Tremblay v. Murphy

111 Me. 38, 1913 Me. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 6, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 111 Me. 38 (Tremblay v. Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tremblay v. Murphy, 111 Me. 38, 1913 Me. LEXIS 79 (Me. 1913).

Opinion

Spear, J.

Chief Justice Savage heard all these cases and rendered a decision in favor of the petitioners, from which George A. Murphy, claimant to the office of Collector of Taxes, and George Z. Bernier and George A. Welch, claimants for the office of Assessors, appealed. We adopt in full, with a single exception, the following finding oif facts by Chief, Justice Savage as the basis upon which the opinion of the court will proceed. The exception relates to the clerical error in stating that the original statute applied to the Judge of Probate, when an inspection shows that it applied to all county officers including the Judge of Probate.

The Finding.

These cases are petitions brought under Revised Statutes, Chapter 6, Section 70 by persons claiming to have been elected to certain municipal offices in the city of Lewiston, and were all heard together.

The first question presented is whether the court has jurisdiction to determine the election of these persons. They claim to have [40]*40been, elected by joint convention of the boards of mayor and aider-men and common council in the city of Lewiston to the offices of city physician, city solicitor, city auditor, member of board of water commissioners, fire commissioner, collector of taxes and assessors of taxes.

Section 70 as originally enacted in 1880 provided that persons claiming to have been elected to the office of Judge of Probate or county attorney might maintain such a petition. By an amendment adopted in 1893, the section was so amended as to read: “Any

person claiming to be elected to any county or municipal office or to the office of county attorney may maintain this proceeding as in equity.” It is contended that inasmuch as the election referred to in the original act necessarily related only to elections by the people, that under the amendment of 1893 the section should have the same restricted meaning, and that only such municipal officers as may be elected by popular vote can maintain this petition. But the statute is very broad as it now stands and says that any person claiming to be elected to “any municipal office” may maintain a petition. And although the question is not free from dou'bt I think the statute intended to give'to dlaimants of all municipal offices the same right to a speedy determination of a disputed election as dlaimants of other offices have and not leave them to the remedy of quo warranto, which ordinarily could not be effective until the terms of office have expired or nearly so, and therefore I hold that these petitions are properly brought and that the court has jurisdiction.

After the municipal election in March, 1913, certain persons claiming to have been elected to the common council of Lewiston brought petitions before a Justice of the Supreme Judicial Court to determine their right to the office of common councilman. Their opponents had been declared by the ward officers to have been elected. A hearing was had and on the 14th day of March decision was rendered to the effect that the petitioners, Messrs. Kernan and Coombs 'had been elected, and that the defendants, Messrs. Sullivan and Hebert had not been elected, and the same day the defendants had notice entered on the docket of an intention to appeal, but [41]*41this I regard as of no consequence inasmuch as the statute does not require such notice.

City Counciu Organizes.

On Monday, March 17, the city government organized. The common council elected a president and cl'erk and adopted rules of procedure. Thereupon the common council, by resolution reciting the proceedings before the Justice of the Supreme Judicial Court and his decision, unseated Sullivan and Hebert who held certificates of election, and seated Kernan and Coombs. On March 24 the defendants of that proceeding filed a formal appeal from the decision of the Justice, which was served on the first or second day of April following.

On April 4th there was a meeting of the city government. By direction of the mayor, police officers were stationed at all the doors leading to the common council chamber which had not been locked, and all persons except certain ones whose names had been given to the officers were excluded. Sulivan and Hebert were admitted to the common council chamber; Kernan and Coombs were excluded. The dioor to the council chamber was left open, officers guarding it. There were also two windows opening from the chamber into the corridor which were open or partially so. The board of mayor and aldermen passed an order for a joint convention for the election of city officers and sent it down to the common council for concurrence.

The common council voted not to concur, the clerk calling the names of Kernan and Coombs, who answered from the corridor, and not calling the names of Sullivan and Hebert. Thereupon one of the councilmen moved to elect a temporary clerk on the ground that the duly elected clerk refused to call the names of Sullivan and Hebert. The president declared the motion out of order and declined to admit an appeal. Thereupon the councilman put the motion himself and was elected temporary clerk, he calling the names of Sullivan and Hebert and omitting the names of Kernan and Coombs. The roll of the common council was called by Kerrigan, including Sullivan and Hebert, but excluding Kernan and Coombs, and on this roll call! it was voted to concur in the order [42]*42for a joint convention. Then the regular cierk went to the chamber of the mayor and aldermen, followed by the so-called temporary clerk, and presented' to the mayor, the common council’s endorsement upon the order for a joint convention, to wit: “Voted not to concur, Eugene Cloutier, clerk.” The temporary clerk informed the mayor that he had been elected temporary clerk, and was directed by the mayor to make an endorsement which he did in these words: “Voted to concur,” and joint convention was in order, and they signed it. The mayor then ruled that board go to the common council room, where an election was had wherein these respondents were voted for and declared elected, Sullivan and Hebert being allowed to vote, and their votes being necessary to an election, while Kernan and Coombs were not allowed to vote. The public were still excluded from the room. In this joint convention 15 voted, including Sullivan and Hebert. All others retired from the chamber. The city council of Lewiston consists of seven aldermen and twenty-one councilmen. Later the appeal from the decision of the presiding Justice in the election petition was affirmed by the Supreme Court, and Kernan and Coombs were declared elected to the common council. After the decision of the Law Court another convention was held1, May 19, 1913, regular in form at which these petitioners were elected respectively to the several officers, and they have brought these petitions.

The petitioners contend that the election of April 4 was void for two principal reasons: First, that the meeting was not public as the charter of the city of Lewiston requires, and therefore, that the proceedings were void; secondly, that the election of April 4th was void on the ground that two persons authorized to vote were not permitted to vote, and that two persons unauthorized to vote did vote and that their votes were necessary to make a quorum and accomplish the election.

Although the election was not public in any proper sense of the word, I do not place my decision upon that ground.

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Bluebook (online)
111 Me. 38, 1913 Me. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tremblay-v-murphy-me-1913.