Ex parte Strahl

16 Iowa 369
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 13, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 16 Iowa 369 (Ex parte Strahl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Strahl, 16 Iowa 369 (iowa 1864).

Opinion

Wright, Ch. J.

Petitioner was arrested and held in custody under a writ issued by W. H. Leas, as Mayor of the city of Des Moines, for an offence against the ordinances of said city. In his petition, he claims that said Leas is not the mayor of said city, that he was never elected as such mayor, and that he had no power or authority to issue said writ. The answer shows that said Leas was declared duly elected, that a certificate of election was issued in due form by the proper officer, that he took the oath and executed the bond required by la\y, entered upon the discharge of his duties, and was in the exercise of the same as such mayor, at the time of issuing said writ.

• To this answer a demurrer is interposed, claiming, in substance, that it does not show that said Leas was the mayor de jure, and that though an officer de facto, this would not authorize him to exercise the duties, issue the writ, and hold the petitioner in custody.

There is a clear distinction between a bold, unwarranted assumption of right to exercise the duties of an officer and their exercise under color of right. If A, without any pretense of an election or an appointment to an office, or without any claim of right, should issue a process and cause the arrest of an alleged offender, we would not hesitate to hold the restraint illegal and discharge the prisoner. But where it appears, as in this answer, that no other person was exercising or discharging the duties of the office that the incumbent had been declared duly elected, received his certificate of election, filed his bond, and entered upon the [371]*371discharge of his duties, and was in the exercise thereof, in issuing the writ for the arrest of the prisoner and detaining him, a very different question arises, and in such a case, the legality of the restraint, in our opinion, cannot be inquired into on habeas corpus.

The respondent, under such circumstances, holds the office under cobr of right, and though not an officer de jure, his right to hold it will not be inquired into in this proceeding, but a direct proceeding should be instituted to first determine the legality of the holding.

It is claimed in the petition that one Absalom Morris was elected to said office, so declared, and that he and not respondent is the real and actual mayor of said city. With this statement, it is but too manifest that the object of this proceeding in effect is to contest the right of Leas to said office, or to convert this writ into a contested election proceeding. That the investigation may stop short of an inquiry into all of the facts attending said election, whether the one or the other received a majority of the legal votes cast at the election, whether the canvassers erred in granting the certificate of election to respondent rather than his competitor, cannot affect the question; for, after all the purpose and object of this proceeding is the same, and such inquiry we do not feel authorized to make. If decided either way, no right would be settled between the real contestants. We can do no more than say that this prisoner is or is not illegally detained. The very nature and framework of the writ shows that this is its sole office, and that it cannot be converted into process under which the rights of parties to official position can be settled and determined. Our statutes provide other and more direct, and well understood and settled methods for determining such controversy.

None of the cases cited by the petitioner relate to a proceeding of this character, nor does any of them' hold [372]*372that the officer may not, in such a case, justify, when he is in the actual discharge of the duties of the office, under color of right, or an election or appointment, while the following cases clearly support the foregoing views, and warrant us in overruling the demurrer. Ex parte Walker, 3 B. Monr., 166; Wilcox v. South, 5 Wend., 235; Aulamier v. The Governor, 1 Texas, 653; Douglass v. Wicklie, 19 Conn., 489.

Friday, June 17. After the demurrer to the answer was overruled, for the reasons stated in the opinion of Wright, Ch. J., the petitioner filed a replication, in which he set out in substance that the certificate under which the respondent claimed to exercise the duties of the office of mayor was false and fraudulent, and alleged that Absalom Morris, and not the respondent, was the mayor of the city. The parties admitted that there was an election regularly held in the city of Des Moines for city officers in March, 1864, that Leas and Morris were, respectively, candidates for the office of mayor at such election; that returns were made and canvassed, as required by section 1131 of the Revision of 1860, showing in Morris’ favor a majority over Leas of five votes, and the result was entered of record; but the recorder or clerk did not deliver any certificate to Morris, being by the city council instructed to withhold the same. Leas gave notice of his intention to contest the election; and such proceedings were had before the city council (Morris all the time protesting against their jurisdiction to act as a contesting tribunal), that it was decided that Leas was elected by a majority of legal votes cast; and a certificate of election was issued to him by the recorder. He thereupon gave bond, and took the oath of office, and has ever since exercised the duties pertaining thereto. Soon after the canvass was made, showing Morris to have a majority; and before the contest was determined, Morris tendered to the council a sufficient bond, with a written oath of office. This bond was referred to the city solicitor by the council, who reported it to be in due form, but with a recommendation, to the effect that no proceedings should be taken in relation to the bond of either party, until the determination of the contest. It was never returned to Morris. Morris has never entered upon or exercised the duties of the office; nor was his right to do so ever recognized by the city council. The other facts appear in the opinion of Wright, Ch. J., and in the following opinion. The only question is, whether Colbert Strahl, the petitioner for the writ of habeas corpus, is entitled in law to be thereon discharged.

[372]*372Demurrer overruled.

M. D. McHenry and William, Phillips for the relator, contended: 1. That the general incorporation law conferred no power upon the city council to entertain a contest of an election of mayor. Bev., 1860, ch. 51; Ang. & A. Corp., § 325; 2 Kent’s Com., 298; chap. 25, Acts Extra Sess., 9 Gren. Assembly; 2. That if the certificate of the canvassers, appended to a statement of the result of the canvass, showed that a person other than the respondent, received a majority of the votes cast at the election, the illegality of any ballot cast could be determined only on quo warranto. Bev., 1860, §§ 3732-3739; The People, ex rel. Eastman, v. Seaman, 5 Denio, 409; The People, ex rel. Benton, v. Vail, 20 Wend., 12; The People, ex rel. Welch, jr., v. Ooolc, 4 Seld., 67; 3. The respondent must show that he is an officer de jure, when he is a party and seeks to justify as such. Blalce v. Sturtevant, 12 N. H., 567; 3 Scam. 111., 483; 23 Wend., 490; 5 Id., 235; 5 Hill, 168. If the council did not have authority, its action was void and did not give the respondent even color of authority. Riddle v.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Iowa 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-strahl-iowa-1864.