Court Opinion

ID: 5552514
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-11 00:34:47.132226+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:35:11.886726
License: Public Domain

By the Court.

McDonald, J.
delivering the opinion.
The plaintiff instituted his suit in the Court below, for the purpose of recovering from the defendants the amount of salary that would have accrued to him as marshal of the City of Macon, for the time intervening his removal ahd the expiration of the term for which he was elected; and also, the perquisites of his office of marshal during the same time ; and *469for recovering, also, the expenses of defending himself against “the charges for which he was removed from office.'
[1.] It is unnecessary to consider the point made in the argument, whether the defendants can be held liable, as judicial officers, for errors of judgment. The marshal is elected by the people, but he is under the exclusive control of the mayor and council, and may be dismissed from office, at any time, for malpractice in office or neglect of duty, by a vote of •a majority of the members present. {Acts of 1852, p. 389.) The mayor and council have discretionary power to remove him within the restrictions of the Act. They cannot remove him but for the specified causes.
[2.] And in investigating these causes, they cannot organize themselves into a Court, and by assuming to act in a judicial capacity, escape the consequences of the amotion of their officer, without sufficient legal cause. Again — they are mot sued as individuals; the suit is against the corporation.
The Court below, however, held that the defendants, in ••amoving plaintiff from office, acted as a judicial body ? andaré mot responsible for their errors of judgment while sitting and acting as a Court.
[3.] As remarked, it is unnecessary to discuss the proposition, whether the persons constituting the Mayor and Council of the City of Macon, are amenable as individuals for errors committed by them as judicial officers. That is not the complaint in this case. The suit is against the corporate body. The names of the individuals who formed the corporate body which amoved the defendant, are not mentioned, •either in the declaration or process.
[4-3 The action is not for damages for a wrongful or tortious act, but is on the original contract, and is the ordinary case of a party’s suing and claiming the full benefit of a contract which he has not performed, but the performance of which was prevented by the act of the other party. The defendant may, as in all such cases, plead to the action and justify the dismissal of the plaintiff, if the facts warrant the defence. The defendants, however, cannot be allowed the *470same latitude of defence as natural persons. They are a body corporate, and have no powers except such as the incorporating Act confers, and such as are incident to the same kind of corporate body. The corporation has no incidental power of removing an officer, deriving and holding his appointment as plaintiff did. Its whole power, in this case, is derived from the charter; and by the charter it could not remove him, except for malpractice in office or neglect of duty. The record, embracing a former report of a case between the same parties, shows that specific charges were made against the plaintiff, which, it was alleged, amounted to malpractice in office and neglect of duty ; and oír these charges he was removed. This Court held that the said charges did not amount to malpractice in office or neglect of duty by the marshal; and, of course, the removal thereon was illegal. We think the Court erred in awarding a non-suit; and on that ground, the judgment must be reversed.
[5.] The plaintiff cannot recover of defendants, money expended in Counsel fees, in defending him against the charges preferred against him. (5 Wendell’s Hep. 533.)
[6.] His damages are such as necessarily-resulted from his amotion from office, viz : his salary and perquisites, should the Jury, under the law as it may be given them in charge by the Court, believe that he is entitled to the full benefit of his contract,'leaving open to the defendants, however, all the defences they may legally have under their restricted discretionary power under the charter.