Court Opinion

ID: 6314559
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 20:22:14.615476+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:59:12.780068
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Rogers, J.
A rule has been obtained on the commissioners of the county of Philadelphia, at the instance of James Leslie, to show cause, why a mandamus should not issue, directing them to receive the return of the assessment made in Locust Ward, by James Leslie, Henry Vollum, and Nathan P. Sullivan; to make payment to said persons of the amounts prescribed by law for their services as assessor, and assistant assessors, of said ward; and to appoint as collector of taxes in said ward, one of the individuals returned to them for that purpose, by said Leslie, Vollum and Sullivan. Cause has been shown, the grounds of which are stated at large in the return of the commissioners to the rule.
For the relator to succeed in this application, it must clearly appear that the assessors de facto, were not duly elected; for if it were a doubtful election, a mandamus ought not to be granted. I do not take into view, that the assessors de facto, were not parties to this rule, as we shall consider the case in the same light as if the rule was amended by the insertion of their names on the record. *77But still the objection remains, that when there is any doubt of the validity of the election, the court will not interfere by mandamus, but will put the party in the first instance to an information in nature of a quo warranto. Before a mandamus would be granted against the commissioners, we should require that there should be a judgment of ouster against those who were actually performing the duties of the office. And this would be a sufficient answer to the rule; for here it is plain, that the election or appointment of the officers defacto, is not apparently such a one as is merely colourable and void. Rex. v. Bankes et al., 3 Burr. R. 1454.
But we do not intend to rest the case on this ground, as the effect would merely be to turn the relators round to a new proceeding. This course would not meet the wishes of either party.
I shall examine the case in two points of view. 1. What is the title of the relators; and 2d, the title of the respondents, and by respondents I mean the officers de facto, to whom the commissioners directed their precept, and whom we take to be parties to the rule.
I must first premise, that as a prerequisite to the issuing of a mandamus, it must appear not only that the respondents have no title but that the relators have. The writ is grounded on the suggestion of their own right. It cannot be claimed as a right that the court is bound to issue a mandamus to compel the commissioners, for instance, to pay money for services rendered as assessors, when they are not legally such, nor even colourably so. And this makes it our duty to inquire by what title the relators claim to be assessors. The counsel for the relators rest their pretensions on the return of the constable, made in pursuance of the 4th section of the act of the 11th of April, 1799. The act directs that the constables holding elections shall make a return thereof, signed by the judges, within ten days, to the commissioners of the proper county, &c. who shall file the same in their office. They contend that the commissioners are compelled to receive and file the return of the constable, and to issue their precept to the persons therein named, to make the assessment. But conceding that the commissioners have no discretion in relation to the return, (a point which I shall hereafter notice,) yet it is not perceived how this helps the relator’s case, unless it can be also shown that the return is conclusive on the Supreme Court, and that in fact there is no tribunal in the commonwealth' competent to examine into, and correct gross fraud or illegality of procedure, on the part of the returning officer. It is in vain to deny, that this court have a superintending power by information, to examine and correct abuses in such cases, and I cannot conceive how this can be done in many cases unless we go behind the return. It is not sufficient that forms have been observed, but it is necessary to its validity that the election shall have been conducted in the manner prescribed by law. By the return of the commissioners in which the facts are stated, with the requisite clearness and precision, it *78' appears that the constable, in pursuance of the directions of the act . of assembly, gave notice of the time and place of holding the election. That the electors assembled at the time, and the place designated, that being the place generally used for the purposes aforesaid; that much confusion and disorder having arisen, the constable and the two persons who it was alleged were elected judges, removed the election from the place designated, and opened the polls at a neighboring house; at which place the relators had the highest number of votes, and were returned by the constable and judges as duly elected assessors of the ward. The change of place was the act of the constable, or of the constable and judges; and if such authority is vested in him or them, it must be by virtue of some act of assembly which has not been produced. The only mode in which the place can be altered, is by force of the act of'the fifteenth of April, 1807, which makés it lawful for a majority of the qualified electors present at any meeting held at the usual place for electing assessors or inspectors, or other township officers, to change the place of holding said election to any suitable or convenient house, best adapted for the convenience of the inhabitants of the respective townships. Now whether the majority present would'have had the' right to adjourn the election it is useless to determine, as there is no evidence of an overwhelming necessity; nor is there any allegation that any vote was taken to ascertain the wish of the electors. We are therefore of the opinion, that the relators were not legally elected, and have no title to the office of assessors, and this is of itself a decisive answer to the rule for a mandamus.
