Longshore v. State Ex Rel. Kroell

76 So. 33, 200 Ala. 267, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 408
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 7, 1917
Docket7 Div. 873.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 76 So. 33 (Longshore v. State Ex Rel. Kroell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Longshore v. State Ex Rel. Kroell, 76 So. 33, 200 Ala. 267, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 408 (Ala. 1917).

Opinion

SOMERVILLE, J.

The state of Alabama, on the relation of P. J. Kroell, files its petition in a quo warranto proceeding calling upon the respondent, A. P. Longshore, to show by what authority he claims to hold the office of president of the board of revenue of Shelby county, and praying that he be ousted therefrom. Besides the formal parts, the petition charges simply that the respondent “has usurped, intruded into, and unlawfully holds, without warrant or authority of law,” the office in question, which is a public civil office of the state of Alabama.

Demurrers to the petition being overruled, respondent filed a general answer and a number of special pleas. A demurrer was sustained to the answer, and all the special pleas were eliminated either by demurrer or by motion to strike, except plea 11, on which *268 issue was joined, and the trial was had on the pleadings and an agreed statement of facts.

Tlie trial court rendered a judgment of ouster in accordance with the prayer of the petition, from which respondent appeals.

A local act, which became effective in May, 1911 (Local Acts 1911, p. 154), created a board of revenue for Shelby county, and abolished the court of county commissioners. The new board consisted of a president and four members, to be appointed initially and thereafter by the Governor.

A local act approved September 2, 1915 (Local Acts 1915, p. 199), amended the previous act by making 'the president and associate members of the board elective at the general elections, instead of appointive by the Governor, their terms to run, with other county officers, from the first Monday after the second Tuesday'in January. Under the first act the relator, Kroell, was appointed and commissioned by the Governor as president of the board on May 22, 1915. Under the amendatory act the respondent, Long-shore, and the relator, Kroell, were candidates in the general election of November, 1916, the former for president and the latter for member of the board of revenue, and their election to those offices was certified by the proper officer to the secretary of state. Thereupon, on November 22, 1916, a commission was issued to each of them by the Governor in the usual form. The terms of office to which these commissions relate were to begin, under the amendatory act, tm Monday, January 15, 1917, up to which date the respondent, Longshore, remained legally incumbent in the office of probate judge of Shelby county, and the relator, Kroell, remained legally incumbent in the office of president of the board of revenue. On that date Longshore assumed the office of president of the board, and Kroell assumed the office of associate member of the board, and have since so acted.

The petition is filed on the theory that the local act of September 2, 1915, is void because violative of section 106 of the Constitution, and hence the commission issued to respondent on a void election gives him no title to the office. The invalidity of that act, for the reason stated, is conceded and affirmed by respondent. His defenses, however, are threefold. He contends:

(1) That, since the relator anticipated his own automatic reinstatement in the office of president of the board if respondent is ousted, the proceeding is in effect a private suit between relator and respondent, and, relator having accepted the benefits of his own election, though his election and respondent’s may both be void, and having occupied the office of member of the board, and received its emoluments, he is thereby estopped from denying respondent’s title to the office of president of the board.

(2) That, though respondent’s election was void, yet the commission issued to him' by the Governor on November 22, 1916, was in effect an executive appointment to the office under the provisions of the act of 1911: this upon the theory that the office of president of the board was then vacant by reason of the fact that Kroell, previously incumbent, had vacated the presidency of the board by accepting on that date his own commission from the Governor as associate member of the board.

A third contention, as shown by the allegations of plea 11, was that the act of 1915 is invalid entirely, and the act of 1911 is invalid in part, viz. as to its provisions for executive appointment of the members of the board, and hence respondent’s election in November, 1916, will be imputed to, and be upheld as valid under, the genéral provision for the election of such officers to be found in section 334 of the Code.

[1,2] This last contention is not insisted upon in argument, and, indeed, if sustained, would ^ manifestly defeat itself, for the act of 1911 could not stand if the appointive provision were stricken from it; and the result would be to annihilate the board of revenue itself. Respondent’s idea seems to be that the title of the act, “To establish a board of revenue for Shelby county, and to abolish the court of county commissioners thereof,” does not comprehend by any logical suggestion the grant of the appointing power to the Governor, and hence violates section 45 of the Constitution. There is no merit in this criticism. State ex rel. Thomas v. Gunter, 170 Ala. 165, 174, 54 South. 283.

We will now consider the questions presented.

*[3] 1. Tested by the purpose and prayer of the petition, this is a proceeding strictly in quo warranto, since it does not seek to secure the relator’s installation in the office in question. The petition is sufficient for the purpose stated. State ex rel. Knox v. Dillard, 72 South. 56. 1 It is of no consequence that some incidental benefit may result to the relator from the ouster of the respondent.

[4] 2. In such a case no estoppel can be urged against the relator personally which could affect the right of the state to oust the respondent from a public office unlawfully held. Frost v. State ex rel. Clements, 153 Ala. 654, 45 South. 203. Such an estoppel could operate only upon the relator’s claim to the office for himself. The striking of the several pleas of estoppel from the file was without prejudice to respondent’s rights.

[5] 3. “When the state requires one who claims to hold a public office, as it has the unquestionable right to do, to show by what right and authority he holds and exercises the functions of said office, the duty and burden of showing a lawful right to the office is put upon the defendant. * * * In such a case it is not enough to show what might be termed a bare prima facie *269 right to the office, such as would be evidenced by the holding of a commission from the chief executive, but the inquiry reaches further than this, and requires that it be shown that the Governor thereunto was lawfully authorized to act.” Jackson v. State ex rel. Tillman, 143 Ala. 145, 42 South. 61.

Under this requirement the respondent was bound to show, not merely a commission from the Governor, but also that that commission was issued as required by law, to evidence either respondent’s legal election to the office or his appointment to fill an existing vacancy in a term thereof.

All of respondent’s pleas show that he is claiming the office under a commission issued to him, not

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Bluebook (online)
76 So. 33, 200 Ala. 267, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/longshore-v-state-ex-rel-kroell-ala-1917.