People ex rel. Keyes v. Burnside

By the Court —

Miller, P. J.

This case involves the question whether the county judge of the county of Otsego had the power to declare the offices of railroad commissioners of the town of Oneonta, in said county, held by the relators, vacant, and to appoint the defendants in error in their places, in accordance with the provisions of chapter 384 of the Laws of 1859, section 5, which reads as follows: “In case any commissioner under the said act, passed March 31, 1856, as amended April 14, 1857, shall refuse or willfully neglect to peo form any part of the duties specified thereioi, or required by this act, his office shall thereupon become vacant; and upon proof of the fact, to the satisfaction of the county judge of the county wherein such commissioner shall reside, he shall appoint some other person to fill his place, in the manner now provided by law.”

This provision is highly penal in its character, and inflicts a severe penalty upon the delinquent who has violated its requirements. The jurisdiction conferred is limited and special, and the proceeding for the enforcement of the act is of the most summary and rigorous character. The rule is well established, that penal statutes, in declaring what acts shall-constitute an offence, and in prescribing the punishment to be inflicted, are to be construed with strictness and rigor. (Dwarris, 736; Sedg. on Stat., 327; The Watervliet Turn*77pike Company v. McKean, 6 Hill, 616.) The charge made against the commissioners was a sale, or an attempted sale, of the stock of the town in the Albany and Susquehanna Railroad Company, in violation of the provisions of chapter 401 of section 6 of the Laws of 1857, which provides that the said commissioner or commissioners appointed under and by virtue of this act, may at any time, after acquiring such capital stock, exchange the same, in whole or in part, for the bonds issued under the authority of this act; and in such case they shall cancel the bonds so received by them, or they may dispose of such stock in their discretion to any purchaser or purchasers, for cash; but shall not sell or dispose of such stock at less than par, except upon the written consent of a majority of the tax-payers of said town, their heirs or legal representatives, representing a majority of the taxable property of said town appearing upon the last assessment roll, proof of which shall be by affidavit. The said commissioner or commissioners shall then sell the same at public auction, of which twenty days’ notice shall be given in two newspapers published in the county wherein said town is located, and in case of sale of said stock either at public or private sale, the proceeds thereof shall be applied by said commissioners to the purchase or redemption of the bonds authorized to be issued by this act, and to no other purpose whatever.”

The county judge made an order whereby he declared the offices held by the relators vacant, and appointed other commissioners in their places, upon the ground that they had willfully neglected or refused to peform their duties, in selling or disposing of the stock held by the town on 'credit. The willful neglect and refusal upon which the order was based was, that the commissioners had done an act in violation of their duty, and had been guilty of misfeasance in office, and was not upon the ground of a refusal to perform, or a willful nonfeascmce. In this, I think, that the county judge committed an error. In order to make out a case within the provisions of the section cited, there must be an absolute refusal or a willful neglect to perform some duty imposed by *78the act. The statute evidently was not intended to punish the commissioners for positive acts done by them in violation of law, but for contumacy, in'refusing to obey the mandate of the law, and for willfully and unlawfully neglecting to do what was required by the plain terms and import of the statute. While the language of the provision cited, negatives the idea that it was intended .to authorize an appointment of new commissioners as a mere consequence of a wrongful act, it is quite manifest that it was not designed to embrace a ease where there was a mere breach of duty. Such an interpretation would be extending the statute by construction beyond what its language imports; and if such had been the intention, certainly it would have contained a provision to that effect.

I also think that there is no force in the position that the relators, by selling on credit, neglected and omitted to sell for cash, and therefore were guilty of a willful neglect to perform their duty. It is a sufficient answer to this proposition to say that the county judge has not found that the relators had an opportunity to sell for cash, and that they refused or neglected to avail themselves of such opportunity and sold upon credit. If the county judge had found that the commissioners had refused and willfully neglected to sell for cash, it may have materially altered the position of the relators; for it is not difficult to see that a willful refusal or neglect to sell for cash, when the interest of the tax-payers of the town demanded such sale, and when it would be far more advantageous than any other disposition or sale of the stock, might make out a violation of their official duty, within the meaning of the section referred to. Suppose the commissioners had been offered cash for the stock at its par value, and were certain of obtaining it, and had unlawfully refused the offer, and entered into a contract for a sale at less than par on credit with parties of doubtful pecuniary responsibility, so that it was clear that the taxpayers of the town would be seriously injured by the refusal to sell for cash and at par, can there be any doubt that they would be guilty of a willful neglect of duty ? I think not. And, under such circumstances, it would be the plain duty *79of tile county judge to declare their offices vacant, and to appoint their successors. As the county judge did not thus hold, his decision cannot be sustained upon any such ground.

If the view I have taken as to the construction to be placed upon the statute is sound, then it is of no importance to discuss the qnestion, whether the commissioners had a right to sell upon credit, and were bound to sell for cash and not less than par. It is not inappropriate to say, however, that I am strongly inclined to think that the discretion vested in the commissioners, under the sixth section of the act, relates to the time when, and the purchasers to whom they may sell, and that in the reasonable exercise of their discretion in this respect, they may select the time of sale, name the persons to whom they will make a sale, as well as the price, the sale being made for not less than par. The evident object of the provision as to a sale for cash and at par, was to protect the tax-payers of the town from the improvident, reckless, and perhaps corrupt acts of these officers, and to limit them in fixing the terms of sale, as is also abundantly manifest, by the exception incorporated in the same section which provides for a sale, at public auction, upon the written consent of a majority of the tax-payers of the town.

I am also of the opinion, that the county judge had authority to declare the offices of the commissioners vacant, and to appoint new officers in the proceeding before him, if a case had been made out within the provisions of the act. Although the statute prescribes no form of proceeding in the premises, except that proof of the fact of such violation of duty shall be made to the satisfaction of the county judge, it is quite evident that it was the intention of the legislature, that the proceeding should be of a summary character, and not technically formal. Otherwise, it might be a useless ceremony, and of no avail whatever. In the case at bar, due notice was given; both parties had a full opportunity to be heard; a full investigation was had, and there is no reason to doubt that the county judge had jurisdiction. The legislature have unquestionably, the power to provide for a summary removal *80of officers appointed under local and special enactments, and such authority has been frequently exercised. (See The People v. Platt, 19 How., 171; The People v. The Board of Metropolitan Police, 24 How., 481; People v. Bearfield, 35 Barb., 354.)

Although the proceedings before the county judge were regular, and within his jurisdiction, yet as he exceeded his authority in declaring the offices of the commissioners vacant, for a cause not provided for, and not within the spirit and meaning of the law, they must he reversed.

In a case like this, neither party is entitled to costs. (37 M. Y., 506.)

Order reversed.