Fausler v. Parsons

Moore, Judge.

The Plaintiff, on the first day of January 1867, sued out o f the clerk’s office of the Circuit Court of Tucker county, a summons against the Defendants to answer him of a plea of trespass on the case. The cause having been remanded to rules with leave to file an amended declaration, the Plaintiff on the first Monday in February 1868, at rules, filed his amended declaration. On the third day of March 1869, in term of Court, the Defendants demurred generally to the amended declaration, and to each count thereof. Demurrer was sustained by the Court, and the Plaintiff has appealed from that judgment.

The question submitted by argument in support of the demurrer is, “Whether judicial officers, or officers performing judicial duties and acts, are liable to be sued1 for such acts.”

The solution of the question depends on the kind of officers and their jurisdiction.

In the case of Bradley vs. Fisher, 13 Wallace, 335, it was held that judges of courts of record of superior or general jurisdiction, are not liable to civil actions for their j udicial acts, even when such acts are in excess of their jurisdiction, and are alleged to have been done maliciously or corruptly. In that case, Mr. Justice Field, in delivering the opinion of the court, (p. 354,) said; “The exemption of judges of the superior courts of record from liability to civil suit for their judicial acts ex*489isting when there is jurisdiction of the subject matter, though irregularity and error attend the exercise of the jurisdiction, the exemption cannot be affected by any consideration of the motives with which the acts are done. The allegation of malicious or corrupt motives, could always be made, and if the motives could be inquired into judges would bo subjected to the same vexatious litigation upon such allegations, whether the motives had or had not any real existence. Against the consequences of their erroneous or irregular action, from whatever motives proceeding, the law has provided for private parties numerous remedies, and to those remedies they must, in such cases, resort. But for malice or corruption in their action whilst exercising their judicial functions within the general scope of their jurisdiction, the judges of these courts can only be reached by public prosecution in the form of impeachment, or in such other form as may be sj>ecially prescribed.”

Judge Cooley, with his usual correctness in eliminating authorities, in his most excellent work on Constitutional Limitations, p. 405, et seq. and notes, says; “Some courts are of general jurisdiction, by which is meant that their authority extends to a great variety of matters ; while others are only of special and limited jurisdiction, by which it is understood that they have authority extending only to certain special cases. The want of jurisdiction is equally fatal in the proceedings of each; but different rules prevail in showing it. It is not to be assumed that a court of general jurisdiction has in any case proceeded to adjudge upon matters over which it had no authority; and its jurisdiction, is to be presumed, whether there are recitals in its records to show it or not. On the other hand, no such intendment is made in favor of the judgment of a court of limited jurisdiction, but the recitals contained in the minutes of proceedings must be sufficient to show that the case was one which *490the law permitted the court to take cognizance of, and that the parties were subjected to its jurisdiction by proper process.”

“There is also another difference between these two classes of tribunals in this, that the jurisdiction of the one may be disproved under circumstances where it would not be allowed in the case of the other. A record is not commonly suffered to bo contradicted by parol evidence ; but wherever a fact showing want of jurisdiction in a court of general jurisdiction can be proved without contradicting its recitals, it is allowable to do .so, and thus defeat its effect. But in the case of a court of special and limited authority, it is permitted to go still further, and to show a want of jurisdiction even in opposition to the recitals contained in the record.”

“JSTo person is liable in a civil action for what he has done as a judge, while acting within the limits of his jurisdiction; Burnham vs. Stevens, 33 N. H., 247. But it is to be further remarked, that, if persons having a special or limited judicial authority, do any act beyond the scope of their authority, they make themselves trespassers.” Blood vs. Sayre, 17 Verm., 609. * * *

“The general rule of law, as to actions of trespass .against persons having a limited authority, is plain and ■clear. If they do any act beyond the limit of their authority, they thereby subject themselves to an action of trespass; but if the act done be within the limit of their authority, although it may be done through an erroneous or mistaken judgment, they are not thereby liable to such an action. Doswell vs. Impey, 1 B. & C., 169; acc. Miller vs. Seare, 2 W. Bl., 1141.” Hilliard on Torts, 186.

