Baker v. Nichols

72 So. 1, 111 Miss. 673
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 72 So. 1 (Baker v. Nichols) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Nichols, 72 So. 1, 111 Miss. 673 (Mich. 1916).

Opinion

Stevens, J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in equity instituted by apellant, as complainant in the court below, against E. S. Nichols, Mrs. Anna Eliza Harris, and W. H. Harris, appellees herein, for a discovery, accounting and decree for the perquisites and emoluments of the office of sheriff of De Soto county. The record discloses that on November 25, 1912, W. P. Harris, the lawful sheriff of De Soto county, died leaving the office in charge of appellee, E. S. Nichols, the acting deputy sheriff. On November 27th the governor of the state, acting under section 103 of the Constitution, appointed German Baker, the appellant, as sheriff to succeed W. P. Har[675]*675ris, deceased, and to fill the vacancy in the office until an election could be held. Apellant qualified by taking the oath and executing a bond which was duly aproved by the proper authority, and presented himself at the sheriff’s office to take charge of the books and to perform the duties of the office. Mr. Nichols,, the deputy, refused, however, to turn over the office or any of the books and records to the governor’s appointee, asserted that he, as a regular deputy, under section 3487 of the Code, had a vested right to hold the office until an election could be held, and declined to recognize the appointment or authority of appellant. On January 2, 1913, an-election was held to fill the vacancy, and at this election Mr. Nichols received a majority of the votes east and the governor issued to him a commission. On January 31st quo warranto proceedings on the relation of appellant were instituted against Mr. , Nichols, charging, among other things, that the latter was not a qualified voter and therefore was disqualified to hold the office. From a judgment of the circuit court sustaining a demurrer to the petition in quo warrcmto, apepllant prosecuted an appeal to the supreme court and secured a reversal of said judgment as disclosed by the reported case of State ex rel. German Baker v. E. S. Nichols, 106 Miss. 419, 63 So. 1025. In February 1914, Mr. Nichols, the respondent in the quo warrcmto proceedings, filed a plea to the petition averring that he was in deed and in fact a qualified' elector and was, under section 3487 of -the Code authorized to serve as the lawful deputy and to discharge all the duties of the office of sheriff. Thereafter the district attorney and German Baker, the relator, dismissed the petition in quo warrcmto without prejudice to any of the rights of Mr. Baker. In November, 1914, Mr. Baker exhibited the bill of complaint in the present cause, setting out all the foregoing proceedings except the institution of the quo ivarranto proceedings, asserted his right to the [676]*676office, charged that Mr. Nichols and the sureties on his bond had been and were wrongfully excluding him from the office, were appropriating the profits thereof, and prayed for an acounting and a decree for the fees, commissions, emoluments, and benefits which Mr. Nichols had received from the office from December 2, 1912, to the date of said suit. The bill also charged that Mrs. A. E. Harris, the widow of W. P. Harris, deceased, and W. PI. Harris, his son, were co-operating with Mr. Nichols in receiving and appropriating the fees and commissions of the office, charged that they were administrators by their own wrong of the estate of W. P. Harris, deceased, and should be made to account for the fees, commissions, and benefits received by them. There is also a prayer in the bill that the books, papers, and paraphernalia of the office be surrendered and delivered over to the complainant, and that Mr. Nichols should be enjoined and restrained from holding the said office, as well as the books and papers thereof, and that he should be required to surrender and deliver the same over to the complainant. A demurrer was interposed to the bill and sustained by the court. Thereupon complainant by leave of the court amended the original bill by interlining in red ink the following averment:

“That the complainant, German Baker, has established bis right and title to the office of sheriff and tax collector of De Soto county, Mississippi, by quo warranto proceedings in circuit court of said county and has been adjudged the de jure sheriff and tax collector of said county since December 2, 1912, and is now the de jure sheriff and tax collector of said county.”

The defendant then interposed a special plea- to that part of the amended bill set out in red ink, denying that appellant was the lawful sheriff and tax collector, denying that his title to the office had been adjudicated by the circuit court, and offered to verify the [677]*677facts set out in the plea by the record and proceedings in the case of State ex rel. German Baker v. E. S. Nichols. Issue was taken, in short; on the facts and averments of the special plea, and the cause proceeded to trial on the bill as amended and the special plea. The only evidence introduced was the entire record of the proceedings in quo warranto. The chancellor was of the opinion, and so announced in the final decree, that the chancery court was without jurisdiction to grant the relief prayed for and for that reason dismissed the bill.

About the only question presented for our decision is whether equity has jurisdiction, or, to state the point differently, whether appellant can invoke the aid of chancery court for a discovery and decree for fees and commissions without first having established his right or title to the office by judgment in a quo warranto proceeding. It is established by the record that appellant, after having instituted the proper proceeding to establish title to the office and after winning the preliminary contest over the pleadings in that case, dismissed his suit without prejudice, and by so doing he, of course, placed himself in the same attitude he would be in had no quo warranto proceeding been filed at all. It may be conceded, therefore, that he has not established his title to the office by the appropriate remedy in such cases. It. is our conclusion, however,' and we so hold, that the bill in this case is not one primarily to recover the office or to establish title to the office of sheriff of De Soto county, but is primarily and essentially a suit for an accounting and recovery of the fees, commissions, and benefits which the bill charges have been received by the defendants unlawfully and which, according to the contention of appellant, Mr. Baker is entitled to recover. If the governor, upon the death of the regular sheriff, is authorized to name a successor, to fill the vacancy until an election could be [678]*678held, then Mr:. Baker was a de jure officer and certainly the lawful sheriff of De Soto county until an election was held and a eomission was issued to the party elected. The hill avers that Mr. Baker duly qualified and did all that he could to take charge of the office, and that possession was denied him through the wrong of Mr. Nichols. These facts are admitted by the demurrer. This is a personal action between the parties hereto and a suit whereof equity has original jurisdiction. It is a suit for an accounting.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Parks v. Tucei
166 So. 370 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1936)
Burnett v. Bass
120 So. 456 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
72 So. 1, 111 Miss. 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-nichols-miss-1916.