State v. Baxter

28 Ark. 129
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 28 Ark. 129 (State v. Baxter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Baxter, 28 Ark. 129 (Ark. 1873).

Opinion

Gregg, J.

T. D. W. Yonley, as tbe attorney general for tbe state, has presented to the court an information, upon the relation of Joseph Brooks, and alleges therein that Elisha Baxter, without any legal warrant, grant or right whatsoever, hath for four months and more held, used and executed the office'of governor of the state, and that he claims to be the governor of said state, and for said time has enjoyed all the liberties, privileges and franchises of that office, but that the same has been usurped and held without right, etc., and he moves the court for a writ of quo warranto against said Baxter.

The counsel for Mr. Baxter objected to the filing of the application and the issuance of the writ. Counsel then asked leave to argue the case, and we patiently heard them for two days of long sitting, in which arguments, authorities that had required much time to collect and arrange, were read and commented upon, and the merits of the case, so far as the jurisdiction of the court and its power to determine the matters in controversy, were, on each side well presented.

For the last few years no quéstion has .more earnestly attracted the attention of this court than that of quo warrantoproceedings. We had many days of excitement and earnest discussion in the case of the State v. Johnson, reported in 26 Ark., 281, and for weeks before this proceeding was instituted, our attention was called to it by the wrangling of the political papers of the states, besides, other important cases have been argued before us.

The attorney general announced to the court that if the court were of the opinion the information was objectionable, because made upon the relation of Joseph Brooks, they should strike out that name, but in frankness he must state that, by replication, the name would again be brought before the court as the relator of the person elected. He made no motion to strike Mr. Brooks’ name from the information.

The principal argument of the counsel of Mr. Baxter was not directed to the form of the information, or the fact that Mr. Brooks was the relator, but to the jurisdiction of the court, and its authority to determine the proposed issue, whether or not Mr. Baxter was the elected and qualified governor of Arkansas, and these arguments were responded to at length by counsel for the state, presenting the matter as if upon demurrer to the information, and assuming that if the information, upon its face, did not show facts sufficient to confer jurisdiction, the court would not entertain it, or issue the writ, and upon this view the case has been considered.

If the information is insufficient upon its face, it is not irregular, upon objection made, to decline entertaining it and refuse the writ, nor does the attorney general insist upon the filing unless the writ can issue thereon.

It must be borne in mind that our legal rights depend upon the laws, and the tribunals that must determine and enforce them.

The will of the people, as enacted in the organic law, or other laws not inconsistent with the constitution, is the rule by which all must be governed, and there is nothing in the argument that the courts alone can determine disputed rights, and that they alone possess all the judicial power of the state. The will of the people directs where such power shall be, and it may be vested in executive officers or in legislators, if the people in convention so ordain. Perhaps in every state in this Union, a branch of the legislature, for some purposes, sits and determines, as a court, and it is too well known to refer to the instances wherein states constituted their senate a court of last resort.

For most purposes, under our forms of government, it has been considered best to separate legislative, executive and judicial powers; but whenever the people, the sovereign power of the state, determine otherwise and engraft it in their organic law, the one department may, as well as any other, sit in judgment upon individual claims and rights.

Hence, there was j ust the same power in the people, when assembled by their delegates in convention, to give the power of settling any controversy that might arise, to one branch of the government as another; and if they conferred the power on the legislature, and not the courts, to determine who is the governor elected by the people, that body must execute the trust, and their authority cannot be revoked until the people again meet in convention and exercise their sovereign power.

It has been urged that the legislature may not exert their power against one unlawfully in place or incompetent to hold such position, or that legislators may become corrupt and count in one not elected, and thereby a mere' usurper would exercise these high prerogatives without having received a majority of the electors’ votes.

It is true that these are matters of great magnitude, and, like most others that affect the very elements of our government, were legitimate for consideration and determination by the sovereignty of the state, when in convention assembled; and as it is important to the people who shall govern a state, it becomes likewise important to them, in case of a contest, who shall decide who is the proper governor, and hence that question should have been discussed before the convention, and that body, as they did, should have declared how so important an issue should be adjudicated. And while it is not to be presumed that either the legislature or the courts will ever become corrupt, through partisan prejudice, pecuniary consideration or otherwise, yet in matters so vital ifc may have been proper to consider of remote possibilities, and fortify wherever danger could approach; and may the convention not have reasoned, as the courts compose the department most remote from the people, and are made up of but few judges, whose terms are for several years, that the offer of greater promotion, the power of personal influence, or even the love of mammon, more possibly, might produce some bias with the few so distant from the power that created them a court, than with the large numbers forming the general assembly, all of whom are directly responsible to the people for the trust reposed in them, and a large majority of whom must come before their constituents each session, where they must expect to be held responsible for their official acts.

The argument is pressed that if the governor be a usurper and his seat not contested before the legislature, the people are governed by a mere trespasser, and if the attorney general cannot sue out a quo warranto and this court decide who is elected, there is no remedy, and that “rights so dear, rights so sacred to the people,” etc., never can be thus violated in a just government and no redress offered, etc.

This is but changing the form of the sophism, and is answered by the same solution. The question is, In whom shall so great a trust be reposed ? If in the attorney general and a few judges,.and they should not execute it, would not the same result be produced ? Shall the governor of the state, the head of the executive department, be subject to removal by the courts of the state; shall these departments be coordinate, coequal in strength and dignity; or shall the officers of one have power to remove the incumbent of the other, and thus dictate his policy, or hold the executive at their mercy? These were questions when the elements and theory of our government were under discussion.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Ark. 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-baxter-ark-1873.