Darling v. Brunson
Darling v. Brunson
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
In 1912 the respondent, J. C. Brunson, was secretary of the board of health of the city of Florence, and the respondent, A. J. Hoole, was health officer of the chy. The petitioner, O. O. Darling, in his separate proceedings against the respondents, alleges that he was elected, by the board of health, health officer, on 16th July, *209 1913. and secretary of -the board of health on 13th August, 1913, and that the respondents refuse to surrender to him the books, papers and other equipments of the office of secretary and health officer. Under these allegations, a rule to show cause was issued against the respondents, and they first interposed demurrers on the ground that the proceeding was one to try title to office, and that such an issue could not be tried by a rule tO' show cause, but only by summons and complaint.
*210 2 *209 Respondents’ contention that the board of health could not elect or remove its secretary and the health officer of the city without the approval of the city council is clearly unten *210 able. Sections 1591 and 1592 of the Code of 1912, which provide for the election of boards of health and require them to-. elect a secretar}'- and health officer, apply to “every incorporated city, town or village in the State.” This must be considered to include the city of Florence, and the provisions of the special charter of the city with respect to the powers of the board of health must yield to this later statute.
On these points we agree with the Circuit Judge.
As the petitioner could not hold two- offices, the law interprets his act of accepting- the second office as an abandonment of the first. Throop on Public Offices, sec. 31; Mechen on Public Offices, sec. 429; Bishop v. State, 149 Ind. 223, 48 N. E. 1038; 63 Am. St. R. 279; 39 L. R. A. 278; State v. Thompson, 122 N. C. 493, 29 S. E. 720; State v. Mason, 61 Ohio 513, 56 N. E. 468. It does not clearly appear from the pleadings which was the last office accepted by the petitioner, but that fact, if not admitted, may be readily ascertained.
It is, therefore, adjudged that the cause be remanded to the Circuit Court to ascertain whether the petitioner last accepted the office of secretary or health officer, that the petition be granted as to the office last accepted and denied as to' the office first accepted, and that the judgment of the Circuit Court be modified accordingly.
Modified.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Darling v. Brunson. Darling v. Hoole.
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Office — Rule to Show Cause. — Where serious issues of fact are involved in an issue of title to office, it should not be tried under rule to show cause under section 472 of Code, but in a regular action under section 462. When the facts are not in dispute such title may be tried under rule. 2. Ibid. — The boakd of health of a city can elect or remove its secretary and health officer without the approval of the city council. 3. Ibid. — The same person cannot hold' the office of secretary of a municipal board of health and: the office of health officer of the same city at the same time. When such person has accepted the two offices, the one first accepted is deemed abandoned.