Lee v. Mayor & Council

15 Del. 65
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 1, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Del. 65 (Lee v. Mayor & Council) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Mayor & Council, 15 Del. 65 (Del. 1895).

Opinion

Mabvel, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court below.

[68]*68From this case stated it appears that the only question submitted for the decision of the Court is whether the plaintiff upon the above stated facts had, at the time of the commencement of the action, a right to maintain this action of assumpsit against the defendant.

The first objection urged by the counsel for the defendant is, that the plaintiff cannot in this action try the question of his right to the offices, that being a collateral proceeding.

Judge Dillon, in his work on Municipal Corporation, third edition, § 831, says: “The salary or fees of an officer of a municipal or public corporation may, like other debts be recovered by an action at law against the corporation. This, ordinarily, is the remedy and not mandamus ; but if the officer cannot sue the corporation, he may, where entitled, compel payment by means of his writ, unless another is in possession under color of right, in which case the title to the office cannot ordinarily be determined on mandamus or in a collateral proceeding.”

Selby vs. City of Portland, 14 Ore. 243, was an action to recover the amount of salary alleged to be due the plaintiff as chief of police, and for the salaries of some five other policemen which had been assigned to him. The officers had been regularly appointed and served for a time. While they were so serving, the Mayor of the City displaced them and appointed others in their places, and the action was brought to recover their respective salaries after being so displaced and until the time of the commencement of the action.

Thayer, J. said : “ It looks very much to me as though the public confidence was abused in the transaction and that the appellant and his assignors were shamefully trifled with ; but it occurs to my mind that they neglected to take proper steps in the matter, and have lost the remedy they could have invoked successfully. They might have commenced an action in the nature of a quo warranto against the persons designated to succeed them, and been re-instated in their position ****** x0 allow an officer in such a case to remain wholly passive for a term of years and then bring [69]*69an action and recover the amount of his salary, which had been all the time accumulating, without attempting to dispossess the incumbent, would result in a pernicious practice and tend to overturn a well-established rule of law regarding the trial of the right to an office. No precedent for such a course has been furnished.”

After reviewing many cases, including the most of those cited upon this point in the argument of the case at bar, he said further: None of the cases referred to indicate that an action to recover the salary of an office could be maintained while it is occupied by a de facto officer, until the right to the office has been determined by proper adjudication. Such a determination could not properly be had in this case, as it would determine the rights of parties not before the Court. It would be a determination that the incumbent who succeeded the appellant and his assignors were intruders and usurpers when they were not before the Court. Upon this ground the appellant was not entitled to recover, and the Circuit Court should have dismissed the complaint instead of trying the case upon the merits.”

It is not necessary to cite more of the cases upon this point, as they are all referred to and considered by Judge Dillon and in the above case of Selby vs. City of Portland.

There is another very large class of cases upon the question whether the payment of a salary, or fees, or emoluments of an office to a de facto incumbent would exonerate the government or political body from the payment thereof to the de jure officer.

Whichever side of the question any of these cases may take, none sanction the right of the de jure officer to recover the salary while out of possession of the office until he obtains a determination of a competent tribunal in favor of his title in a direct proceeding instituted for that purpose.

After a patient examination of the books, the only case we have been able to find where it might be possible to consider that a court had thought differently is Stadler vs. City of Detroit, 13 Mich. 346. But we find that this case has been reviewed, and, so far as it may be considered as supporting the claim of the plaintiff [70]*70in this action, was disposed of by the case of The Auditors of Wayne County vs. Benoitt, 20 Mich. 176, which decided that no claim can be enforced against a county for the salary or perquisites of a county office except for a period during which the claimant was the actual incumbent.

It is true that to successfully maintain the action upon the declaration at the time of the bringing of the suit, upon the facts admitted, would necessarily require a determination of the question of the right of William H. Lee to the possession of the office of Registrar of Deaths, Births and Marriages and Secretary of the Board of Health from June 3d, 1891, until the first Thursday in May, 1892.

Now if the plaintiff has the right to go to trial upon the declaration filed in this action, the principal question contested at that trial, judging from the argument of the learned counsel, would be the right of William H. Lee to the office. If this principle is valid, it will apply as well to officers elected by the people as to those appointed' or removed by state or municipal authority, and wherever there is a contest touching the result of a popular election or the validity of an appointment to, or a removal from office, the question is to be settled by an action for the salary. The incumbent of the office would be entitled as against the corporation to recover his salary. The claimant may, as in this case, acquiesce in his removal from office, and at the expiration of two or five years establish his title and recover his pay, though his office may have been filled and the salary received by another. He may thus recover compensation not only for services never rendered, but may compel the corporation to pay twice for the same service. It would supply an ingenious device by which both candidates, if they could not enjoy the honor, might at least reap the emoluments of the . office,” City of Hoboken vs. Gear, 27 N. J. L. 280.

That there was no defacto officer is urged upon the authority of Norton vs. Shelby County, 118 U. S. 425.

But that case decided that where there was no such office as the one in controversy there could be no de facto officer, because [71]*71the existence of an office was necessary to make an officer either de facto or de jure. Here there was an office—if that office were not vacant there was nevertheless an office—as Justice Field said in the case just cited.

It is, however, contended by the counsel for the plaintiff that the objection now being considered does not apply, upon the ground that there is no question of title involved in this case; for while the plaintiff was not in actual possession he was in legal possession until the first Thursday in May, 1892, by virtue of the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Del. 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-mayor-council-del-1895.