Spitzer v. Martin

100 A. 739, 130 Md. 428, 1917 Md. LEXIS 140
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 13, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 100 A. 739 (Spitzer v. Martin) 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
Spitzer v. Martin, 100 A. 739, 130 Md. 428, 1917 Md. LEXIS 140 (Md. 1917).

Opinion

Stockbridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Legislature of 1916 by Chapter 456 adopted extensive amendments to the Charter of Brunswick. The effect of the Act was to provide the entire machinery for the government of the corporation, and the holding of the elections to pfit the Act into full operation and effect.

*430 Among these was one for the holding of an election on the first Monday of August, 1916 (August the seventh), at which were to be elected three councilmen, one from each of the wards into which the town was divided. At that election Frank L. Spitzer and George W. Nuce were opposing candidates for the office of councilman from the Third Ward, and the former received a plurality of the votes cast. What purported to be a certificate of election was issued to Spitzer by Jacob H. Fry, clerk to the Mayor and City Council.

By the terms of the Charter the newly elected members of the Council, and those who held over until 1917, were to meet for the first session of the newly constituted body on September 5th, 1916. At twenty minutes before eight on the evening of that day, Mr. Spitzer filed a petition for mandamus in the Circuit Court for Frederick County, in which after setting forth the provisions of the Act of 1916, he alleged that John T. Martin, the Mayor of Brunswick, will not permit him, the petitioner, to take the oath of office when the Council convenes at eight o’clock, and the prayer of the petition was for a peremptory writ of mandamus to compel the administration of the oath to the petitioner.

An order nisi was signed upon the presentation of the petition, requiring the Mayor to answer the allegations by the 15th of September, and on this latter date the answer1 of the Mayor was filed. The answer departed from the usually recognized canons of pleading in mandamus cases in not being definite and specific with regard to a number of the allegations, but the petitioner did not demur to portions of the answer, as he might have done.

From this point the pleadings were those customary in an equity case, rather than those appropriate to' an action of mandamus. No objection has been raised by either party to this appeal on the ground of the form of the pleadings, and apparently none was interposed below, so that this Court is constrained to take the case as it finds it.

*431 Evidence was taken tending to bear on the eligibility of Mr. Spitzer as a member of the Council, and that question and the jurisdiction of the Court to entertain the case are the two issues now to be passed on.

These both present questions of law, and neither is of any special difficulty. Logically they should be considered in the inverse order from that just stated. The objection on the ground of lack of jurisdiction is sought to be based on two grounds—first, that the Council, being a legislative body, is of necessity the sole judge of the election and qualifications of its members; and, in the second place, that inasmuch as the remedy is given in section G of the Act to anyone feeling aggrieved, that provision of necessity excludes resort being had to any other form of remedy.

The Act of 1916, in providing for a Council for Brunswick, does not contain the customary provision making such body the judge of the election and qualifications of its members, but apart from this omission there are numerous cases which hold that in every legislative body that body is the sole judge of these questions.

This proceeding in no manner interfered with that right, if it be assumed to have existed. The petition sought only to have the Mayor of Brunswick perform that which was a purely ministerial duty, and the performance or non-performance of which could in no manner interfere with the power of the Council to inquire into and pass upon the election and qualifications of its. members. The remedy given by the Act in certain cases is contained in Section 6, where it is provided that:

“The Council shall receive all election returns, and determine all questions arising thereon, and any person conceiving himself aggrieved by reason of such decision may appeal to the Circuit Court for Frederick County, which shall hear and determine the same and determine who shall pay the costs of appeal.”

*432 This manifestly applies to questions arising out of the conduct of the election which may affect the validity of it, and the appeal there given from the action of the Council was an entirely different matter from that involved in the petition to compel the executive officer of the town to perform a ministerial act. As has already been said, the petition in this case was filed some twenty minutes before the Council met, at which time there was no action from which any .appeal would lie, and the prayer of the petition looked to an entirely different relief from that which was covered by the provision of section 6, already quoted.

The case in this State most nearly approaching this aspect of the present case is Covington v. Buffett, 90 Md. 518, 41 L. R. A. 623. In that case the Court was asked not merely to issue a mandamus to compel the Supervisors of Elections to place a name on the ticket, but also to create a vacancy by declaring that a member of the State Senate, by reason of having accepted another office, had vacated his position as a member of the Maryland Senate. In that case the Court declined to entertain the application, because of the constitutional provision by which the Senate is made the judge of the election and qualifications of its members. It was, therefore, for the Senate, and not for the Court, to determine whether a vacancy had been created and was then existing, which was preliminary to any election being held. That case is, therefore, readily distinguishable from the present one.

The question of the jurisdiction of the courts in such cases was elaborately considered in Sherwood v. State Board of Canvassers, 129 N. Y. 360, 14 L. R. A. 646, and the jurisdiction was amply sustained, the Court saying, in effect, that it was not precluded by a constitutional provision making each branch of the Legislature the judge of elections, returns and qualifications of its own members, from declaring as a basis for refusing its aid to an applicant for a writ of mandamus, to compel a canvassing board to give him a certificate *433 of election, that he is ineligible for the office, when the facts showing the eligibility are undisputed, and the principle so laid down is adopted as the established rule of law in 9 R. C. L. 1021.

No doubt whatever is entertained, therefore, that tie Circuit Court for Frederick County was possessed of full jurisdiction to inquire into the case as presented to it by Mr. Spitzer’s petition.

In the per curiam filed immediately at the conclusion of the argument, this Court indicated that in its view Mr. Spitzer was ineligible under the provisions of Chapter 456 of the Acts of 1916, for membership in the Council of Brunswick. The qualifications prescribed in the Act for a Councilman are that

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 A. 739, 130 Md. 428, 1917 Md. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spitzer-v-martin-md-1917.