State ex rel. Attorney General v. Messmore

14 Wis. 115
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 14 Wis. 115 (State ex rel. Attorney General v. Messmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Attorney General v. Messmore, 14 Wis. 115 (Wis. 1861).

Opinion

By the Court,

Dixon, C. J.

Motion by the defendant to quash, the writ and dismiss the information in a proceeding in the nature of a quo warranto, instituted by the attorney general for the purpose of removing the respondent from the office of judge of the circuit court for the sixth judicial circuit in this state, which it is alleged he has usurped and unlawfully holds.

The information or complaint is in the form heretofore usually adopted when the proceeding was by information, properly so called, and avers generally that the defendant “for the space of one day and upwards, from the 11th day of April, 1861, has usurped, intruded into and unlawfully held, used and exercised, and still doth usurp, intrude into, unlawfully hold, use and exercise, the office of judge of the sixth judicial circuit in the said state, without any legal election, appointment, warrant or authority whatsoever therefor, in contempt of the people of the state of Wisconsin, to their great damage and prejudice.” It concludes with a prayer for due advice in the premises and for due process of law against the defendant, that he be made to answer by what warrant he claims to hold, use, exercise and enjoy the office, and if no sufficient warrant be shown, that judgment of ouster be entered against him.

The summons is directed to the sheriff of the county of [117]*117Dane, and commands him to summon the defendant, if to be found in his county, to be and appear before the justices this court, at the capítol, in the city of Madison, within i twenty days after service thereof, exclusive of the day of \service, then and there to answer to a certain information in the nature of quo warranto, filed by the attorney general in this court on the day the summons was issued, whereby the defendant is required to show by what warrant or authority he has usurped, &c., the said office. It also directs the sheriff to summon and require the defendant to serve a copy of his answer to the information (a copy of which will therewith be served upon him) upon the attorney general, at his office in the capitol, in the city of Madison, within twenty days after service of the summons and of a copy of the information, exclusive.of the day of service; and in default thereof he is notified that the attorney general will apply to this court for the relief and judgment demanded and prayed for in the information. It is tested in the name of the chief justice, and signed and sealed by the clerk of the court, but not subscribed by the 'attorney general.

The objections taken by the motion are, 1. The proceeding is not in the form of a civil action. 2. The writ is not sufficient as a summons, and the information not sufficient as a complaint in any action known to the laws of the state; and 3. The writ is not a sufficient writ of quo warranto, nor a sufficient writ in a proceeding in the nature of quo warranto, in that it fails to require the defendant to show by what warrant he holds, or claims to hold, the office which he is alleged to have usurped, and fails to name any day upon which he is to appear, but designates twenty days for that purpose, during all which time the court was not to be and was not in session.

The motion is framed to meet either of two views which it was thought might possibly be taken by the court. The last point is only relied upon in case we should be of opinion that the common law writ of quo warranto and the substituted statutory proceeding by information in the nature of quo warranto are not abolished, and that the attorney general in the present case is attempting to pursue one or the [118]*118•other of those remedies. If they still exist and this proceeding was instituted in pursuit of either of them, there would seem to be little room for doubting its irregularity. But as the other points are predicated upon the abolition of the writ and the proceeding by information, and as we think they are abolished, comment upon this one becomes unnecessary.

Sec. 1, chap. 160, R. S., provides: “The writ of scire facias, the writ of quo warranto, and proceedings by information in the nature of quo warranto, shall be as here prescribed ; and the remedies heretofore obtainable in those forms may be obtained by civil action, under the provisions of this chapter. But any proceedings heretofore commenced, or judgment rendered, or right acquired, shall not be affected by this act. It shall not be necessary to sue out such writs in form.”

This was originally section 881 of the Code of Procedure as enacted in 1856 ; and the chapter of which it is a part constituted sections 831 to 350, inclusive. Laws of 1856, p. 207. It was chapter I, of title 18, ’as the Code was after-wards classified and divided. At ■ that time therefore there can be no doubt that the legislature intended the remedy in such cases should be by civil action in the forms prescribed by the Code. The Code was passed and published as one chapter, and no other construction could have been given. It is a “civil action,” as it was then and still is defined by statute. Secs. 1-6, Code; secs. 1-6, chap. 122, R. S.

In the revision of 1858, the Code was dismembered, and its various parts distributed through the statutes under, the different titles and chapters. In doing this, sufficient regard seems not to have been had to the applicability of the language of particular sections. They were left to read as in their original connection, and thus much apparent confusion and uncertainty were introduced. The section before us is one among many instances of the kind. It is declared that the remedies heretofore obtainable by the writ of quo war-ranto, and proceedings by information in the nature of quo warranto, “ may be obtained by civil-action under the provisions of this chapter.” This chapter 160 contains no provi[119]*119sions whatever upon the subject of civil actions. There is, in strictness, nothing to which the language can be applied, land we are without a statutory guide for the proceeding, iln its former connection it signified the civil action prescribed by the Code, which was all but one chapter. To have been consistent and according to the obvious intention of the legislature and the revisers, it should have read, “under the provisions of these statutes,” or more properly perhaps “under the provisions of chapters 121 and 125 of these statutes.” A similar question was presented in the case of Buckstaff vs. Hanville, decided on the first day of the present term, [ante p. 77]; and we held that such transposition furnished no sufficient evidence that the legislature intended any change, and that these disjecta membra ” of the Code were to be construed- as when they constituted one body of the law. This case must be governed by/the same rule, and is therefore a civil action, to be commenced and prosecuted in all respects like other civil actions.

The same doctrine was, by implication at least, held in the case of The State ex. rel. Attorney General vs. Foote, decided at the January term, 1860. [11 Wis., 14]. The complaint in that case, as in this, was styled an 1 ‘ information ”; and the summons here is copied from the one there issued. No objection was taken ip the form of the summons, but the complaint was demurred to, principally on the ground that this court had no jurisdiction over the subject of the action. It was insisted that section 3 of article VII of the constitution only gave this court power to issue the writ of quo war-ranto

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Bluebook (online)
14 Wis. 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-attorney-general-v-messmore-wis-1861.