Court Opinion

ID: 6434805
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:11:31.660344+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:20.729456
License: Public Domain

Rugg, C. J.
These aré two actions of tort brought to recover damages for two attempted removals of the plaintiff, the first in January, 1917, and the second in February and March, 1917, from the office of city treasurer and collector of taxes of the city of Lowell. The defendants on those dates were three of the five members constituting the municipal council of Lowell. The municipal council of Lowell was clothed with authority to remove the city treasurer from office for such cause as it deemed sufficient, provided it proceeded in accordance with the law regulating the civil service. St. 1911, c. 645, § 40. It had no power in that regard except .by following the terms of that law. The provisions of the civil service law required as essential preliminaries that reasons be specifically given in writing and that the person sought to be removed should be notified of the proposed action and furnished with a copy of reasons claimed to constitute just cause for removal. The defendants, being a majority of the municipal council, joined in going through the form of adopting orders removing the plaintiff from the office of
*181city treasurer without notifying him of the proposed action and without giving him any copy of reasons for removal. Therefore it has been held expressly that the orders “were a nullity and were wholly ineffectual” as attempts to remove the plaintiff from office. Thomas v. Municipal Council of Lowell, 227 Mass. 116, 119. Stiles v. Municipal Council of Lowell, 229 Mass. 208, 210. The duty of the defendants to give the notice and hearing to the plaintiff was certain and specific. The statute covered the ground completely and left nothing to the exercise of discretion. Ransom v. Mayor of Boston, 193 Mass. 537, 540.
The defendants, in passing upon the question of the removal of a city officer under civil service rules, were executive or administrative officers. If they had followed the requirements of the civil service laws in making the removal, they then would have been performing functions to some extent judicial. The power to remove an officer in the public service is in its nature executive, when considered by itself alone. Murphy v. Webster, 131 Mass. 482. When, as essential prerequisites to the exercise of that power, there must be a formulation of specific charges as grounds for removal, notice of those charges to the person to be removed, opportunity to him for a hearing, followed by a hearing and decision, then the hearing and decision partake also of the “nature of a judicial investigation.” McCarthy v. Emerson, 202 Mass. 352, 354. Driscoll v. Mayor of Somerville, 213 Mass. 493, 494. Swan v. Justices of the Superior Court, 222 Mass. 542, 548. State v. Common Council of Superior, 90 Wis. 612, 619. The functions of the members of the municipal council are like those of selectmen in deciding upon the qualifications of voters, which, as was said by Chief Justice Shaw, are “in this respect, to some extent judicial.” Blanchard v. Stearns, 5 Met. 298, 300. Speaking with accuracy, the removal by a municipal council under these circumstances is still - an executive or administrative act which must be performed in this particular in a judicial manner. See Levangie’s Case, 228 Mass. 213.
Treating the liability of the defendants in its executive or administrative aspect, they are bound to act in accordance with the law. They acquire no authority in the premises except such as the law confers. The plaintiff had an interest in remaining in office, of which he could not be deprived except in accordance with law. *182Continuance in office was valuable to him both as a means of support and as matter of reputation. Ham v. Boston Board of Police, 142 Mass. 90, 95. Hill v. Mayor of Boston, 193 Mass. 569, 575. The incumbent of an office carrying emolument has rights. protected from assault by third persons, although as against the State itself his relation may be of a different nature. Ashley v. Three Justices of the Superior Court, 228 Mass. 63, 73. Personal liability attaches to executive or administrative officers who interfere with rights of individuals in ways not authorized by law. The cloak of office is no protection to them even when acting in good faith. The principle by which personal liability is fixed on field drivers for taking stray cattle except as provided by the statute, Coffin v. Field, 7 Cush. 355, on members of the board of health for killing a well horse honestly but mistakenly supposed to have glanders, Miller v. Horton, 152 Mass. 540, on selectmen and' other officers when acting as members of an election or registration board in refusing to put on the voting list and to permit to . vote a man entitled to vote, Larned v. Wheeler, 140 Mass. 390, on assessors for making an illegal assessment, Stetson v. Kempton, 13 Mass. 272, 283, and in general on municipal officers for acts of personal misfeasance in performance of public duty, Moynihan v. Todd, 188 Mass. 301, is controlling when the position of the defendants is considered as executive or administrative.
