State ex rel. Gentry v. Mayor of Village of Dodson

49 So. 635, 123 La. 903, 1909 La. LEXIS 800
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 26, 1909
DocketNo. 17,518
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 49 So. 635 (State ex rel. Gentry v. Mayor of Village of Dodson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Gentry v. Mayor of Village of Dodson, 49 So. 635, 123 La. 903, 1909 La. LEXIS 800 (La. 1909).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

NICHOLLS, J.

This case was before us under the number 16,956, on an appeal taken from a judgment rendered therein in the district court for the parish of Winn. The court, on examination of the record, having ascertained that the appeal was not-properly before it for want of jurisdiction, it was transferred to the Court of Appeal, parish of Winn. It was heard and decided, and it is now before us on a writ of review of that judgment.

The judgment brought up in that court for review was as follows:

“The relator was duly appointed marshal of the village of Dodson by the Governor of the state to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of his predecessor. It appears that the relator belonged to the political faction to which-a majority of the members of the board of aider-men were opposed, and shortly after his appointment the said board of aldermen met, and by a majority vote adopted two ordinances, one of which fixed the bond of the marshal at $3,-000, and the other fixed his compensation at $1 per month, $1 for every arrest where a conviction was had and a fine exceeding $5 was collected, and 10 per cent, on all fines collected.
[905]*905“The relator, alleging that he was prevented from performing the duties and enjoying the •emoluments of his office by the wrongful, illegal, fraudulent, malicious, and unreasonable .acts of the mayor and board of aldermen in fixing his bond at the unreasonable and ' outra.geous sum of $3,000, and in fixing the salary of the marshal at the small, ridiculous, -unreasonable, and unjust sum of $1 per month, pray-ed that said ordinance be declared null and void, because illegal and unreasonable, and that the mayor and board of aldermen be compelled by the writ of mandamus to fix a reasonable bond and reasonable compensation for the mar■shal.
“The writ was issued, and the mayor answered, admitting that the ordinances complained •of were illegal and unreasonable and were passed for the sole purpose of forcing the plaintiff to resign his position as marshal of the village ■of Dodson, and he avers that the ordinances were passed despite his earnest disapproval.
“The other defendants, the three members of the board of aldermen who voted for said ordinances, answered defending their conduct in the premises, asserting and maintaining the reasonableness and legality of the ordinances, -which they declared were adopted in the interest of an economical reform, and they squarely challenged the power of the court to coerce them in the matter of fixing either the bond or the compensation of the marshal, declaring that they were vested by law with the sole discretion to perform such duties; and that the court is ■without jurisdiction to inquire into the matter .or to control them. After the trial the district court made the writ peremptory and ordered defendants to fix the bond in a sum not exceeding $1,000, and the marshal’s compensation at a -sum not less than $50 per month.
“The defendants prosecuted an appeal to the Supreme Court, and that tribunal, finding that the amount in dispute was not large enough to .give it jurisdiction, ordered the case transferred to this court. The petition and answer in the ■case were quite lengthy, and we have contented ■ourselves with giving such an outline of the matters pleaded as was deemed sufficient to give .a proper understanding of the really pertinent issues. A motion to dismiss the appeal was filed in the Supreme Court, but, as we have not found it in the record, and it is desirable to settle' the case on its merits, we shall overrule •the motion.
“Opinion.
“The village of Dodson is a municipal corporation, and its affairs were administered by a mayor and board of aldermen in accordance with the provisions of Act No. 136, p. 224, of 1898 (commonly known as the ‘Lawrason act’), which, so far as it applies to a municipality of that ■class, may be said to be the charter of Dodson.
“Section 19 of the act is -as follows: ‘That the officers of every municipality shall be a mayor, aldermen, a marshal, a tax collector, a ;derk and a street commissioner. The mayor, aldermen and marshal shall be elected by the people, the officers, by the board of aldermen.’
“It further provides (section 15) that the may- or and board of aldermen of every city, town, and village shall have ■ power to prescribe the duties and to fix the compensation of all officers and employés and to require bonds with sureties for the performance of duties of all officers and employés. Thus we see that the office of marshal is created by the Legislature, and is filled by election; and hence the mayor and aldermen are powerless to abolish the office, and they cannot legally remove the incumbent save by proceedings for that purpose conducted in accordance with rules which they are required to adopt. But can they fix an excessive bond and wholly inadequate compensation, force the marshal to resign, and thus accomplish by evasion what would be illegal for them to do directly?
“We hardly think that counsel for defendants are really in earnest in their effort to show that the salary of the marshal, as fixed by the majority of the board of aldermen, is a reasonable one, or that said majority acted in good faith in the premises.
“Their main, if not their only real hope, is upon the proposition, so earnestly pressed in their elaborate and able brief, that the language used by the Lawrason act, in conferring upon the mayor and aldermen the power to fix the bond and compensation of the several officers named, is permissive and not mandatory, and gives the board the right to perform the duty or leave it undone as its wisdom dictates; in other words, that the duties referred to are entirely within the discretion of the board, and this being so, the court will not interfere with the board, or even attempt to review the manner in which it has been performed. The vital question in the case is whether, without regard to the words or language in which the power is granted, the Legislature has required these boards to fix the compensation and bonds of marshals, or has simply authorized them to do so, or not, as they see fit.
“If it is their absolute duty to do these things, then it is their duty to do them in a reasonable way — that is, they are required to fix a reasonable compensation and bond — and the writ herein sued out may be invoked to compel a compliance with that duty.
“Considering the nature of the office of city marshal and the fact that a proper performance of its duties would require all the time of the officer, we think we are justified in assuming that the Legislature intended to create it a salaried office and to require 'the board to fix a reasonable compensation and bond.
“The language employed by the Legislature in conferring the power under consideration is of but slight importance in determining the question whether the duty is mandatory or discretionary.
“Substantially the same language was used in conferring upon police juries and municipalities the power to assess licenses for retail [907]*907of intoxicating liquors, and yet the Supreme Court in several recent cases held that such bodies could be compelled to fix the licenses within certain bounds.

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Bluebook (online)
49 So. 635, 123 La. 903, 1909 La. LEXIS 800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-gentry-v-mayor-of-village-of-dodson-la-1909.