Zumstein v. Tafel

4 Ohio N.P. 314
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio N.P. 314 (Zumstein v. Tafel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zumstein v. Tafel, 4 Ohio N.P. 314 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

JELKE, J.

From the evidence in this case, made up by the petition, which is sworn to positively by Mr. John Zumstein, the affidavit of the defendant, his Honor, Mayor Tafel, the defendant’s oral testimony on the witness stand, the testimony of Mr. F. A. Armstrong and Mr. Koneth C. Kerr, and the ■subpoena put in evidence, I find the following facts to have existed on the morning of Wednesday, the 18th day of August, 1897, .at the time application was made to this court for the temporary restraining order .granted herein.

1. The charges set out in the petition as subscribed by E. O. Coppin et al., had been filed with the Hon. Gustav Tafel, mayor of the city of Cincinnati.

2. On August 6, Mayor Tafel had trans■mitted a copy of said charges to each of the plaintiffs herein, and notified each of them to be present at the mayor’s ofiicce at the city building, on Wednesday. August 18th, at lloc’lock a. in., when said charges would be investigated.

3. On Monday, August 16, the members of the Board of Supervisors, plaintiffs herein, by their counsel,applied to the major to dismiss said charges, which application was in words as set out in the petition.

4. On Monday, August 16, after hearing argument the mayor took the application to dismiss under advisement.

5. On said Monday, August 16, the may ■or notified counsel to be in readiness to go into the bearing of said charges on Wednes day, August 18, at 11 o’clock a. m., and to come prepared for such hearing.

6. The mayor did not, on or about the 18th day of August, 1897, nor has he at any other time in express terms, refused the application of the plaintiffs to dismiss the charges referred to in the petition herein, ■ as alleged in the petition herein.

7. Mayor Iafel did not, on the 18th of August, 1897, notify plaintiffs that he would proceed to hear evidence and act upon said charges on the 18th day of Avgust, 1897, at 11 o’clock a. m.

8. Mayor Tafel had not formally announced any conclusionss as to the sufficiency of the charges.

9. It does not appear from the testimony whether or not he had made up his mind in this regard.

10. Whether Mayor Tafel had arrived at a ■settled opinion or not on the subject, he had not formally held and construed the requirements of the provisions of the Rev. Stats.'referred to in said charges, and more particularly sec. 1720, Rev. Stats., as having been a mandatory provision, requiring the Board of Supervisors every month to review and investigate the proceedings of the council of said city and of all the other departments of the corporation government.

11. Mayor Tafel did, on Tuesday, August 17, about 4 o’clock in the afternoon, say to Mr. Keneth O. Kerr and Mr. Holmes, that he would not give his decision on Wednesday morning upon the motion to disimss the charges, but that he would hold the decision in reserve until after all the evidence was in, and that the hearing of the charges would proceed.

12. Mayor Tafel did, on the 17th day of August, 1897, issue the subpoena to F. A Armstrong offered in evidence, thereby re quiringtbe saidF. A. Armstrong to attend, on the 18th day of August, A. B., 1897, at 11 o’clock a. m., in the mayor’s office at the city building, in Cincinnati, before the Hon. Gustav Tafel, mayor of the city of Cincinnati, to testify as a witness in the matter of the charges preferred against the members of the Board of Supervisors of said city, and to bring with you the minutes of the said Board of Supervisors for the years 1891-2 3-4- 5 and 6; and if in addition to their minutes as a Board of Supervisors, said board kept other minutes as a Board of Revision, produce also such minutes of the Board of Revision; also produce all reports or copies of reports and documents pertaining to the investigations made by said board of the proceedings of the Board of Legislation or any other department of the corporation government of the city of Cincinnati, and not depart the mayor’s office without leave.

13. I find that at the time Mayor Tafel issued this subpoena he had resolved and had a settled intention m his own mind to proceed to a hearing of the charges against the supervisors at 11 o’clock on the next day, Wednesday.

14. I find that at the time of this hearing, unless restrained, Mayor Tafel intended to proceed to an early hearing of the charges and to put plaintiffs herein on their defense as to such charges, without passing on their sufficiency, but reserving his decision in that regard until after hearing all the evidence.

These findings of fact seem to me to be fairly deducible from the testimony and without contradiction.

Growing out of these findings two questions of law arise:

1. Whether or not the charges preferred against the supervisors are sufficient in law —that is, whether if conceded to be true— they furnish a legal foundation upon which the mayor can remove or take any other action in relation to these officers?

2. If such charges be found to be legally insufficient, can the mayor be restrained by the order of a court of chancery from proceeding to hear and determine the truth or falsity of such insufficient charges?

Taking all these charges in their order, the first charge is as follows: Said sec. [316]*3161720, of the Rev. Stats., provides that the board “shall meet as often as once in every month to review and investigate the proceedings in council, and of all the other departments of the corporation government. The undersigned hereby charge George Mortimer Roe, Louis Werner, John Zumstein, Richard Smith, Louis Krohn and John J. Sullivan, members of the Board of Supervisors of the city of Oinicnnati, jointly and severally, with neglect of duty as members of said board in this: that they failed to meet as often as once in every month to review and investigate the proceedings of council and of all other departments of the corporation government,and the undersigned aver that each of said members wholly or grossly neglected to review and investigate the proceedings of council and all other de partments of the corporation government, contrary to the provisions of the statures commanding them to do so. ”

I am of opinion that this charge does not state a charge of neglect of duty or misconduct in office in contemplation of 2G9Um.

Sec. 1720 of the Rev. Stats., provides that the mayor, the president of the board of -.'ouncilmen and the solicitor of the corporation, shall constitute a board of revision (now superseded by the board of supervisors, 1 to review and investigate the proceedings of the council and of all other departments for the corporation government, etc. Said section, after the word “revision” and before the words “to review,” between two commas, contains the relative clause “which shall meet as often as once in every month.” I am of opinion that this section of the statute makes it mandatory upon said board to meet once in every month, but the mandatory provision does not extend to review and investigate the proceedings of council and of all other departments of the corporation government.

This charge is drawn on a construction of this section of the statutes, which would make it mandatory upon the supervisors to review and investigate the proceedings of the council and of all other departments of the government as often as once in every month. This construction can not obtain for the following reasons:

1. It would not be in accord with the grammar and punctuation of the Tflnglish language.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio N.P. 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zumstein-v-tafel-ohctcomplhamilt-1896.