I shall now proceed to examine the respondent’s title; and by the respondents, as before intimated, we mean the persons appointed assessors by the commissioners. In discussing the question, it will be necesssary to inquire what rights were acquired by the election held at the proper place. For after the secession of the constable, the electors who remained elected judges, who held an election at the- usual place designated by the constable, and who returned to the commissioners that John Rutherford, James M. Linnard, and John Benner, had received a majority of votes, stating the number each had received, and that they were duly elected assessors for the ward. This was a proceeding wholly unwarranted, for there is no law which authorizes an election under such circumstances, and in the manner above stated. For the 2d section of the act of the 15th of February, 1799, prescribes that if any constable shall neglect or refuse to perform the duties' required of him by that act, he shall forfeit the sum of fifty dollars; and in case of neglect, refusal, death, or absence from the county, of any constable or constables, the overseers of the poor of the township, ward or district. When there shall be no overseer of the poor, in such cases the supervisors of the highways shall perform the duties required to be done by the constable, &c. This act relates to the election of inspectors; but by *79the 3d section of the act of the 11th of April, 1799, the constable is directed to hold the elections; and the elections are ordered to be holden under the same regulations as inspectors for the general election are directed to be chosen. It is then clear, that on refusal, or neglect of the constable, the overseers of the poor, or in default of an overseer of the poor, the supervisors of the highway, or in the city the street commissioners, who take the place and perform the duty of supervisors, should have been called in by the electors to conduct the election. In default of such an officer, no judges could be properly chosen, nor legal election held. This then is the case of a failure on the part-of the electors to elect; and the 87 th section of the act of the 15th of April, 1834, provides, that if the electors of any township shall fail to choose an assessor or assistant assessor, at the time appointed by law, or if any person elected to such office shall neglect or refuse to serve therein, or if any vacancy shall happen therein by death or otherwise, the commissioners of the county shall appoint a fit person to fill the office, who shall have the same powers, be subject to the same penalties, and receive the same compensation, as if he had been elected, áse. This act should receive a liberal construction, and if there is a failure to elect for any cause whatever, the power to appoint (for without it the public would be deprived of these important officers) devolves upon the commissioners. On the ground that there had been no election, the commissioners appointed the respondents assessors for the ward, and in this we conceive they exercised a duty imposed upon them by the act. But the counsel for the relators contend, that the commissioners were bound to receive and file the constable’s return, and that it was their duty to issue their precept to the persons returned by him as duly elected. Without adverting particularly to the form of the return, it must be observed that two returns were made, and it was for them to decide which return was correct, or whether either of them should be received. As it. is made the duty of the commissioners in a certain event to appoint, that seems necessarily to imply the power to inquire whether the event had taken place, on the háppening of which, it became their duty to act. It is a startling doctrine, that in case of a notorious fraud, or a palpable violation of the law, a constable could palm an officer on the public by the force of his return. That by merely omitting to state the place where the election was held, he could control the election, when it was admitted that it was not in fact held at the place appointed by the act. If this be the law, it is useless to go through the mockery of (in election. The constable may return "whom he pleases, always taking care that his return is correct upon its face. It would be better to give the appointment to the constable at once, without the useless ceremony of an election. The act admits of the construction which we have given to it, nor do we perceive any danger in committing to the commissioners the power to examine into the illegality *80of elections conducted as this has been. The election is local, but the commissioners represent the whole county. They may be fairly supposed, as in some measure exempt from the feelings which act on the electors of the ward or township, and therefore a reasonable' hope may be entertained of something like impartiality. If however this hope should fail, the aggrieved party may resort to an information, when the whole case will be_ examined, and right and justice done.
In the course of the argument, reference was made to the act of the 19th of March, 1824, but that act only gives jurisdiction to the Quarter Sessions, in the case of a contest with respect to the election of county commissioners, auditors, and other county officers. An assessor is not a county, but a township officer, a distinction plainly marked in the various acts of assembly, and particularly in the act of the 15th of April, 1834, entitled an act relating to counties and townships, and county and township officers.
Rule discharged.