State ex rel. Thompson v. Crump

134 Tenn. 121
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 134 Tenn. 121 (State ex rel. Thompson v. Crump) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee 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. Thompson v. Crump, 134 Tenn. 121 (Tenn. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Green

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This bill was filed by the State, on relation of the attorney-general, against Edward H. Crump, mayor of the city of Memphis, R. A. Utley, vice mayor and [124]*124commissioner of the department of fire and police of the city of Memphis, Oliver IT. Perry, inspector of police of the city of Memphis, and W. M. Stanton, city judge of Memphis, to remove them from their several positions on account of alleged misconduct in office. The suit was instituted on October 14, 1915, and was based on chapter 11 of the Acts of 1915, known as the Ouster Law.

The bill averred that defendant Crump was first inducted into the office of mayor of Memphis in January, 1910, and that he was thereafter re-elected for a term of four years beginning January 1, 1912, and it appeared from the bill that said Crump was again reelected to the said office for a term beginning January 1,1916.

It was averred that R. A. Utley was first inducted into the office of vice mayor and commissioner of the department of fire and police in 1912, for a term of four years, and it appeared that he was also re-elected in April, 1915, for another term beginning January 1, 1916.

It was averred that defendant Stanton was elected to the office of city judge by the commissioners of the city of Memphis in the summer of 1915, apparently to fill out an unexpired term which ended January 1,1916.

Proceedings against defendant Perry were dismissed below, and there was no appeal on the part of complainant, and the case against him need not therefore be further noticed.

[125]*125The hill filed by the attorney-general was quite lengthy, and charged defendants Crnmp, Utley, and Staton with various acts of misfeasance and nonfeasance in office covering the entire time during which they held their several positions. It was charged that they had neglected to enforce the laws against the sale of liquor, against gambling, and against prostitution, that they had connived at and encouraged the violation of these laws, and that there existed and had been conducted, during their terms, in open violation of law, in the city of Memphis, numerous liquor saloons, gambling houses, and houses of ill fame. All these matters were set out in detail, and the bill charged the employment of certain colorable devices by which the defendants permitted the aforesaid unlawful occupations to be pursued in the city of Memphis.

Passing over some of the preliminary steps taken by the defendants, and noticing only those things which' are before us on this appeal, it is sufficient to say that defendants filed an answer to the bill of the attorney-general in which they denied many of the charges made against them, and assailed the Ouster Act as unconstitutional, and contended that at any rate said act had no application to them. Defendants also demanded a jury to try the issues of fact, and raised some other questions which will be noticed in the course of this opinion.

The chancellors were of opinion that chapter 11 of the Acts of 1915 was constitutional,- and that it did [126]*126apply to the defendants, and they were furthermore of opinion that defendants were not entitled to a jury trial. Certain other questions of law were likewise ' determined adversely to defendants, and the ease was thereupon set for hearing on its merits by the chancellors.

"When the case was called for trial, counsel were asked for a preliminary statement of the issues and the probable course of the proof. Counsel for the attorney-general told the court that they expected to prove and had witnesses ready to prove every material allegation of the bill.

Counsel for defendants thereupon stated that, relying on all the preliminary questions made by them, such as the right to trial by jury, the applicability of the act, etc., and desiring an early determination of those questions by this court, they had concluded to introduce no proof and thereby delay final determination of the cause. They agreed that for the purposes of this case they would admit that the attorney-general could prove all the relevant charges made against defendants in the bill.

After much controversy between the court and counsel as to the effect of this admission, the chancellors proceeded to treat the facts charged in the bill as if they were facts proven, and pronounced a judgment of ouster against the defendants.

We do not deem it necessary to dwell upon the discussion of counsel as to the effect of defendants’ admission. According to the language of defendants’ [127]*127counsel, the relevant facts charged in the bill were admitted to be true for the purposes of this case. “This case” is the only case we are here undertaking to determine, and we accordingly treat the charges of the bill as true.

The decree of the chancellors herein removing defendants from office was pronounced November 4, 1915.

The first question presented for our determination is as to the effect of this decree upon the terms of defendants Crump and Utley beginning January'1, 1916. Their terms pending at the date of the decree expired January 1,1916.

These defendants insist that their terms, beginning January 1, 1916, were not in issue in the proceedings below, and were not affected thereby. Defendants were assuming that such was the case, and were about to qualify and enter into the offices of mayor and vice mayor, to which they had been elected in April, 1915', for terms beginning January 1, 1916, when they were restrained from so doing by an interlocutory order heretofore made by this. court. The court thought it best to preserve the existing status until the case was finally determined.

It is insisted on behalf of the State that the decree of November 4, 1915, was effective, not only to remove defendants Crump and Utley from their offices for the terms they were then serving, ending January 1, 1916, but, that said decree deprived said defendants of all [128]*128rights to their future terms, beginning January 1, 1916, to which they had been elected in April 1915.

There has been much discussion as to whether the 1916-20 terms 'of defendants Crump and Utley were fairly involved upon the pleadings in this case, and likewise as to whether the decree below undertook to adjudicate anything with reference to defendants’ rights respecting these terms. We do not find it necessary to consider either the pleadings or the decree to determine this dispute. To reach the true result, we must go further back and examine the act upon which these pleadings and this decree are based and ascertain from this statute if proceedings had thereunder can by any possibility affect defendants’ enjoyment of a term of office not then current.

Chapter 11 of the Acts of 1915', known as the Ouster Act, is entitled:

“An act to provide for the removal of unfaithful public officers, and providing a procedure therefor.”

The first section of the act provides that any State, county, or municipal officer who knowingly or willfully misconducts himself in office or who knowingly or willfully neglects to perform any duty enjoined upon him by the laws of the State, or who shall become intoxicated, engaged in gambling, or violate any penal statute involving moral turpitude “shall forfeit his office, and shall be ousted from such office in the manner hereinafter provided.”

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Bluebook (online)
134 Tenn. 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-thompson-v-crump-tenn-1915.