State ex rel. McIlhany v. Stewart

32 Mo. 379
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 32 Mo. 379 (State ex rel. McIlhany v. Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. McIlhany v. Stewart, 32 Mo. 379 (Mo. 1862).

Opinion

Napton, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an application for leave to file an information in the nature of a quo warranto.

The information proposed to be filed and acted on states, that at an election of directors of the St. Charles branch of the Southern Bank of St. Louis, on the 11th March, 1861, the relators were duly elected, and afterwards took the oaths and qualified, according to law, for the performance of the duties of such directors ; that the defendants, who were also voted for as directors, but who did not receive a majority of the votes cast", have usurped the office of directors, and are now illegally exercising the duties thereof. A judgment of ouster is prayed.

Without expressing any opinion upon the merits of the application, a summons was ordered to notify the defendants, with the understanding that the court, upon the coming in of the defendants, would pass upon the questions involved in the motion.

Upon the return of the summons, a motion was made to quash the return, and upon this motion the subject has been discussed generally on both sides. The question is, has this court jurisdiction ? and if it has, ought leave to be granted ?

The jurisdiction of this court in writs of quo warranto, and information in the nature of quo warranto, is almost entirely a new question in this court. It is true that as early as 1834 this court exercised jurisdiction in a case where an information was filed against a person who was alleged to have usurped illegally the office of mayor of St. Louis (see State v. Merry, 3 Mo. 278); and at a subsequent period, in the case of the State v. McBride (4 Mo. 302), the right of a circuit judge to his seat on the bench was heard and determined in [381]*381this court, on a similar information. But in the first case there was no examination of the question, so far as the report shows; and the original papers, now on file, do not show what the character of the information was — whether it was filed by the attorney for the State on his own motion, or was an information in his name at the relation of another. In the ease of Judge McBride, there seems to have been no question made of the jurisdiction of the court. So, at the last term of this court, we decided a case which was submitted upon an agreed state of facts. And in the case of the State v. Perpetual Insurance Company (8 Mo. 330), the subject was alluded to, but nothing determined in relation to the questions now involved; nor was it necessary that they should be settled.

A writ of quo loarranto was an original writ out of chancery, directing the sheriff to summon the defendant to appear before the king, or his justices itinerant, when they should come into the county, and show by what warrant he claimed the franchise mentioned in the writ. This writ became obsolete in England with the cessation of the circuits of justices in eyre, and informations were substituted in its stead. These informations were criminal in their form and origin, but have long since been substantially and essentially civil proceedings.

There are in England three distinct classes of informations in the nature of a quo warranto: First, those filed by the attorney general, without leave of the court and without any relators second, those filed with the leave of the court, by the clerk of the crown, by virtue of his common law power; and third, informations by the clerk of the crown, on the relation of some one, and by leave of the court, under the statute of 9 Anne, c. 20.

The information filed in this case falls within the last mentioned class. The name of the attorney general is substituted for that of the clerk of the crown office in England ; but, in all other respects, the proceeding is one identical in form and purpose with that which is regulated, if not originated, by the statute of Anne.

[382]*382The statute of Anne has never been in force here, nor has the statute of 4 and 5 W. & M. c. 18, which first imposed some restrictions upon the power of the clerk of the crown in filing these informations on the suggestion of private persons, by prohibiting them from being filed without an express order from the Court of King’s Bench.

The statute of Anne has, however, been in substance enacted in this State as early as 1825, but the jurisdiction conferred and regulated by it is exclusively confined to the Circuit Courts. The statute seems to be designed, like the New York statute, of which it is essentially a copy, to cover the whole ground of informations in the nature of a quo warranto, where leave of the court was requisite. It is more comprehensive than the statute of Anne, which was confined to officers • of municipal corporations, and embraces all officers and franchises.

The constitution has conferred upon this court the power to issue writs of quo ivarranto, and to hear and determine the same. The legislature cannot deprive this court of any jurisdiction conferred on it by the constitution. This court has already determined that the power conferred by the constitution extended as well to informations in the nature of a quo warranto as to the original writ, which was known as such in the common law. But it has never been decided, nor do the reports show, that there has ever been any occasion to decide, whether this court would exercise any jurisdiction over that class of informations which fall within our statute, and which even at common law required leave from the court, nor under what circumstances, if jurisdiction was entertained, leave would be granted.

Where the attorney general files an information ex officio, it is not necessary for him to obtain the leave of the court. But informations at the relation of private persons, whether under the statute of Anne or under our statute, or exhibited as at the common law, can be filed only by leave of the court. The information is not granted as of course, but depends upon the sound discretion of the court under the circumstances of the case.

[383]*383One of the circumstances that in England and in this country materially influence the exercise of this discretion, is the absence or existence of any other remedy; and there are other circumstances, not merely growing out of the nature of the office or franchise and the position of the parties, plaintiffs and defendants, but depending on the powers and peculiar jurisdiction of the courts to which the application is made, which will influence the result of the application.

In the case of the Commonwealth v. Smith (4 Binn. 117), the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, although invested with original jurisdiction generally, refused to entertain a motion for leave to file an information in the nature of a quo warranto at Pittsburgh, because it had no power to try issues in fact in that district. The C. J. (Tilghman) said: “ The advocates for the motion say that we ought to proceed until we meet with this impediment; that very probably no issue in fact will arise; and that, if it should, it is time enough to stop when we come to it. To this mode of reasoning I cannot accede. It behooves the court to look to their first step, or they may find themselves placed in a very undignified situation.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Mo. 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-mcilhany-v-stewart-mo-1862.