Lancaster v. Hill

71 S.E. 731, 136 Ga. 405, 1911 Ga. LEXIS 561
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 71 S.E. 731 (Lancaster v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lancaster v. Hill, 71 S.E. 731, 136 Ga. 405, 1911 Ga. LEXIS 561 (Ga. 1911).

Opinion

Evans, P. J.

This is a proceeding by the solicitor-general of the Atlanta circuit, on the relation of J. D. Cromer, to remove from office C. M. Lancaster, a constable of Fulton county. The original petition assigned, as grounds for his removal, (1) that he insisted on levying a fi. fa. after the defendant and the plaintiff in execution had agreed that the fi. fa. should be temporarily stayed, unless his costs were paid, which insistence was in the business office of the relator and in the presence of some of his patrons, and that the constable only desisted when the defendant had taken further legal steps by procuring a supersedeas, of the judgment on which the execution issued; -(2) that the officer is unreasonable, rough, and domineering in his methods, delighting to oppress the poor and the weak and to humiliate the innocent, and that he has an exaggerated conception of the importance of his office; (3) that on three occasions he has been convicted of being drunk and disorderly in the recorder’s court of the City of Atlanta, and in the [407]*407last two offenses his disorderly conduct consisted in the use of vile, vulgar, and profane language; (4) that the constable has been guilty of divers and sundry other acts of cruelty and misconduct; and the plaintiff asks permission of the court to produce evidence thereof. The constable demurred to the sufficiency of the complaint. Whereupon the relator amended by alleging the following additional grounds for the officer’s removal: (5) The officer went to the house of Mrs. J. A. Burton to execute a fi. fa. against her and her husband, by levying on the household goods of the defendants. Mrs. Burton exhibited her exemption certificate, legal in form and substance, and' duly allowed by the ordinary, embracing the household goods upon which the officer indicated his intention to levy. Mrs. Burton was sick, and requested the ’officer to desist from levying the fi. fa. Whereupon the constable said he would levy the fi. fa. unless she paid to him $3.90. She borrowed the money and paid it to the officer. It is charged that the defendant deliberately harrassed, threatened, and humiliated Mrs. Burton, by threats of an illegal levy, into paying him money to which he was not entitled in law at the time, and that the defendant thereby extorted from her, by color of his office, money that was not due him. (6) He received a certain sum of money from a claimant of property on which he had levied, with the understanding that it would be returned to him upon the execution of proper claim and forthcoming bonds with good security. Such bonds were executed and tendered to the officer, who refused to accept them or to deliver the money to the claimant. It is charged “that the act of the said Lancaster in receiving a cash bond from a third party was illegal and improper, and that the taking and receiving of said money by color of his office was illegal and improper. Belator further charges that the keeping of said money when proper bond and security were tendered him was illegal and improper.” (7) The constable executed a writ of attachment by an excessive levy on household goods; the levy was made outside of the district where the officer held his commission, and the goods were taken to the court-room of the justice of the peace in the officer’s district. It is charged “that the said defendant, in making the said grossly excessive levy and in removing said property as aforesaid was guilty of the most reprehensible misconduct and misbehavior in office.” Other amendments were allowed, amplifying the specific [408]*408charges by supplying details of the averments. The defendant objected to the -amendments, because the original petition was so defective in the statement of a legal cause of action that it did .not serve as a basis for amendment, and that as amended no sufficient cause. was alleged for his removal from office. Certain special demurrers were urged, and, with one exception, were overruled, and 'the general demurrer was also overruled. The exception is to the overruling of the demurrers.

1. Constables are subject to be removed from office on the same grounds and on the same proceedings as clerks of the superior court are, and on conviction for malpractice in office as justices of the peace are. Civil Code (1910), § 4681. Clerks of the superior court “are subject to be removed from office by the judge of the said court for any sufficient cause, including incapacity or misbehavior in office, charges for which must be exhibited to the court in writing and the facts tried by a special jury, such clerk being entitled to a copy of the charges three days before trial.” Civil Code (1910), § 4897. Constables may therefore be removed from office for any sufficient cause, including official incapacity, misbehavior, or as a result of a conviction for malpractice in ■ office. ■ The first ground for removal is that prescribed for clerks of the superior court, made on written specification of charge, and the last is the automatic result of a conviction for malpractice in office. The petition in the present case is framed under the Civil Code (1910), § 48Ó.7, and the subject-matter of inquiry is the sufficiency of the various charges as alleging cause for removal of a constable under 'this code section. Sufficient cause means legal cause, and that which specially relates to and affects the administration of the office, and must be restricted to something of a substantial nature directly affecting the rights and interests of the public. Boggs case, 11 Coke, 93b; State v. Duluth, 53 Minn. 238 (55 N. W. 118, 39 Am. St. R. 595). The specification that sufficient cause includes official incapacity and misbehavior would seem to import that these items of specification were intended rather as an enlargement than a restriction as to what constitutes sufficient cause to remove an officer. We do not think that the words “suffidient cause2’ should be construed to embrace any cause not affecting the competency of the officer and his official conduct.

2. A plaintiff in execution has control of the process and may [409]*409direct the executing officer as to the time and manner of enforcing it. Hatcher v. Lord, 115 Ga. 623 (41 S. E. 1007, 61 L. R. A. 353); Gorham v. Gale, 7 Cowen, 739 (17 Am. Dec. 549); Isler v. Colgrove, 35 N. C. 335; Patton v. Hammer, 28 Ala. 618. The inclusion of the officer’s fee in the execution does not give the officer the power of enforcement contrary-to'the plaintiffs direction, since the court costs, embracing the officer’s fees, are a part of the plaintiffs recovery, for the payment of which to the officers the plaintiff is ultimately bound. If the plaintiff prevents or obstructs the levying officer from executing the process, the officer may have judgment ^gainst the plaintiff for his costs, and-have execution issued thereon. Robertson v. Smith, 37 Ga. 604. It may be that a sheriff or constable would be permitted to sell in case of collusion between the parties and when the plaintiff is irresponsible. Jackson v. Anderson, 4 Wend. 474. However this record does'not present such a ease. The first count or charge as 'a basis for the constable’s removal, when reduced to its bare facts, is that the constable insisted on a levy of the fi. fa. after the plaintiff’s attorney had directed him to postpone his levy, unless his costs were paid. The constable was entitled to his costs, but was not entitled to enforce collection by a levy of the fi. fa. after he was directed by the plaintiff to withhold action for a time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 S.E. 731, 136 Ga. 405, 1911 Ga. LEXIS 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lancaster-v-hill-ga-1911.