Boring v. Griffith

48 Tenn. 456
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 48 Tenn. 456 (Boring v. Griffith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boring v. Griffith, 48 Tenn. 456 (Tenn. 1870).

Opinion

McFarland, S. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was a proceeding instituted in the Circuit Court of Washington county, in which the plaintiff attempted to contest the defendant’s right to the office of Sheriff of that county. The election was held on the 7th day of March, 1868. On the 25th of the same month, the plaintiff caused a notice to be served, upon the defendant, that, on the 4th Monday of June, 1868, he would contest his election as Sheriff before the Circuit Court of Washington county, then sitting; and there appears in the record a similar notice directed to the County Court of said county. On the 22d of June, the plaintiff filed in the Clerk’s office of said Court, his petition, duly sworn to, in which he asks that the contest be made on the next day, being the second day of the term. The plaintiff appeared by attorney and moved the Court for a trial of the cause; and thereupon, by consent of the parties, it was ordered that the cause be continued until [458]*458Friday next ensuing. On that day the defendant, by attorney, appeared, and moved the Court to dismiss the proceedings. This motion, at a subsequent day, was overruled. A demurrer to the petition was then filed, to which there was a joinder. This demurrer does not make any question as to the sufficiency of the causes of the contest, but is merely to the jurisdiction of the Court, and as to the manner of instituting the proceeding. Upen argument, the Court sustained the demurrer, refused a hearing, and dismissed the cause, and gave judgment against the plaintiff for costs, from which he has appealed to this Court.

Section 889 of the Code, provides as follows: “The Circuit- Court hears and determines all contests of the election of Sheriffs, Clerks of the Circuit, Criminal or other Courts, whose Clerks are elected by the people, except Clerks of the County Courts.” This is all that is to be found upon the subject. As to the manner in which this proceeding is to be instituted and conducted in the Circuit Court, no provision is made.

The same article of the Code designates the several tribunals whose province it is to hear and determine the cases of the contested elections of Chancellors, Supreme Judges, and other Judicial officers, and of Attorneys-General. Article 2 of the same chapter provides for the manner in which the election of Justices of the Peace shall be conducted, and article 3 specifies the mode of procedure in the cases of Judges and District Attorneys, which requires a sworn statement of the ground of contest to be presented to the Chancellor within twenty days after the election, and the Chancellor is then required [459]*459to fix a day for the trial. But no provision is made as to the manner in which cases of contest before the Circuit Court are to be conducted.

Various questions are raised by the demurrer of the defendant; and 1st: That at that time, the jurisdiction to try the contest had been transferred to the Criminal Court, established by the act of 1867. The fifth section of the act provides that the Criminal Court thus established shall have “exclusive jurisdiction of all cases in which the State is a party, or which, by the laws now in force, require the services of an Attorney-General.” Acts of 1867-8, c. 90, p. 375.

This contest is not, in any sense, a criminal proceeding, but a contest between two private individuals, as to the right to exercise the functions and enjoy the emoluments of the office. This right which the party claims to hold in the office, is defined to be an incorporeal right, and the party is attempting to enforce his right by a civil proceeding. Nor is it a case where the services of an Attorney-General are required. The provisions of the Code before referred to, in which the mode of the procedure is defined in the cases of contest as to the offices of Judge, Attorney-General, Chancellor, Ac., make no provision for notice to . the Attorney-General. Nor ■ is it, in any ease, made the duty of the Attorney-General to attend and take any part in the contest; and these contests have been often tried before the Courts without the State being in any manner represented. In this respect, the proceeding differs materially from the Common' Law proceeding of quo warranto. See Code, 900-906; Wade v. Murry, 2 Sneed, 50; Dodd v. [460]*460Weaver, 2 Sneed, 670; Marshall v. Kerns, 2 Swan, 68; McCraw v. Harralson, 4 Col., 34. We are, therefore, of opinion that the Circuit Court of Washington had jurisdiction of the case.

' The next objection is, that the proceeding was not commenced within the time prescribed by law, and particularly that it was , not commened within twenty days from the election. It will be seen that the Code provides that .in the case of Judges and District Attorneys, a sworn statement of the ground of contest shall be presented to the Chancellor within twenty days. This does not apply to a case of this sort, by its express terms or by analogy; for in cases provided for in that article of the Code, the Chancellor, not the Court, is made the trier of the contest, and it may be tried before him at any time; and the reasons that induced the provision in the one case do not necessarily exist in the other. It will be found that there is no time limited within which the contest, in the case of Sheriffs, shall begin. If the right exists, and the remedy is given, and no limit fixed, as a general proposition, the right may be prosecuted at any time. The action can not be limited by presumption, intendment or analogy. Ang. on Lim., 485. Whether it was the intention of the Legislature to provide that these contests might be commenced at any time during the term of office, may be doubted.

There are strong reasons to suppose that the Legislature intended to provide a mode of trying the question, as to who was duly elected, and that, as far as practicable, these contests should be settled before the successful candidate is commissioned or inducted into office. [461]*461But it is not necessary to determine this question, any further than it is presented in this case. It is clear that the June Term, 1868, of the Circuit Court of Washington county, was the earliest time at which the contest could be tried, this being the first term of the court after the election, and no other tribunal having jurisdiction; and the contestant would necessarily have the right to have the contest tried, notwithstanding his opponent may in the mean time, have been inducted into office.

The question, however, still remains, whether or not the contestant should commence his proceeding in said court in any particular time, and what is necessary to constitute the commencement of the proceeding, or, in other words, how the proceeding shall be commenced?

The section 889, of the Code, before referred to, simply provides that the Circuit Court has jurisdiction of the case. The question is, how this jurisdiction shall be exercised. As a general proposition, “whenever the provision of a statute is general, everything necessary to make such provision effectual must be supplied by the Common Law.” 4 Bacon’s Abr., 634.

What provisions of the common law have we to aid us in this question?

We have no assistance from the common law proceeding .of a quo warranto, first, because the law upon this subject is not in force in this State. State v. Lusk, M. & Y., 287, and Attorney-General v. Leaf, 9 Hum., 753.

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Bluebook (online)
48 Tenn. 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boring-v-griffith-tenn-1870.