The relator’s material objections will be taken up in their order, as made.
1. It is said that the charter of the city confers no authority on the council to remove the mayor from office. Sec. 21 of the charter (ch. 124, Laws of 1891) provides as follows: “Every officer elected or appointed to any office, except watchmen, policemen and firemen, may be removed from such office by a vote of three fourths of all the members of *618the common council; but no such officer, except watchmen, policemen and firemen, shall be removed without cause, nor unless charges are preferred against him and an opportunity given him to be heard in his own defense. The common council shall have power to compel the attendance of witnesses and the production of papers when necessary for the purpose of such trial, and shall proceed within ten days to hear and determine the casé upon the merits thereof. The mayor may suspend any officer against whom charges have been preferred, until the disposition of the same.”
The mayor is an officer of the city, elected by the people by virtue of the provisions of the charter, and certainly the words “ every officer elected or appointed to any office ” are sufficiently comprehensive to include him. Doubtless there would be no contention made as to this point were it not for the final clause of the section, which gives the mayor the power of suspension of any officer -pending the hearing of charges against him. It is said that this clearly indicates that the mayor is not one of the officers included within the section, because it would be absurd to give him the power to suspend himself. The argument is not without a certain force, but, in view of the fact that the plain words of the section expressly include “ every ” city officer, we are disposed to regard the seeming inconsistency in the last clause as a careless or inaccurate expression, rather than a deliberate intent to exclude the office of mayor from the wholesome provisions of the statute. Such an intent could have been easily and plainly expressed without difficulty, and not be left to be spelled out by abstruse reasoning.
2. It is then argued that if the section includes the mayor it is unconstitutional —first, because it is a grant of judicial power and cannot be conferred on any body of men save “courts and justices of the peace;” and, second, because at least two of the aldermen were interested in the result, and hence the court is an unconstitutional court. There are *619certainly some decisions lending color to the view that the -amotion of an officer of a corporation is purely an exercise of judicial power. Dullam v. Willson, 53 Mich. 392; Tompert v. Lithgow, 1 Bush, 176. The better authority, however, is clearly to the effect that the power to remove officers for cause, though to be exercised in a judicial manner, is administrative, not judicial. It is a part of the power of the corporation which is very useful, in fact almost necessary, for the efficient performance of the corporate duties. State ex rel. Att'y Gen. v. Hawkins, 41 Ohio St. 98; Donahue v. Will Co. 100 Ill. 94; 25 Am. Law Rev. art. “ Removal of Public Officers,” pp. 206, 207; Throop, Pub. Off. §§ 345, 346. In this state the exercise of the power by similar bodies does not seem to have been questioned until now, though the cases have been quite numerous. State ex rel. Gill v. Common Council of Watertown, 9 Wis. 254; State ex rel. Kennedy v. McGarry, 21 Wis. 502; State ex rel. Willis v. Prince, 45 Wis. 610. An office is not regarded as property or as a vested right, and the legislature ivhich creates it may, in the absence of constitu7 tional restrictions, undoubtedly make such a provision as the one in question here for the removal of the incumbent, Throop, Pub. Off. § 345. This view.of the character of the power of amotion goes far towards disposing of a number of the objections made by the relator to the validity of the proceedings in question. . The common council, not being a court but merely an administrative body, is not subject to all the rules governing courts in. the transaction of business; and thus it undoubtedly is the law that the fact that one of the aldermen will discharge the duties of mayor in case of the removal of the mayor, and that another of the aldermen signed the charges upon which the mayor was tried, does not bar these aldermen from sitting. The legislature has power to designate the officers who shall possess and exercise the power of removal, and it has designated in this case the common council. It created the office, and it may pro*620vide for the removal of the officer; and it may undoubtedly provide for such removal by a body, one of whom will be called to exercise the duties of mayor in case of his removal. Nor is there any affidavit of prejudice provided for by the statute. Passion and prejudice frequently play an important part in such proceedings as those before us, but in the absence of constitutional or legislative restrictions they do not disqualify the members of the removing board from acting. Ita lex scripta est. Andrews v. King, 77 Me. 224.
