Buckman v. State ex rel. Spencer

34 Fla. 48
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 34 Fla. 48 (Buckman v. State ex rel. Spencer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buckman v. State ex rel. Spencer, 34 Fla. 48 (Fla. 1894).

Opinion

Mabry, J.:

An information in the nature of a quo warranto was' filed in the Circuit Court for Volusia county in the name of the State of Florida, on the relation of appellee, upon the refusal of the Attorney-Gfeneral to .institute the proceeding on such relation, for the purpose of testing the right of appellant to hold the office of mayor of the town of Daytona, in this State. The information alleges, among other things, in substance, that appellee and appellant were the only candidates for said office at a regular election of municipal officers, for said town held on the 24th day of July, A. D. 1889,. and' that appellee'was duly elected by a majority of the electors of said municipality as mayor, but that the judges and inspectors of said election, or a majority of them, fraudulently canvassed the votes cast and wrongfully declared appellant elected, and that he took the oath of office, and was then wrongfully exercising the franchises thereof.

The proceedings in the Circuit Court terminated in a judgment that appellant be ousted from the office of mayor of said town, and that appellee be inducted therein.

[50]*50The pleadings in this case are similar in many respects to those in the case of the State ex rel. Smith vs. Anderson, 26 Fla., 240, 8 South. Rep., 1, both cases growing out of the same election. The respondent in the Circuit Court, appellant here, filed a motion to -quash, and also demurred to the information, and both being overruled, pleas were filed, to which a demurrer was sustained. The pleas were amended, and upon the issues of fact made on them the trial was had that resulted in the judgment mentioned.

The first two errors assigned are the rulings of the •court on the motion to quash, and the demurrer to the information. In reference to these assignments of error counsel for appellant says: “But as the court has virtually passed on the matter raised by them lately in a similar proceeding, these two grounds of error are therefore not now urged, except as such matters differ from the case referred to, and are hereafter specially set up.” It is then urged, first, that the court erred .in overruling the plea of non usurpamt which was filed by respondent. The contention under this head being that while such a plea would not be good as .against the people, where the Attorney-General institutes the proceedings, the same rule does not obtain when a private individual comes in on his own relation upon the refusal of such officer to commence -the suit. This point was settled in the case mentioned — State ex rel. vs. Anderson. Where the suit is instituted on the relation of a private individual, and .a prima facie right to the office is shown, the respondent must show by what right he holds. The relator .having shown a right to contest for the office, and to -call upon the respondent to show by what authority, <.-guo warranto, he exercises the functions thereof, and .an issue being made up to try such right between the [51]*51parties, the fact that the relator may be found not entitled to the office, will not authorize the respondent to hold it unless he is entitled to it. Upon such an issue the statute provides that no person shall be adjudged entitled to hold the office then in question except upon full proof of his title to it. As decided in the case referred to, the plea of non usiorpavit by the respondent is not proper, and the court did not err in overruling it.

It is further insisted under the assignments of error mentioned that the court erred in overrruling respondent’s third original plea. It is not necessary to set out all the allegations of this plea, as the only objections to it urged here may be clearly stated without such recital. The information alleges that the town of Daytona was a municipal corporation duly incorporated under the laws of the State of Florida, and was such corporation on the day of the election therein mentioned; and that said election was ordered and held in pursuance of an ordinance duly passed by said municipality in May, 1884; and that the provisions of another ordinance passed by said town on the 22nd day of July, 1889, two days before said election was held, were enforced by the inspectors of the election up to the closing of the polls. In the second plea to the information it is alleged that the ordinance of the 22nd of July, 1889, was inoperative at the date of the election because it was passed two days prior thereto, and had not been properly promulgated. The third plea sets out the provision of the ordinance passed in 1884, pre- . scribing that the inspectors of elections in said town . shall proceed substantially as the State laws shall direct, and after reciting what was the State regulation ..as to the ballot to be used at a general election, it is further alleged that said election was held in pursu[52]*52anee of the act under which said town was incorporated, the said ordinance passed in 1884, and the said State regulation as to the ballot to be used. Also that on final canvass of the votes cast at said election by the inspectors, respondent was found by them to be duly and legally elected to the office of mayor of said town, giving the votes cast for both parties, and upon the completion of said canvass the inspectors duly certified the result of the election to the mayor of said town, who, with the aldermen thereof, in regular session assembled for that purpose, and in the presence of relator, who made no protest or objection thereto, received the returns of said election, and by resolution adopted the same as the only valid result of said election. It is also alleged that the respondent then took the oath of office as said mayor, and was lawfully exercising the functions thereof.

It will be seen by an examination of- the case already referred to (State ex rel. vs. Anderson), that the validity of the ordinance passed on the 22nd day of July, 1889, so far as shown by the record, was passed upon and held to be valid. The ordinance took effect from the date of its passage and approval.

The points argued by counsel under the third plea are “that the matter was res adjudícala, having been acted upon by the council, a body empowered by the statute to judge of the qualifications and election returns of its own members,” and that the plea set up a full defense to the relator’s claims for the reason according to the authorities cited on this point, that the jurisdiction over such matters is vested exclusively in the town council. The fact that relator was present when the return of the inspectors was received by the council, and made no protest thereto, was not sufficient to estop him from resorting to the courts for the [53]*53redress of such, rights growing out of the election as he may have had. In reference to the grant of power by the general law incorporating cities and towns in this State to the council to judge of the election returns and qualifications of its own members having the effect to deprive the courts of jurisdiction over such matters, it is said in State tx rel. vs. Anderson that ‘ ‘the better authority, as we think, and it seems, the weight of it, is against the proposition that the above grant to the council ousts, of itself, the jurisdiction of this court to enquire, upon information in the nature of quo warranto, into the defendant’s title.” But we fail to find any grant at all to the council to judge of the election of the mayor, or to entertain any contest over the title to this office.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Fla. 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckman-v-state-ex-rel-spencer-fla-1894.