Thomas v. City of Euclid

182 N.E. 605, 43 Ohio App. 52, 11 Ohio Law. Abs. 284, 1931 Ohio App. LEXIS 347
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 2, 1931
StatusPublished

This text of 182 N.E. 605 (Thomas v. City of Euclid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. City of Euclid, 182 N.E. 605, 43 Ohio App. 52, 11 Ohio Law. Abs. 284, 1931 Ohio App. LEXIS 347 (Ohio Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

VICKERY, J.

I think the learned counsel for the plaintiff has misconstrued the decision of the Supreme Court in this Wright case. That was a suit brought by Clark and others as taxpayers against Wright, he b.eing an officer of the village of Bedford and having made contracts in which he and other members and officers of the Village of Bed-ford were interested. The’fact is that he let contracts to himself as engineer and employed couneilmen and other officers of the village to carry out such contracts, all of which was in violation of many statutes of the state of Ohio. In that action a recovery was had in the interest of the taxpayers, which this court sustained, and was affirmed by the Supreme Court in the decision above referred to. The case was again before this court in a suit in mandamus, State ex rel Thompson, Hine & Flory, a Partnership, v Council of the Village of Bedford, 33 O. L. R., 136, 37 Oh Ap 265, later affirmed by the Supreme Court, *285 (123 Oh St, 413), compelling payment of compensation due attorneys for recovering-money wrongfully paid under the contracts to Wright. So this member of the court is perfectly familiar with the whole litigation.

Now the only question that the court had to determine in that lawsuit was whether Wright was an officer of the village of Bed-ford. That he was such officer there can be no question, and in a measure it was by virtue of the sections of the statutes above referred to and, that being established, it did not make a particle of difference whether his power came from the statute, that is, whether the statute was self-operating and made him an officer, or whether it was necessary for the council of the village of Bedford to act under that statute, which it did, in creating the office and to employ him as such officer. In either event he was an officer and, therefore, he had wrongfully made a contract with himself-and had employed other members of the corporation who could not legally benefit financially from a contract with the corporation. That was the point to be decided by the Supreme Court.

Sec 4364 and 4366 GC provide as follows:

“Sec 4364. General duties. Under the direction of council, the street commissioner, or an engineer, when one is so provided by council, shall supervise the improvement and repair of streets, avenues, alleys, lands, lanes, squares,, wards, landings, market houses, bridges, viaducts, sidewalks, sewers, drains, ditches, culverts, ship channels, streams, and water courses. Such commissioner or engineer shall also supervise the lighting, sprinkling and cleaning of all public places, and shall perform such other duties consistent with the nature of his office as council may require.”
“Sec 4366. Duties of various officers: Compensation. In each municipal corporation having a fire engineer, civil engineer or superintendent of markets such officers shall each perform the duties prescribed by this title, and such other duties not incompatible with the nature of his office as the council by ordinance requires, and shall receive for his services such compensation by fees, salary or both as is provided by ordinance.”

It will at once be observed that the statute authorizes or provides for an engineer and other officers mentioned therein when the council by ordinance have so provided such office, which would clearly show that the statute clearly is inoperative and ineffective until the council has exercised the power conferred upon it by this statute. In other words, the passing of the statute by the legislature did not create an office of engineer, confining our remarks to an engineer only, but only authorized the council to create such an office and to appoint the incumbent, and where city or village councils have not acted there is no engineer. Hence, it cannot be said that an engineer appointed under this section after the office has been created and the appointment made by council, occupies an office created only by statute. He is an officer by virtue of the appointment by the council under the authority conferred upon it by the statute, and it is a distinction very important in this lawsuit.

Now, of course, under the authority of Wright v Clark, supra, the engineer is an officer and in a sense it is true that he is so by virtue of the sections referred to in the syllabus, but the sections referred to in the syllabus would not alone make him an officer. As already stated they are not self-operating; action by the council is required, and it is the council that creates the office, and in the Wright case the council of Bed-ford created the office under the statute and appointed Mr. Wright the engineer, and the ordinance was almost exactly similar to the one in question, and while the syl" labus of the Supreme Court is the law of the case, if it does not apply to another case that is not on all fours with it, it does not bind the Supreme Court or any other court in cases differing from it.

Now as already stated all the court had to decide in the Wright case was that Wright was an “officer”, and the source from which he derived his power as an officer, whether ordinance or statute, was unimportant, because as an officer under either theory, he had violated his official duties and had violated the statute. The point and the importance lies in this: that if Thomas was an officer, he was entitled to the usufructs of the office, but the power that created the office could likewise repeal the law which created it, and when it was repealed there would be no basis upon which an officer could perform any duties, inasmuch as they were taken away by repeal of the law creating the office. This familiar doctrine runs through our entire judicial system from its very inception down to the present moment. It is best exemplified, perhaps, by quoting a very historic case which is known in the legal literature as John Adams Midnight Judges case. When the Republicans, as they were then called under Thomas Jefferson, had succeeded in arresting the *286 control of the government from the Federalists, who up to that time had control of at least the executive department of the government, John Adams and the Federalists thought they would make soft places . for a lot of the adherents of the Federalists, and so they passed an Act of Congress creating a circuit court, and the last act that John Adams did was to fill those positions by appointing his friends and the friends of tho Federalist party to the various offices thus created. This offended the Jeffersonian Republicans, now called Democrats, and when Jefferson came into power with a Congress that agreed with him, they repealed the law creating this circuit court, anijl the John Adams Midnight Judges were all, to use the vernacular, “thrown out of office.” '

Ever since that time and before, it has been well recognized that one can always get rid of an officer by repealing the law that created the office, and while one cannot interfere with a man’s office, nor his right to the usufructs of the office, to-wit, the salary attached to it, unless he is impeached and removed from office or otherwise removed in accordance with law established for that purpose, the office itself can always be abolished.

Now that brings us to the nub of this lawsuit.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Thompson, Hine & Flory v. Council of Bedford
174 N.E. 601 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1930)
Council of Village of Bedford v. State Ex Rel. Thompson
175 N.E. 607 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1931)
Wright v. Clark
164 N.E. 512 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
182 N.E. 605, 43 Ohio App. 52, 11 Ohio Law. Abs. 284, 1931 Ohio App. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-city-of-euclid-ohioctapp-1931.