State Ex Rel. Coffey v. McFarland

223 N.W. 931, 57 N.D. 708, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 317
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 223 N.W. 931 (State Ex Rel. Coffey v. McFarland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota 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. Coffey v. McFarland, 223 N.W. 931, 57 N.D. 708, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 317 (N.D. 1929).

Opinion

*711 Birdzell, J.

This is an appeal from a part of an order made by the Honorable Thomas H. Pugh, as judge of the district court of Burleigh County, on December 27, 1928, whereby the application of the plaintiffs for a temporary injunction was denied and a restraining order previously obtained was vacated. The action was brought for the purpose of securing an adjudication to the effect that the nomination and election of the defendant R. G. McEarland to the office of district judge in and for the fourth judicial district was illegal, null and yoid. In the complaint there are allegations as to certain negotiations and transactions between the defendant McFarland and two other persons, whereby the said McFarland is alleged to have advanced his political interests during the pre-election campaign in a corrupt manner and in violation of the corrupt practices act. There.are also allegations of corruption in the obtaining of a political endorsement of his candidacy and of the expenditure of a sum in excess of the maximum permitted by statute. It is admitted, however, that on the face of the returns the defendant McFarland had secured more votes than the relator and that at the regular meeting of the canvassing board he had been found to be one of the successful candidates at the election. It is charged that the canvassing board is about to issue a regular certificate of election to McFarland and that the said McFarland is about to qualify as district judge and that he will do so as soon as the certificate of election is issued and delivered to him. Upon these allegations the plaintiffs asked that the defendants, the governor and secretary of state, who are members of the canvassing board, be restrained from issuing a certificate of election to the defendant McFarland and that the said McFarland "be restrained from taking his qualifying oath of office during the pendency of the action. An order to show cause and a temporary restraining order were issued in accordance with the further prayer of the complaint, which were made returnable on the 15th day of December, 1928. Upon the return day a return was made by the defendant McFarland and a separate joint return by the remain *712 ing defendants. In these returns and upon the hearing it appeared that before the service of the order to show cause and temporary restraining order upon the defendants, a certificate of election had been issued to the defendant McFarland and that he had qualified by taking his oath of office and depositing the same in the office of the secretary of state as required by law. Thereupon the action was dismissed as to the defendants Maddoek and Byrne, governor and secretary of state, respectively, members of the canvassing board, and the restraining order, both as to them and as to the defendant McFarland, was dissolved and vacated. The application of the plaintiffs for aii injunction restraining McFarland from qualifying and assuming the duties of the office was denied. The appeal is from that portion of the order which vacates the restraining order and denies the temporary injunction.

Since it affirmatively appeared upon the return day that the defendant McFarland, upon the face of the election returns, had been elected, had regularly received his certificate of election and had taken and subscribed his oath of office and deposited the same in the office of the secretary of state, thereby completing all the steps necessary to qualify for the assumption of the office upon the expiration of the term of his predecessor, a temporary injunction could serve no purpose other than to prevent such defendant from taking possession of the office and entering upon a discharge of the duties incident thereto.

In the complaint, which was drawn before the certificate of election was issued and the qualifying oath filed, the grounds upon which the court was asked to restrain the defendants were the absence of a plain, speedy and adequate remedy at law and that, unless the defendants were restrained in the manner indicated, any subsequent judgment of the court negativing the title of McFarland to the office would be inoperative and of no effect, and there was danger that the object and purposes of the law with respect to corrupt and illegal practices would be defeated. In argument upon the appeal it was further urged that equity should interfere to preserve the status quo pending the determination of the controversy in order to avoid complications incident to uncertainty occasioned by the fact that two persons were claimants, to the office and both acting as incumbents — one as holding over until his successor should be elected and qualified, and the other as the one elected on the face of the returns, whose title is questioned.

*713 The validity of these contentions in support of the exercise of equity jurisdiction obviously rests upon two assumptions: first, that there is a jurisdiction in equity to determine who of ’two claimants is legally entitled to an office pending the determination of a controversy in which the legal title is in question; and, second, that complications incident to uncertainty as to the ultimate result of a controversy between two claimants for an office can properly be obviated by protecting the possession and prerogatives of the last incumbent where he is authorized to hold over until his successor is elected and qualified. So long as the outcome of the controversy is in doubt, this assumption is necessarily arbitrary, for it may be demonstrated that the right of the defendant to hold the office is clear. In this event it would appear that the uncertainty should have been relieved by protecting his possession rather than that of the plaintiff. Where the uncertainty can be relieved by protecting the possession of either party, there would seem to be no urgent or sufficient reason for ignoring the legal indicia of title. The basic question, then, is whether equity will interfere by injunction to disturb a possession predicated upon a prima facie legal title to an office.

“No principle of the law of injunctions,” says 2 High on Injunctions, 4th ed., § 1312, “and perhaps no doctrine of equity jurisprudence is more definitely fixed or more clearly established than that the courts of equity will not interfere by injunction to determine questions concerning the appointment or election of public officers or their title to office, such questions being of a purely legal nature, and- cognizable only by courts of law. A court of equity will not permit itself to be made the forum for determining disputed questions of title to public offices, or for the trial of contested elections, but will in all such cases leave the claimant of the office to pursue the statutory remedy, if there be such, or the common law remedy by proceedings in the nature of a quo warranto. . . . So it is held that a court of chancery has no jurisdiction to restrain an official board of canvassers from canvassing the returns of an election. . .

“Section 1313. In conformity with the general doctrine as above stated, it is held that one who has been duly appointed and commissioned to fill a vacancy in a public office will not be restrained from entering upon the discharge of his duties upon the application of an *714 other claimant to the office, but such claimant will be left to his legal remedy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
223 N.W. 931, 57 N.D. 708, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-coffey-v-mcfarland-nd-1929.