Tangeman v. Board of Aldermen

51 Colo. 208
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1911
DocketNo. 7449
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 51 Colo. 208 (Tangeman v. Board of Aldermen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tangeman v. Board of Aldermen, 51 Colo. 208 (Colo. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hill

delivered the opinion of the ■court:

On March 3, 1911, the plaintiff in error filed his ■petition for mandamus in which he alleges, in substance, that the respondents (defendant in error here) are the Board of Aldermen of the City and County of Denver; •that the petitioner is a qualified elector residing in the ninth ward in said city and brings this action for himself and on behalf of one thousand nine hundred and nine other qualified electors residing in said ward, who, together with himself, had signed a petition to recall Cornelius C. Worrall, the alderman of said ninth ward. Then follows a copy of the petition in which they petition to recall the said Worrall, who had been declared by the Board of Aldermen to be the alderman elected -at the city election, May 17, 1910, in the said ninth [210]*210ward, etc., and petition that a special election be called and held in said ward, according to the charter for the purpose of electing a member of the Board of Aldermen for said ward. Then follows the alleged grounds upon which it is sought to remove Worrall, which are, in substance, that Worrall was legally defeated by his opponent at the election May 17,1910; that the election commission so declared and that the recount by the committee of the Board of Aldermen in the contest instituted by Worrall against Chamberlain so found; that not one •of the charges made by Worrall in his statement of contest filed with the Board of Aldermen was sustained; that no evidence was introduced in support of any of them; that carelessness on the part of some of the election officials in a few precincts was discovered in counting the ballots; that such mistakes were wholly insufficient to change the majority in favor of Chamberlain; that, knowing all this, Worrall demanded from the Democratic members of the board that they brush aside all law and justice and by force of their majority in the board seat him, and unseat Chamberlain; that his demand was granted and a most grevious wrong inflicted upon not only Chamberlain, but the citizens of the ninth ward, who had decided, by their votes, that Mr. Chamberlain was their choice for alderman; that the signatures of the petitioner and said one thousand nine hundred and nine other qualified electors constituted more than twenty-five per cent, of the vote cast in said ward for all candidates for alderman at said election; that said petition was duly filed with the clerk of the city on the 20th of January, 1911.

The petition contained the further fact, that on May 27, 1910, the election commission declared Chamberlain was elected alderman for said ninth ward; that on June 3, 1910, Worrall filed with the Board of Aldermen a contest against Chamberlain and that the Board of Aldermen did, thereafter, at a regular meeting held on the 20th of December, 1910, decide said con[211]*211test in favor of Worrall, and declared him to have been ■elected alderman from said Ninth Ward at the election .held on the 17th day of May, 1910; that said Worrall is a duly elected, qualified and acting alderman from said ward; that more than six months had expired after his election before said petition was filed, then follows ■certain sections of the charter of the City and County -of Denver, which will hereafter be referred to.

An alternative writ of mandamus was issued, returnable March 6, 1911, at which time the respondents filed their answer, which, eliminating many contentions, presents two questions (which were the principal ones considered by the trial court). In the first, they allege that the election was held on the 17th .day of May, 1910; that the election commission, on the 27th of the same month declared Chamberlain elected; that on the 3rd of June following, Worrall filed a contest; that on the 20th of December, following, the council decided the case in favor of Worrall and did then declare Worrall elected as Alderman from said ninth ward, but denied that said board declared Worrall elected at the election held on the 17th of May, 1910; on the contrary allege that the board only determined that Worrall received a plurality of the legal votes cast over and above the votes cast for Chamberlain and sustained the ■contest of Worrall, and then and there, on the 20th day -of December, 1910, declared Worrall elected alderman from the ninth ward and denied that six months had elapsed and expired after the said election of said Worrall, for these reasons they claimed the petition was premature in time.

The second defense pertains to the provisions of Section 22b of the charter providing for the recall, among other things, it states:

“An elective officer is subject to recall as herein •provided and may be removed from office by a petition •of the electors and an election held thereunder, but no -person shall be so removed from office within six [212]*212months after his election thereto. The petition shall name the officer to be removed * * * and shall contain a statement of the grounds upon which it is sought to remove him.”

The respondents allege that the petition does not comply with the provisions of said Section 22b, but that the same is in violation of its provisions; that the said petitioners, by virtue of said petition and the matters therein recited, were not entitled to have the city council call the election, for the reason that the petition does not set forth any act of omission or commission done or performed by the said Worrall during the time he has served as a member of the Board of Aldermen, nor does it contain any statement of the grounds upon which it is sought to remove him, as contemplated by section 22b of the charter; and the respondents denied that Worrall deliberately or in any manner demanded from the democratic members of the board that they should ignore all law or any law, or ignore justice in the determination of the contest between Worrall and Chamberlain, and denied that Worrall demanded that they, the Board of Aldermen or the democratic members thereof, should, by force of their majority in the board, seat him as alderman from said ninth ward and unseat Chamberlain. They denied any demands by Worrall other than those legitimately presented by the contest proceedings.

Upon the filing of this answer the petitioners; without offering any evidence, made application to have the alternative writ made peremptory; this application was denied and the alternative writ discharged. The petitioners bring the case here for review upon error.

In passing upon these two defenses, among other things, the learned trial judge said:

“There is a matter of public policy involved in this proceeding. It was a matter of common notoriety at the time this recall provision was adopted — I think the [213]*213court is justified in taking judicial notice of that — that this matter was presented to the people of this community, and votes were solicited for this recall, upon the theory that it would give the citizens of the city of Denver an opportunity to recall elective officials who were guilty of malfeasance or non-feasance while in office, and I do not think that this section can be stretched in its application to a set of facts so as to include an individual who is not charged with any .misconduct or any wrongful act and which resulted in his being given a certificate of election by the Board of Aldermen.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 Colo. 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tangeman-v-board-of-aldermen-colo-1911.