State Ex Rel. Hardie v. Coleman

155 So. 129, 115 Fla. 119
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 26, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 155 So. 129 (State Ex Rel. Hardie v. Coleman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Hardie v. Coleman, 155 So. 129, 115 Fla. 119 (Fla. 1934).

Opinions

*122 Terrell, J.

In November, 1932, the relator, Dan Hardie, was elected sheriff of Dade County. He was commissioned and assumed the duties of said office in January, 1933. In October of the same year, by four consecutive orders of the Governor he was suspended from office under Section 15 of Article IV of the Constitution, and the respondent, D. C. Coleman, was appointed in his stead.

Executive order No. 1 was predicated on “neglect of duty in office” and “incompetency,” in that Anne M. Corbet, a woman of high character, went to the office of Dan Hardie, in February or March, 1933, to protest against the inhuman, unmanly and cruel manner in which his deputies had made an arrest of Gilbert Jones, but that the said sheriff refused to listen to the protests of the said Anne M. Corbet or to make an investigation of the facts, he further became abusive and insulting to her and permitted one of the deputies, Paulson by name, to insult her, and he instructed Paulson in her presence to see that Gilbert Jones went to the chain gang.

Executive order No. 2 was predicated on “malfeasance” and “misfeasance,” in that the said Dan Hardie did in March, 1933, have delivered to him at his home for personal use many items of food purchased for the consumption of the prisoners in the Dade County jail.

Executive, order No. 3 was predicated on “neglect of duty in office” and “incompetency” in that during the month of April, 1933, three ladies called on the said Dan Hardie at his office for the purpose of advising him of facts' in connection with the beating to death of an old man by masked men, in the City of Miami, but the said sheriff refused to listen to such facts as proposed to be disclosed to him and he acted in such a discourteous and vulgar manner that the said ladies were forced to leave his presence without re *123 vealing their mission which it was his duty to hear and investigate.

Executive order No. 3 also sets up that in the month of July, 1933, on another occasion, three ladies called on Dan Hardie to discuss a certain kidnapping just outside the corporate limits of the City of Miami, but that on this occasion he exhibited such lack of sound judgment and mental stability that he persisted in exhibiting to them different guns and weapons which he was prepared to use in defending himself from imaginary attacks by gangsters, and his entire conduct was such that* he was far from being a man of sound judgment and mental stability.

Executive order No. 4 was predicated on “malfeasance,” ■“misfeasance,” “neglect of duty in office” and “incompetency,” in that Dan Hardie did prior to March 23, 1933, actively enter into and participate in the making of plans to throw dynamite upon a certain building in the City of Miami, and did aid, counsel and advise one Warren D. Fletcher in making said plans and did plan with the said Warren D. Fletcher to kill one, L. W. Rogers and Emory Burton, they having been induced by Fletcher to go forward with the plans for dynamiting said building.

Executive order No. 4 also alleges that Dan Hardie was fully advised and cognizant of a conspiracy between the said Fletcher, Rogers and Burton to commit the crime as heretofore charged in Executive order No. 4, but that he failed and neglected to arrest the said Fletcher, Rogers and Burton, for the said crime as it was his duty to do.

On November 7th, the Governor accorded Dan Hardie a hearing on his application for reinstatement, at which time much testimony was taken concerning the charges against him, as defined in the four executive orders. December 7th, the Governor wrote Dan Hardie a letter ad *124 vising him that he had found the charges for which he was suspended to be true, that he failed to produce evidence to dispute them and that his application for reinstatement was denied.

Information in .the nature of quo warranto was then filed in this cause. D. C. Coleman, the sheriff appointed to succeed Dan.Hardie,'was' named respondent and a writ of quo warranto was issued, directed to him without prejudice to the determination hereafter of any jurisdictional question which may be involved affecting the character, scope and extent of-the jurisdiction to be exercised. A demurrer and motion to quash the information were entered and the cause now comes on for disposition on that demurrer and motion.

We are first confronted with the question of whether or not this Court will, on quo warranto, review the act of the Governor in suspending Sheriff Hardie by virtue of the power vested in him under Section 15 of Article IV of the Constitution.

Section 15 of Article IV is as follows: •

“All officers that shall have been appointed or elected, and that are not liable to impeachment, may be suspended from office by the Governor for malfeasance or misfeasance or neglect of duty in office, for the commission of any felony, or for drunkenness or. incompetency, and the cause of suspension shall be communicated to the officer suspended and to the Senate at its next session. And the Governor, by and with the consent of the Senate, may remove any officer, not liable to impeachment, for any cause above named. Every suspension shall continue until the adjournment of the next session of the Senate, unless the officer suspended shall, upon recommendation of the Governor, be removed; but the Governor may reinstate the officer sus *125 pended upon satisfactory' evidence that the charge or charges against him are untrue. If the Senate shall refuse to remove, or fail to take action before its adjournment, the officer suspended shall resume the duties of the office. The Governor shall have power to fill by appointment any office, the incumbent of which has been suspended. No officer •suspended who shall under this Section resume the duties of his office, shall suffer any loss of salary or other compensation in consequence of such suspension. The suspension or removal herein authorized shall not relieve the officer from indictment for any misdemeanor in office.”

■ Under this provision of the Constitution, the Governor may suspend any officer not liable to impeachment, for malfeasance, misfeasance, neglect of duty in office, commission óf any felony, drunkenness or incompetency, and for no other causes.

Malfeasance has reference to evil conduct or' an illegal •deed, the doing of that which one ought not to do, the performance of an act by an officer in his official capacity that is wholly illegal and wrongful, which he has no right to perform or which he has contracted not to do. “Words and Phrases, Webster’s New International Dictionary.”

Misfeasance is sometimes loosely applied in the sense of malfeasance. Appropriately used, misfeasance has reference to the performance by an officer in his official capacity, of a legal act in an improper or illegal manner, while malfeasance is the doing of an official act in an unlawful manner. Misfeasance is' literally a misdeed or a trespass, while nonfeasance has reference to the neglect or refusal without sufficient excuse to do that which was an officer’s legal duty to do.

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Bluebook (online)
155 So. 129, 115 Fla. 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hardie-v-coleman-fla-1934.