3. It is argued that by the charter of the city the common council is composed of the mayor and board of aldermen, and that the aldermen alone could not act nor make a valid order of removal. There is some confusion in the charter as to the constitution of the common council. In one section it is said that the corporate authority of the city shall be vested in one principal officer, the mayor; in one board, which shall be known as “ the common council of Superior,” etc.; thus clearly recognizing the common council as a separate and distinct body. In another section it is said: “ The mayor and aldermen shall constitute the common council.” In many other places, however, in the charter, the distinct character of the board of aldermen as constituting the common council is clearly recognized. The discussion of the subject, however, is hot essential. In sitting under the provisions of sec. 21 there can be no doubt that the common council there referred to is composed of the aldermen alone, for manifestly the mayor could not be one of the board which was to decide his own case. This principle is not in need of authority to support it. When the charges were presented against the mayor, and the council voted to consider them, it was his manifest duty to withdraw as the presiding officer; and the council did entirely right when they placed the president of the council in the chair, and disregarded thé mayor’s ruling and declaration of adjournment on the evening of July 6th. No other course was proper. *621The decisions holding that where the power of removal is vested in two bodies both must join in the proceedings, have no application here. There are not two bodies here. The most that can be said here is that the mayor is a member of the removing body. If he is incapacitated from acting, the remainder of the board may unquestionably act.
4. A number of objections are made to the regularity of the proceedings, which will be considered briefly. In the discussion so far it has been, established that the removal of the mayor was the exercise of administrative and not judicial power. It clearly follows from this consideration that the aldermen, in passing on the question of removal, are not acting as judges, but in their capacity as aldermen. The objection, therefore, that the aldermen should have taken a special oath to try the charges against the relator is not tenable, because the oath taken by them as aldermen covered all their administrative duties, of which this is one. hi or can it be successfully objected that the witnesses were not sworn. They were in fact sworn by the chairman of the committee of the whole, which was sitting under authority of the council for the purpose of taking the evidence upon the charges against the mayor. ¥e regard this as a committee appointed by the council to investigate the official conduct of the mayor, and consequently we think the witnesses were duly sworn under sec. 4080, and sec. 4053, E. S.
Examination of the return convinces us that there is no substantial error or irregularity affecting justice in the proceeding resulting in the order of removal in this case. All the testimony was heard in committee of the whole, the committee adjourning from day to day as it became necessary. The mayor did not, at first, participate in the hearing, but after several days came in, and, with his counsel, took part in the proceedings, examined witnesses, and was himself examined. After all the testimony was in, it was read at length to the council, and argued at length, and not until then was *622final action taken. This was not a common-law trial,-but an investigation. While the mayor had a right to insist that he have a fair hearing, and that the substance of the rules governing trials at law should be preserved, he cannot require that the same precision and formality be observed which ai’e required in criminal trials at law. These principles govern the charges made, as well as the procedure. The charge does not need to be drawn with the accuracy of an indictment; it is sufficient if the accused be furnished with the substance of the charge against him. Throop, Pub. Off. § 380; 25 Am. Law Rev. art. “ Removal of Public Officers,” by Berryman, pp. 226, 227. In view of this general principle, we regard the charge upon which the mayor was removed as sufficiently definite and certain for the purposes of the hearing.
Examination of the evidence also amply justifies the finding of the council. The mayor was, by the charter, head of the fire and police departments, with the power of appointment and removal. It is clearly shown that the chiefs of these two departments, with the approval of the mayor, went through their respective departments in May and June, soliciting the firemen and policemen to make contributions to a fund to reimburse the mayor for his campaign expenses, and they collected large sums, which were turned over to the mayor. Some of the men say they paid it voluntarily, and some say they paid it because they thought it would help them keep their positions. The mayor admits the receipt of the money, but says he only took it after learning that there had been no compulsion used and that the men gave it voluntarily and not to secure their positions. Granting the honest intention of the mayor, it is apparent that he erred grievously. It needs no argument or authority to show that the receipt of this money, wrung from city employees who were subject to the mayor’s power of removal at any moment, was a serious offense against his oath and the duties of his office. The fact (if fact it be) that the *623mayor himself cannot appreciate or understand that there is anything reprehensible in his action, simply demonstrates his unfitness for the office to which he was elected.
Upon the whole case it seems to us that substantial justice has been done, and that the order of the common council removing the relator from office must be affirmed.
By the Court.— The proceedings and order of removal of the relator from his office as mayor of the city of Superior are affirmed.