' And this is upon the principle, that judicial protection extends to all judicial tribunals, and is necessary to promote the independence and firmness of the judiciary which must guard and protect, within due bounds, the life, liberty and property of the citizen, as also the rights of the State. In the language of Chief Justice Kent, *491•“No man can see tbe disastrous consequences of a prece■dent in favor of such a suit. Whenever we subject the ■established courts oí the land to the degradation of private prosecution, we subdue their independence and destroy their authority. Instead of being venerable before the public, they become contemptible ; and we thereby ■embolden the licentious to trample upon every thing sacred in society, and to overturn those institutions which have hitherto been deemed the best guardians of civil liberty.”

It seems, therefore, settled that where the subject matter and the person are within the jurisdiction of the courts, the judge, whether of a superior or inferior court, is not subject to a civil action for any matter done by him in the exercise of his judicial functions. “He is not bound, at the peril of an action for damages, or personal controversy, to decide right, in matter either of law or fact; but to decide according to his own convictions of right, of which his recorded judgment is the test, and must be taken to be conclusive evidence. Such of necessity, is the nature of the trust assumed by all on whom judicial power, in greater or lesser measure, is conferred. This trust is fulfilled when he honestly decides according to the conclusions of his own mind in a given case, •although there may be great conflict of evidence, great doubts of the law, and when another mind might honestly come to a different conclusion, * * * * * *. Now it is manifest that to every controversy there are two sides, and that a decision in favor of one must be against another. And this may extend to every interest which men hold most dear; to property, reputation and liberty, •civil and social; to political and religious privileges ; to all that makes life desirable, and to life itself. If an action might be brought against the judge by a party feeling himself aggrieved, the judge would be compelled to put in issue facts in which he _has no interest, and the ■case must be tried before some other judge, who, in his turn, might be held amenable to the losing party, and so *492on indefinitely. If it be said, that it may be conceded that the action will not lie unless in acaso where a judge has acted partially or corruptly, the answer is, that the losing party may always aver that the judge has acted partially or corruptly, and may offer testimony of bystanders or others to prove it; and these proofs are addressed to the Court and jury, before whom the judge is called to defend himself, and the result is made to depend not upon his own original conviction, the conclusion of his own mind in the decision of the original case, as by the theory of jurisprudence it ought to do, but upon the conclusions of other minds, under the influence of other and different considerations.” 2 Hilliard on Torts pp. 171, 172. If it is. a judicial act, done within his jurisdiction, he should not be called upon to answer for it elsewhere in a civil action ; and, “these rules extend as well to a justice of the peace as to any other judicial officer, acting within his jurisdiction, in a judicial capacity.” 2 Hilliard on Torts, p. 180 and note; and extends to jurors, because they act judicially in judging the facts; as held by the Court of K. B. in the case of Groenvelt vs. Burwell, 12 Mod. 386, 1 Salk. 396 and 1 Ld. Raym. 459, cited in opinion of Kent in case of Yates vs. Lansing.

Chief Justice Duvall, in delivering the opinion of the Court in Chrisman vs. Bruce 1 Duvall’s Ky. R. 66, says; “The courts of Massachusetts, and perhaps of some of the other States, have adhered to the doctrine of the English, cases, which dedide that an action is maintainable against officers who preside at an election for refusing the vote of a qualified voter, even though they may have exercised an honest and fair judgment on the question before them.” But, the learned judge adds, that the Court of Appe.als of Kentucky, “has, however, adopted a more equitable and consistent rule, and which more adequately protects such officers in the faithful discharge of their duties. In passing upon the qualifications of a person oflering to vote, the judge of the election acts judicially, and is not unfrequently called upon to determine legal *493questions of great difficulty and doubt. To bold him responsible, in such cases, for a mere error of judgment by which a citizen may have been illegally deprived of his right to vote, would be unjust in principle and unwise in policy ; for the natural result would be to deter honest and capable men for accepting an office attended with such hazards. Hence, in the case Morgan vs. Dudley 18 B Mon., 711, the rule was distinctly announced and acted upon : That, as every human tribunal was liable to err, no judge, even of the most inferior one, should be held responsible for a more error of judgment committed in the regular discharge of his official duties, and that, although the judge of an election may err in determining upon the legality of a vote offered to be given, and thus reject a legally qualified voter, yet if the decision was the result of amere error of judgment, and was not induced by improper motives, no action can be main-taimed on account of such erroneous decision.”

