State ex rel. Langlois v. Lancaster

52 So. 2d 780, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 734
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 28, 1951
DocketNo. 3400
StatusPublished

This text of 52 So. 2d 780 (State ex rel. Langlois v. Lancaster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Langlois v. Lancaster, 52 So. 2d 780, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 734 (La. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

DORÉ, Judge.

Relators instituted this proceeding under the intrusion into office act, LSA-RS 42:76 et seq., alleging that relator Lionel J. Langlois was elected Mayor and the re-lators Rene Lejuene, Charles K. Jordan, Whitney J. Langlois, and Seitz Bordelon were duly elected councilmen or members of the Board of Aldermen of the Town of New Roads, Louisiana, at an election duly and legally called and properly and legally held on June 14, 1949; that the returns thereof were promulgated, and that commissions were issued to them for their respective offices by the Governor dated August 25, 1949, and that they took their respective oaths of office on September 16, 1949; that respondent J. Bradford Lancaster is illegally usurping, intruding into, unlawfully holding and exercising and attempting to remain in possession of the office of Mayor of the Town of New Roads, without any legal right or color of title or interest to said office, and that the same is also true as to the respondents A. L. Bertoniere, Alfred Morgan, Oscar Hebert and F. A. Smith with regard to the offices of councilmen or members of the Board of Aldermen of said Town.

Relators further allege that the only pretended color or right, if any such existed, which defendants (respondents) ever had to said offices, resulted from an illegal, null and void election, which was held in the Town of New Roads, on January 3, 1949, which said election was declared null and void by a judgment of the District Judge on May 24, 1949 and which judgment was affirmed by the Supreme Court of this State on June 30, 1950, a rehearing refused on August 15, 1950, in the matter entitled “Langlois et al. v. Lancaster et al.”, see 217 La. 995, 47 So.2d 795; that legal demand was made upon the defendants on August 25, 1950 to surrender the said respective offices of Mayor and members of the Council or Board of Aldermen, and which demand was refused in writing on August 30, 1950; that respondents should be excluded from their respective offices, and the offices delivered to relators; that respondents are in legal bad faith in holding and attempting to retain possession of said respective offices and should be ordered to refund the emoluments so received by them 'from June 14, 1949 (the date of their election), up to the time the offices are vacated and delivered to relators. Their prayer is in accordance with their allegations.

Respondents, defendants, in their answer allege, among other things, that they were elected to their respective offices at an election held on January 3, 1949, in accordance with the charter of the Town of New Roads, which was subsequently declared null and void by the District Court, in the matter of Langlois et al. v. Lancaster et al., and which judgment was affirmed by the Supreme Court on appeal on June 30, 1950 and a rehearing refused by the Supreme Court on August 15, 1950. See 217 La. 995, 47 So.2d 795. Respondents further allege that this judgment ordered that another general municipal election be held in the town as prayed for in that suit, and in accordance with law; that this election has not been called; that they being in possession of the offices by virtue of said election, having been duly commissioned and having taken their respective oaths, were de facto officers, and as such they not only have the right, but are required by law to continue to perform the duties of their respective offices until their successors are elected at the election [782]*782ordered to be held by the Court in said suit annulling the election of January 3, 1949 and until those elected at such election have been inducted into office.

The respondents further allege in their answer that the election of June 14, 1949, under which relators claim, to have been elected Mayor and councilmen or members of the Board of Aldermen, was illegal, null and void and should be so decreed, because it was held at a time when the judgment of the trial court in the suit of Langlois et al. v. Lancaster et al., ordering another election to be held was pending on suspensive appeal to the Supreme Court, at a time when there was no vacancy in the municipal offices in the Town of New Roads and because the Board of Supervisors of Elections of Pointe Coupee Parish had no authority to call and hold a municipal election in the town.

After making the above allegations respondents pray for only one thing, that is: “Wherefore, Respondents pray that after due proceedings had, there be judgment herein decreeing the nullity of said election of June 14, 1949, held in the Town of New Roads, Louisiana, for the purported purpose of electing a Mayor and Councilmen for said Town of New Roads, Louisiana, and dismissing Relators’ suit at their costs.”

The judgment of the District Court held that the respondents were usurpers, and that they were unlawfully holding, exercising, and attempting to remain in possession of their respective offices. This judgment ordered the respondents to vacate and deliver to relators their respective offices, and condemned them to pay all wages and salaries or emoluments of the respective offices for the period beginning July 1, 1950, up until the time the offices are vacated and delivered into the possession of relators. Defendants-respondents appealed to the Supreme Court. In that Court, relators answered the appeal, praying that the judgment of the District Court be amended so as to allow them all of the emoluments of their respective offices received by the respondents up to the time they vacate said office. The Supreme Court held that Section 6 of Article 19 was not applicable to respondent Lancaster and that he was without right to question the legality of the election of Langlois as Mayor of the Town of New Roads, and reversed that part of the judgment which condemned Lancaster to pay unto Langlois all wages, salaries or emoluments of the office of Mayor for the period beginning July 1, 1950 and affirmed the judgment with reference to the office of Mayor in all other respects. In so far as the appeal concerns the offices of the four councilmen or members of the Board of Aldermen, it, for lack of jurisdiction, transferred the said appeal to this Court. See 51 So.2d 622.

The relators, Rene Lejuene, Charles K. Jordan, Whitney J. Langlois and Seitz Bordelon, having instituted this proceeding under the intrusion into office Statute and having offered and filed their separate commissions from the Governor as Councilmen or members of the Board of Aldermen for the Town of New Roads, and after having taken their oath of office, as such, which is an apparently valid muniment of title, bring themselves within the rule announced by the Supreme Court in State ex rel. Ford v. Miltenberger, 33 La.Ann. 263. In that case it was said: “In a proceeding under the same act, by the State, on the relation of an ‘interested person’, the first inquiry is: Has the relator a muniment of title to the office held by the defendant? If he have, the Court passes at the threshold upon its sufficiency and effect; and if it established a prima facie right to the office, the next inquiry is into the right of tenure of the defendant; * * *_»

Relators having offered such commissions and after having taken the oaths of office thereunder it then becomes incumbent upon the respondents, A. L. Berton-iere, Alfred Morgan, Oscar Hebert and F. A. Smith to show their right to remain in office until a rightful successor demands possession of the office. State ex rel. Williams v. Cage, 196 La. 341, 199 So. 209, 211. As was pointed out by the Supreme Court in the Cage case, if the respondent makes such a showing, “he has the right to [783]

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Related

State Ex Rel. Williams v. Cage
199 So. 209 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1940)
Langlois v. Lancaster
47 So. 2d 795 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1950)
State ex rel. Langlois v. Lancaster
51 So. 2d 622 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1951)
State ex rel. Ford v. Miltenberger
33 La. Ann. 263 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1881)

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Bluebook (online)
52 So. 2d 780, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-langlois-v-lancaster-lactapp-1951.