State ex rel. Palmer v. Darby

4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 124
CourtOttawa Circuit Court
DecidedJune 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 124 (State ex rel. Palmer v. Darby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ottawa Circuit 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. Palmer v. Darby, 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 124 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Bentley, J.

This action in quo warranto is brought for the purpose of obtaining a judgment ousting the respondent from exercising the office of councilman of the village of Wauseoh, Fulton county, O., and declaring the relator entitled thereto.

By the pleadings and proof it appears that in June, 1892, Wm. C. Barnes held said office o councilman, having been elected thereto for the term of two years in the spring of 1891 and having been duly qualified. On June 20,1892,it was shown to the mayor and council of the village that Wm. Barnes had removed from the village, and the mayor thereupon duly declared said office vacant, and with the advice and consent of the council, duly expressed by a yea and nay vote, duly rendered, duly appointed John S. Dimke to fill said vacancy. On July 18,1892, Dimke having reiused to accept said appointment or to qualify, the mayor appointed Myron T. Palmer, the relator, to fill the vacancy.

. Mr. Palmer, being present at the time, was sworn in and took his seat as councilman.

At the spring election of 1893, George W. Hartman was duly elected to said office, and having refused to qualify, on April 17, 1893, the mayor declared a vacancy in said office and again appointed the relator to fill it, and the relator being present at the time, again took the oath of office and continued to discharge the duties of councilman.

By reason of some misapprehension or other cause, the names of no candidates for said office were placed on the tickets of either or any political party in the spring of 1894, so, of course, no one was elected thereto.

Thereupon a special meeting of the council was called for April 12, 1894, and at that meeting, the mayor and six members of the council, including the relator, were present. At this meeting the mayor declared said office of councilman vacant, “on account of expiration ■of time of Myron T. Palmer, an acting member” as the record recites, and appointed the respondent, Darby, thereto, and on motion then and there made to confirm said appointment three of said councilmeu voted yea and three (including Palmer, the relator,) voted nay, and the mayor’s name being thereupon called, he voted yea, and declared the motion to confirm carried, whereupon the respondent was sworn in and took his seat as councilman and has since continued to act as such, in place of Palmer, who has not since acted, but brings this _stiit in the name of the State to determine the right of himself and the respondent to the office.

On behalf of the respondent it is urged that this court has no jurisdiction of such a case, since by sec. 1679, Rev. Stat., the council is made “the judge of the election returns and qualifications of its own members.” But we do not regard this exclusive right of the council as extending to a case where the controversy is not simply which of two or more persons was properly selected to fill a conceded vacancy then to be filled by some one, but where the point in dispute is whether under the law there is any vacancy or office then to be filled by any election or appointment. It would hardly be contended, for instance, that a council could assume that the term of one of its members regularly elected under the law [126]*126for two years, expired in one, and upon some other person being elected or appointed then to such supposed place, could vote to seat the new claimant in place of the old member and successfully defend its action and the old member be concluded by the action of the council under this section.

The principles recognized and enforced in the case of the State v. O'Brien. 47 O. S., 473, (see 47 O. S., 566, and 44 O. S., 469,) in our view, forbid the conclusion that sec. 1679 confers the exclusive, if any, power , on the council to adjudge in such a case as is here presented.

If the relator has any right to exercise the powers and perform the duties of the office, it is wholly because he was legally an officer whose rightful incumbency had not terminated when the respondent was appointed, and no action of the council other than by the motion of a member (1684-5) according to the requirements of the statute, could interfere with a tenure positively fixed by law.

We must inquire then, by what if any rightful and definite tenure was Palmer holding the office when Darby was appointed, or, in other words, was there a vacancy which could lawfully be filled by appointment?

Under sec. 1673, the regular term of councilmen is two years. In case of a vacancy in the council, were it not that sec. 1724 makes special provision applicable only to councilmen, it might well be held that the more general provision of sec. 1713 in the chapter on “ Officers of cities and villages ” and which is made applicable “ unless otherwise provided in this title,” would apply, but since sec. 1724 being thus special and containing provisions regarding the time for which vacancies in the council may be filled, wholly different from those in sec. 1613 regarding vacancies in municipal offices, generally, we think it clear that notwithstanding the reference to sec. 1713 in sec. 1693, these provisions of sec. 1724 must govern in determining whether the appointment shall be “ till the next annual municipal election ” or “ for the unexpired term.” The appointment, therefore, must be for the unexpired term. We think it is not competent for the mayor to fix the term of the appointment otherwise, and his appointment of a councilman, when made with the consent of the council, is for the unexpired term of the person who after being elected and qualified, ceases to be councilman before the expiration of the term for which he was elected. And the misapprehension of the true tenure of the appointee, on the part of the mayor, the appointee or others cannot abridge the term fixed by law for his continuance in office.

Sec. 1713 also provides, that, “ unless otherwise provided, all municipal officers shall serve until their successors are qualified.”

Section 8 and sec. 11, Rev. Stat.

Mechem, in his work on Public Offices and Officers, sec. 402, lays down the rule that officers appointed to fill vacancies in elective offices are generally considered as appointed for the remainder of the unexpired term of the person whose place they fill, and that on failure to elect at the regular election, they hold over, and that if the provision is that they are to continue until their successors are elected and qualified there must be an election and not an appointment of a successor.

In State v. McGregor, 44 O. S., 630-1, the Supreme Court held that sec. 1208 and not sec. 11 applied to the filling of vacancies in the office of sheriff and coroner. And we suppose that in view of the particular provision in sec. 1713 and 1724 in connection with the more general provision of sec. 8, that if Palmer'was legally appointed and confirmed to fill the unexpired term of Barnes, which would end in the spring of 1893, he would hold the office till his successor is elected and qualified.

If, in 1892, Palmer was duly appointed by the mayor with the advice and consent of the council properly expressed, there has never been a vacancy in the office since which could be legally filled by appointment and the appointment of 1893, however formal, was of no effect. And if he was not so appointed and confirmed in 1892, he was simply a de facto councilman, at least till the alleged [127]

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-palmer-v-darby-ohcirctottawa-1894.