“But this doctrine, whilst it thus affords protection to the officer in the honest discharge of official duty, does not deny redress to the citizen, who has been wilfully and knowingly deprived of his right to vote. It is an invaluable right. As was said by Lord Holt in a celebrated case, “a right that a man has to give his vote at the election of a person to represent him in Parliament^ there to concur in the making of laws which are to bind his liberty and property, is a most transcendent thing.” Ashley vs. White, 2 Raym. 950. Here, it is the fundamental right; all other rights, civil and political, depend on the free exercise of this one, and any material impairment of it is, to that extent, a subversion of our political system. Hence the care with which any invasion of this right, from every possible source, has been guarded against.”

It is true there are a niimber of authorities sanctioning civil actions against election officers and selectment, where they have acted corruptly, or knowingly and unlawfully refused to register a voter, or receive his vote, *494but in nearly all the cases they have been regulated by-statute or constitution ; and the decision in such cases, turned upon that fact. The most of the cases cited in 2 Rob. (New) Practice, 575, 576, were of that class; so was the case of Gordon vs. Farrar et als, 2 Doug. Mich. N. p. 411. Other cases were where they acted without jurisdiction, and thus became usurpers and trespassers.

We now recur to the question before us, did the Defendants act in a judicial capacity in erasing the name of Plaintiff from the register of voters ?

It was made the duty ofthe County Board of Registration, by Chap. 87, sec. 8, acts 1866, to examine the Beg-istrar’s book ; section also declared; “And if they are satisfied that any person has been registered who has been guilty of any of the acts enumerated in the affidavit contained in the third section of this act, or is in any way disqualified to vote, under the provisions thereof, it shall be the duty of the said board, .upon proof of any such act or disqualification, to exclude the name of such person from the list of registered voters. But the party whose name is proposed to be excluded, shall have due notice of the time and place of taking the evidence to prove his disqualification, which evidence he shall have the right to rebut, and shall have his name restored to such list if improperly stricken therefrom.”

There certainly can be no question that the Defendants acting under that section, and passing upon the right of a party to be registered or not, acted judicially; and if they acted within their jurisdiction, as required by the statute, they are not amenable to the Plaintiff in a civil action; But if they exceeded their jurisdiction and did not comply with the requisitions of the statute,, but erased the name of the Plaintiff from the register of voters, without giving him due notice of the time and place of taking the evidence &c., or refused him the right to rebut the evidence, it would have been a usurpation of authority, and such a violation of law as to have made them trespassers, and amenable in an action, by *495the Plaintiff, for damages; because their authority was prescribed and limited by the act of the Legislature, and they had no right to exceed that limit, but acted without jurisdiction, and

Therefore, I am brought to the conclusion, that the allegations in the declaration are not sufficient in law. The mere allegations of '“wilfully, unlawfully, knowingly, maliciously and corruptly, and without sufficient cause, exclude and erase the oíame of the Plaintiff, &c.,” do not make the declaration good, but the declaration must show by allegation how the Defendants acted “wilfully,” “unlawfully,” “corruptly” &c. Did they erase his name without giving him the notice required ? Did they erase it without complying with the requirements of the statute ? Did they act without jurisdiction ? If so, the declaration should so allege, otherwise the Court will presume they acted within their juo-isdiction and judicially, and will refuse to take jurisdiction of a case against them for mere error of judgment.

The demurrer was properly sustained.

HaymoND, President, and HoffmaN and Paull, Judges, concur in the foregoing opinion.