Rider v. Brown

1893 OK 8, 32 P. 341, 1 Okla. 244, 1893 Okla. LEXIS 26
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 27, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1893 OK 8 (Rider v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rider v. Brown, 1893 OK 8, 32 P. 341, 1 Okla. 244, 1893 Okla. LEXIS 26 (Okla. 1893).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

CLARK, J:

On the nth day of March, 1891, the plaintiff in error filed his complaint in the office of the district court of Canadian county, where he represented that he was a candidate for the office of register of deeds of said county at the special election held therein *245 on the 3rd day of February, 1891, and that at said election he received the largest number of votes cast for any candidate for said office. He further represented, that the then county commissioners of said county, Spencer W. Johnson, George F. Brown and Thomas Jenson, canvassed the votes cast at said election, on the 19th day of .February, 1891, with the above result, and that he requested said board of county commissioners to deliver to him a certificate of said election, which request was denied, and that the term of office of said commissioners expired on the 23d day of said month.

The plaintiff further alleged, that on the 23d day of said month, the above named defendants were qualified as county commissioners of said county, and that on that day he requested said defendants to deliver to him his certificate of election as register of deeds of said' county, which request was denied. Whereupon he prayed that a writ of mandamus be issued and directed to said defendants, commanding them to issue him a certificate of election to the office of register of deeds of Canadian county, and to grant to him an early opportunity to file, his official bond. Thereupon, an order was issued to said defendants, which, after reciting the above facts, commanded them to show cause at the court at El Reno, Canadian county, on the 7th day of April, 1891, why they had not issued the said certificate.

The defendants thereupon filed several motions, and among others, moved the court,

To quash the pretended writ herein granted, for the reason that neither the same nor the petition on which the same was granted, stated a cause of action against the said defendants.”

The order above stated was in no sense a writ. It was neither signed nor sealed by the clerk, and was never *246 intended to be a writ, but was a preliminary order to enable the defendants to show why a writ should not be issued. The motion to quash was in the nature of a demurrer to the sufficiency of the affidavit, and of the order, and was so treated by the court, and was so treated on the argument of the case, and will be so treated in this opinion.

Section 5064, of the Statutes of the Territory, is as follows:

“The writ shall be issued upon affidavit and motion, and shall be attested and sealed and made returnable as the court shall direct.”

But this statute does not prohibit the court, in the first instance, from inquiring into the facts so as to determine whether any writ should be issued. A rule to show cause why a writ should not issue serves all the purposes and performs all the functions of an alternative writ, and its sufficiency, and that of the affidavit, may be tested by a demurrer or motions to quash.

The demurrer admitted the correctness of the facts stated, but simply denied their sufficiency. CJearly, if no cause of action was stated against the defendants, the proceedings should have been dismissed, unless the plaintiff asked leave to amend, and the record is silent upon that subject. The presumption then is that the plaintiff proposed to stand by his affidavit and rule to show cause as containing all the essential elements of a good complaint.

At the April term of said court for the year 1891, the aforesaid matter came up for hearing before said court, and on the hearing the following order was entered:

“The court, after being fully advised in the premises, finds the issues for the defendants and refuses to issue the peremptory mandamus, commanding said defendants to do anything prayed for in the plaintiff’s petition, and does adjudge,, that defendants have and recover of the plaintiff their costs in this suit paid out and expended, and have execution therefor ”

*247 To all of which the plaintiff excepted, and from which he appealed to this court.

It does not appear from the record on file, nor from the brief, on what precise point the case turned. Several questions arise, among others this one: Had the plaintiff a right of action in his own name against the defendants? The practice has been long established in mandamus actions, that the action should be brought in the name of the sovereign power, on relation or complaint of the party in interest. (Maxwell on Code Pleadings, p. 324; High on Extraordinary Legal Remedies, §§ X and 531.) In the United States, this writ has lost its prerogative features, but it is still classed as an extraordinary writ; and in form and name, the proceedings are somewhat in the nature of a criminal action, and is in the name of the sovereign power. (24 Howard, 66; 12 Pet. 227.)

This action was brought to obtain possession of a certificate of election as a preliminary step to the obtaining the possession of an office. By it the right to the office cannot be tried.

But quo warranto is a writ by which the right to the office maybe tested. In this Territory, an information is substituted therefor. That has to be commenced in the name of the Territory, on the relation of the party claiming the office. The practice in Indiana, whence our statute and code came, has been to issue the writ of mandamus in the name of the state on relation of the party interested, which is -the safe and better practice.

The plaintiff was the real party in interest, and as the code provides that the real party in interest shall be the plaintiff, the effect of that provision of the code on the general and long established rule, that the action shall be commenced in the name of the sovereign power on complaint of the party in interest, will not be *248 further noticed, and another, and perhaps a more important question will be considered.

Even if the plaintiff has a right to bring the action in his own name, had he a right of action against the defendants? Had they, as county commissioners, any power whatever to canvass the votes cast at the election in February, 1891, or to issue or cause to be issued certificates of election to candidates who received at that election the largest number of votes according to the canvass of the votes made by their predecessors. The election in question was a special election, held under Chap. 32, of the laws of Oklahoma, applicable to that election alone. Section 2791 of said chapter is as follows:

“It shall be the duty of the county clerk to furnish poll books for the use of the officers holding such election, and the election shall be conducted, notices issued, the votes counted, returns made and the votes finally canvassed, and the final result declared as provided by the laws of Nebraska, now in force in this Territory, which are hereby adopted for the purpose of the special election provided for by this act, and for no other purpose.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1893 OK 8, 32 P. 341, 1 Okla. 244, 1893 Okla. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rider-v-brown-okla-1893.