If the defendants’ position is approached from the viewpoint of exercising the judicial faculty, the same result follows. “All inferior tribunals and magistrates . . . if they act without any jurisdiction over the subject matter; or if . . . they are guilty of an excess of jurisdiction . . . are liable in damages to the party injured by such unauthorized acts.” Piper v. Pearson, 2 Gray, 120, 122. Clarke v. May, 2 Gray, 410. Doggett v. Cook, 11 Cush. 262. Sullivan v. Jones, 2 Gray, 570. Kelly v. Bemis, 4 Gray, 83. Kendall v. Powers, 4 Met. 553. Brewer v. Casey, 196 Mass. 384, 387. Von Arx v. Shafer, 154 C. C. A. 407; S. C. 241 Fed. Rep. 649, 650. Although there are contrary decisions on this point, to the effect that good faith may be a defence or that there is liability only if there is malice, the weight of authority is in favor of the absolute liability established so firmly in our jurisprudence by the decisions already cited as not to be open further to discussion. The case at bar is indistinguishable in essence from the established *183liability of election officers for a well intentioned mistake of judgment in refusing registration and in denying the right to vote to one duly qualified. Lincoln v. Hapgood, 11 Mass. 350. Blanchard v. Stearns, 5 Met. 298, 300. Kinneen v. Wells, 144 Mass. 497, 504.
It is plain that the defendants never acquired a jurisdiction to exercise, their quasi judicial functions respecting the removal from office of the plaintiff, because they never notified him and never gave him a copy of the charges against him and he did not voluntarily submit himself to their action, but has resisted and asserted the invalidity of their procedure at every point. The full performance of all conditions established by the statute are essential prerequisites to the jurisdiction of the municipal council over the subject matter of the removal of an officer. There is no delegation of judicial power to the municipal council. Holcombe v. Creamer, 231 Mass. 99, and cases collected at page 111. That hardly could be done under our Constitution, which sharply separates the three departments of government. Boston v. Chelsea, 212 Mass. 127.
The municipal council was clothed with the power of removal of city officers so long as there was conformity to the requirements of the law. When the members ceased to comply with the law they were acting outside their official capacity and were subjected to responsibility as individuals.
It follows that the trial judge rightly ordered verdicts for the plaintiff for at least nominal damages. Ransom v. Boston, 196 Mass. 248.
The plaintiff was entitled to have considered as an element of his damages the amounts reasonably paid for counsel fees in procuring reinstatement in office. He was obliged to resort to the. court for redress and to employ counsel to that end. Those proceedings were rendered imperative, in order that he might protect his rights, by the tortious conduct of the defendants. The plaintiff was not obliged to incur these expenses through any misfeasance or contract of his own, but wholly by reason of the wrongdoing of the defendants, of which these expenses were the immediate and direct result. As was said in Wheeler v. Hanson, 161 Mass. 370, 376: "It has been held more than once in this State, that when the plaintiff has, in consequence of the wrongful conduct of the defendant, been put to expense in the employment
*184of counsel, the amount so paid is an element of damage in an action against the defendant arising out of such wrongful conduct.” Berry v. Ingalls, 199 Mass. 77: Maguire v. Pan-American Amusement Co. 205 Mass. 64, and cases collected at page 68. Sears v. Nahant, 215 Mass. 234, 239, 240. The case at bar is within this principle. It is quite different from those decisions where the taxable costs are held, so far as concerns a particular proceeding, to be full compensation for expenses in conducting litigation, such as Newton Rubber Works v. De las Casas, 182 Mass. 436, and cases cited at page 438, and McIntire v. Mower, 204 Mass. 233, 237. See Fitzgerald v. Heady, 225 Mass. 75.
