged.

If we were inclined to doubt the force of the contention made by the petitioners here that they do not come within the provisions of the act, such doubt would necessarily have to be resolved in favor of their contention when we come to consider the ease of Barton v. Alexander, 27 Ida. 286, 148 Pac. 471, Ann. Cas. 1917D, 729. The act (sec.

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Bluebook (online)
57 P.2d 342, 56 Idaho 521, 1936 Ida. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rogers-rendall-pitzen-idaho-1936.