Price v. Fitzpatrick

100 S.E. 872, 85 W. Va. 76, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 110
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 4, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 100 S.E. 872 (Price v. Fitzpatrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Price v. Fitzpatrick, 100 S.E. 872, 85 W. Va. 76, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 110 (W. Va. 1919).

Opinion

Ritz, Judge:

At the election held in the town of Scarbro in the month of January, 1919, the following persons were candidates for the municipal offices of said town on the Citizens Ticket, to-wit: for mayor, S. W. Price; for recorder, Henry J. Smith; and for eouncilmen, V. P. Spradling, C. E. Heerman, L. Douglass, Joseph H. Blake and Charles S. Thomas. These candidates at that time constituted the common council of said town, their terms expiring with the month of January, 1919, and they being candidates for the respective offices they were then filling. At said election the Citizens Labor Ticket had candidates for said offices as follows: for mayor, J. E. Fitzpatrick; for recorder, Henry C. Darlington; and for eouncilmen, Thomas Garrett, W. H. Johnson, T. T. Lewis, S. E. Hester and Arnold Brabbin. Upon a canvass of the returns of the election it was found that for the office of mayor Fitzpatrick received a majority of the votes, and for eouncilmen, Garrett, Johnson, Lewis, Hester and Brabbin each received a majority of the votes cast, and certificates of election were accordingly issued to them. A contest, however, was at once instituted by their opponents upon the ground, among others, that parties voted for them in said election who were not entitled to vote in said town. Notice of this contest was served upon the contestees on the 28th of January, 1919, to be heard on the 31st of that month, the day before the commencement of the term of office of the new mayor and coun-[78]*78oilmen. In yiew of tbe fact that the council then in office were all contestants, and the council to come into office on the first of February were all contestees in said proceeding, the old council determined to create a new and disinterested tribunal for the trial of said contest by each resigning his office and electing a successor to hold the unexpired term, so that on the 31st of Januarjq when the contest came on for trial, there was an entirely new council, selected however by the contestants, for the purpose of trying this contest. Objection was made by the contestees, but all objections were overruled, and a hearing had, and the contestants found to be legally elected, and on the following day they were inducted into office. This proceeding was removed by the contestees by writ of certiorari into the circuit court of Fayette county, where the judgment of the co\mcil was reversed, and a trial de novo had therein, which resulted in a finding that Fitzpatrick was elected mayor, that the contestee Garrett was elected as one of the councilmen and that the contestants Heerman, Douglass, Blake and Thomas were elected as the other four councilmen, and judgment rendered by said court accordingly, from which judgment the contestees Johnson, Lewis, Hester and Brabbin prosecute this writ of error.

It is insisted that the circuit court did not have jurisdiction to try the contest upon the writ of certiorari for two reasons: first, that it had never been tried by the tribunal having jurisdiction to try it in the first instance, and that until it had been so tried no jurisdiction could be acquired by the circuit court; and second, that the notice was void because it was not served ten days before the time fixed for the hearing, as it is insisted the statute requires.

Did the tribunal which tried the contest as the council of the town of Scarbro have any jurisdiction to try the same? In the case of Trunick v. Town of Northview, 80 W. Va. 9, we held that the council-to which a member is elected, whose right to hold the office is contested, is the tribunal to try the contest, and not the council in office at the time of the election. Under this holding, of course, the council which tried the contest here had no jurisdiction to try the same. While it was not made up of the same men who composed the council at the time of the election, it vras in fact the same council, the men being selected [79]*79to fill vacancies caused by the resignation of those then in office, and their terms expired with the terms of those who were. in office at the time of the election.

It is, however, insisted that this case is not controlled by the case of Trunick v. Town of Northview, for the reason that the right of all of the new council to hold office is contested, and that to allow that body to try the matter would be permitting them to sit in their own case, and that to permit the council who were in office at the time of the election, who were all contestants, would likewise be permitting them to sit in a case in which they were personally interested, so that the only way to get an unbiased and unprejudiced body was for them to resign and appoint their successors for the unexpired term, and allow the contest to be tried by the body thus constituted. We see very little difference in principle in a litigant sitting on his own case, and in selecting without his adversary having a voice therein, the judge who is to sit in it. We do not think-there, was any jurisdiction in any body to try this contest until the new council came into office on the first day of February. It is undoubtedly true that to permit this council to try this contest would be requiring them to sit and vote upon a matter in which they had a personal interest, there being no provision for substituting another tribunal .for the trial of such a contest where the majority of the councilmen are interested therein. Of course, if the seats of less than a majority were contested then the majority whose seats were uncontested would sit and try the contest, and their right to do so could not be questioned, but where the seats of the whole body are contested, and there is no provision made for substituting any other tribunal for the trial thereof, it would seem that by the law of necessity they would be required to sit and hear and determine the contest, even though the seats held by them were in dispute. Tf this were not the case there would be no way to secure a trial of such a contest. The legislature evidently never contemplated that a situation would arise where the seats of all the members of a town council would be contested, and has made no special provision for the trial of such a contest. It is undoubtedly true that it is against the spirit of our laws for one to act as .-judge in his own case, and he will not be allowed to do so when [80]*80be has the slightest pecuniary interest therein, unless there is absolute necessity therefor. Forest Coal Co. v. Doolittle, Judge, 54 W. Va. 210; Findley v. Smith, 42 W. Va. 299. But where there is a contest like this which musí be decided, and in which the only tribunal provided by law for its trial and determination is interested, the necessity of the case requires that such tribunal proceed to judgment therein, and such judgment, where the necessity for such action appears, will be as binding as though the parties rendering it were not at all interested in the controversy unless the same is reversed on app>eal. It must be understood that this doctrine of necessity can be carried no further than is absolutely necessary. In the case of Forest Coal Co. v. Doolittle, Judge, supra, it was held that because of the interest of the judge in that ease, he could not hear the controversy and determine it, but that he might call in a judge from another circuit to hear it, or cause an election of a special judge, as provided by law, for the purpose, notwithstanding his interest, because there was no other way provided by statute for securing a hearing of the cause; and in the case of Dimes v. Grand Junction Canal,

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.E. 872, 85 W. Va. 76, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-fitzpatrick-wva-1919.