There was no error in permitting the jury to consider the damages caused to the plaintiff by being obliged to resign his office. It might have been found that "the plaintiff’s inability to secure the. required surety on his bond was due directly to the illegal conduct of the defendants and flowed from,it as a natural consequence. See Ransom v. Boston, 192 Mass. 299, 307. It is not an answer in this connection that the plaintiff was restored to his office by mandamus proceedings and was ultimately paid his salary up to the time of his resignation. With respect to the conduct of the defendants here in issue, the plaintiff had a legal right to remain in office unmolested. If the unlawful efforts of the defendants to remove him from office so injured his standing and reputation in the community and with bonding companies that he could no longer secure surety on his bond and thereby was compelled to resign, that would constitute an element of damage provided he was unable to get more lucrative employment elsewhere.
Testimony as to the reasons given by agents of the bonding companies for refusal to become surety on the plaintiff’s bond was competent. Weston v. Barnicoat, 175 Mass. 454. Hubbard. v. Allyn, 200 Mass. 166, 174.
The plaintiff was entitled to have the jury consider in assessing his damages the mental suffering which he sustained so far as it was the natural and proximate result of the unlawful conduct of the defendants. It might have been found that a feeling of humiliation and a sense of degradation would ensue to the ordinary person as the normal and: direct consequence of the illegal expulsion from office. Mental suffering ordinarily has been held not *185to be an independent cause of action. The reason for this in large part, as was said by Lurton, J., in a dissenting opinion in Wadsworth v. Western Union Telegraph Co. 86 Tenn. 695, “is found in the remoteness of such damages and in the metaphysical character of such an injury. . . . Such injuries are generally more sentimental than substantial.” Summerfield v. Western Union Telegraph Co. 87 Wis. 1. The rule is well settled, however, that if the natural consequence of the wrongful act, done wilfully or with gross negligence, is mental suffering to the plaintiff, then that element may be considered in assessing damages. Meagher v. Driscoll, 99 Mass. 281. Fillebrown v. Hoar, 124 Mass. 580, 585. In the application of this rule it has been held that one, acting on the erroneous but honest belief that the plaintiff was an apprentice in his employ, who made a false statement to that effect, the expected result being the discharge of the plaintiff, was liable in damages including mental suffering. Lombard v. Lennox, 155 Mass. 70. It also has been held that the jury, in assessing the damages to a boy “unlawfully excluded” from a public school, might consider the indignity or disgrace which followed the expulsion. In that case as reported there is shown no malice or want of good faith, and nothing more than honest mistake of their legal duty as to giving hearing on the part of the school committee. Morrison v. Lawrence, 181 Mass. 127. The case at bar falls within the principle applied in these two decisions and is indistinguishable from them in any essential particular. Good faith and absence of malice in the perpetration of such a palpable wrong to the plaintiff constitute no defence to the defendants against the almost inevitable effect of their acts. In Bishop v. Rowley, 165 Mass. 460, liability was established although apparently the school committee acted in entire good faith in refusing to grant a hearing to the scholar excluded from school. See Austro-American Steamship Co. v. Thomas, 160 C.C.A. 309; S. C. 248 Fed. Rep. 231. The case at bar is distinguishable from White v. Dresser, 135 Mass. 150, Burton v. Scherpf, 1 Allen, 133, Lopes v. Connolly, 210 Mass. 487, Spade v. Lynn & Boston Railroad, 168 Mass. 285, 289, and kindred decisions.
Evidence of the plaintiff narrating a conversation with the defendant Brown, wherein the latter stated in effect that he would “get even” with the Lowell Trust Company because its *186president had refused to honor his note, was admissible as tending to show malice toward the plaintiff on the part of Brown, then an issue although subsequently waived, and also as tending to eliminate that charge as a cause of worry to the plaintiff. On cross-examination of the plaintiff it had been developed, that in the spring of 1917 after the illegal removals, action had been brought against him and the sureties on his bond by the city of Lowell, for failure to collect interest on deposits of city money from the Lowell Trust Company. It was pertinent, in reply to the natural effect of this evidence, for the plaintiff to testify that he had been informed from various sources that there was no ground for that action, in order to rebut the inference that his mental distress came from that cause.
It is not necessary to go through the exceptions to evidence in further detail. A careful examination of them satisfies us that there was no reversible error in these particulars.
The defendants’ requests for rulings need not be reviewed one by one. It follows from what has been said that there was no error in the refusal of these requests, and that the instructions given are not open to just criticism in law.

Exceptions overruled.