State ex rel. Heilbron v. Van Brocklin

36 P. 495, 8 Wash. 557, 1894 Wash. LEXIS 109
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1894
DocketNo. 1196
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 36 P. 495 (State ex rel. Heilbron v. Van Brocklin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Heilbron v. Van Brocklin, 36 P. 495, 8 Wash. 557, 1894 Wash. LEXIS 109 (Wash. 1894).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Stiles, J.

— Respondent was removed from the office of member of the board of public works, of the city of Seattle, by the mayor, for cause alleged and found to be sufficient after notice and a hearing. The court below, in a proceeding by quo warranto against his successor in the office, rendered judgment in favor of respondent, ousting the successor and charging him with the salary of the office during the period of his usurpation.

The appellant filed an answer to the information in which he set up the proceedings taken by the mayor and his findings and order pursuant thereto. Respondent demurred to the sufficiency of the answer, and when the court sustained the demurrer appellant declined to plead further, whereupon judgment as above stated was entered.

The only propositions submitted by appellant which are material are two, viz.: (1) Was the course taken by respondent to test the right to the office the proper one, or should the proceeding have been certiorari to the mayor? (2) Did the facts found by the mayor constitute “cause” for removal ?

1. Code Proc., §679, expressly provides that an information may be filed against any person who shall usurp, intrude upon, or unlawfully hold or exercise any public office within this state. This information is, under the code, a plain statement of the facts (§681), and therein is just like a complaint upon any other cause of action; that it is to be-filed upon the relation of some one is the only even formal difference between this proceeding and an ordinary civil action. For convenience and from custom [559]*559we call the proceeding quo warranto, and it is the statutory mode of testing the title to an office by the state, whether there be a contestant for the office or not, and by a contestant on his own behalf. Other methods of accomplishing the same result, where the dispute is as to the validity of an election, are found in the election laws.

It would seem, therefore, that the statute exactly covered this case. Quo warranto was employed in People, ex rel. Metevier, v. Therrien, 80 Mich. 187 (45 N. W. 78), and the court passed both on the question of jurisdiction and the sufficiency of the charge, although certiorari would have been an appropriate proceeding for attack on the jurisdiction. A statutoiy proceeding similar to that provided for here was employed in State, ex rel. Smith, v. Anderson, 26 Fla. 240 (8 South. 1), to determine which of two claimants was entitled to the office of alderman of the town of Daytona. The charter of the town gave the council the power to judge of the election returns and qualifications of its own members, and it was urged that the canvass of the vote, the declaration of the result, and the admission of the respondent to the office by the council was a prior adjudication which could not be set aside by quo warranto; but this objection was passed with the remark that the relator was not in any sense a party to the alleged adjudication.

But the theory of appellant here is, that because the charter of the city of Seattle authorized the mayor to remove any appointed officer for cause, and inasmuch as the proceedings for removal must be judicial in their character, the adjudication made by him cannot be inquired into and its sufficiency ascertained, as to jurisdiction or upon the merits, except by a direct proceeding for a review of the judgment, and, as no appeal is provided for, the proceeding must be certiorari.

No authority need be cited to uphold the general prop[560]*560osition that the judgment of any tribunal, however inferior, to which the determination of a matter is committed will stand as verity until it is directly attacked, if, in the exercise of its power, it has kept within its jurisdiction. Counsel upon this point cite People, ex rel. Hatzel, v. Hall, 80 N. Y. 117, where quo warranto was refused for the benefit of the private relator, Hatzel, who claimed the office, but was sustained as to the people, who, it was declared, were not bound by the adjudication of the board of aldermen, although that body was, by statute, invested with the power to judge of the election returns and qualifications of its own members. In passing, it was held that the clause appended to this grant of authority, “subject, however, to the review of any court of competent j urisdiction, ’ ’ was nothing more than a declaration of what would have been the case without such clause. The case cited contains a very full and learned discussion of the relations of the courts to municipal corporations and inferior tribunals, much-of which is applicable to the case before us. The relator was denied the benefit of the writ because, as it is said, he had himself invoked action by the board of aldermen by a petition that he be awarded a seat, because in the ensuing proceeding it had been determined that he had not, but that the respondent had, a right to the seat, and because that adjudication was unreversed and operative.

Certiorari is the universal method of trying these questions in New York; but when we come to examine the law upon which the practice is based, People, ex rel. Clapp, v. Board of Police, 72 N. Y. 415, is a fair specimen of the cases there, and it shows that, by some means, the evidence upon which the board acted was before the court, an unusual thing in certiorari where the record alone, with so much of the evidence as may be pertinent to the question of jurisdiction, is transmitted to the reviewing court. But there is in New York a complete code governing certiorari to [561]*561review the determination of inferior tribunals, art. 7, ch. 16, Code of Civil Procedure (1891), and at § 2140 we find the following:

“The questions, involving the merits, to be determined by the court upon the hearing, are the following only:
‘ ‘ 4. Whether there was any competent proof of all the facts necessary to be proved in order to authorize the making of the determination.
“6. If there was such proof, whether there was, upon all the evidence, such a preponderance of proof against the existence of any of those facts, that the verdict of a jury, affirming the existence thereof, rendered in an action in the supreme court, triable by a jury, would be set aside by the court, as against the weight of evidence. ’ ’

It is needless to say that in this state we have nothing but the common law writ to depend upon, and that an examination of the merits of a casé could not be had under it. In the case at bar there is neither statute, charter nor ordinance governing the proceedings to be taken by the mayor. He was left to his own devices to originate the charges, notice, manner of hearing and determination, and he has performed this part of the proceeding in such a manner that no criticism is made of it. He has, as appears • by the answer, made a record sufficient as a return upon certiorari. But suppose the respondent desired to contest the materiality or sufficiency of the evidence upon which the findings were made, is it not clear that both he and the court would be estopped? And thus it would turn out that the officer would be removed (supposing the findings to be sufficiently strong) upon unsworn testimony, where there was no power on either side to summon witnesses, and, perhaps, in case the mayor should have no experience in judicial investigations, upon evidence which was wholly immaterial and irrelevant. An instance of this kind is shown in People, ex rel. Clapp, v. Board of Police, supra,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 P. 495, 8 Wash. 557, 1894 Wash. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-heilbron-v-van-brocklin-wash-1894.