Ward v. Sweeney

82 N.W. 169, 106 Wis. 44, 1900 Wisc. LEXIS 48
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 82 N.W. 169 (Ward v. Sweeney) 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
Ward v. Sweeney, 82 N.W. 169, 106 Wis. 44, 1900 Wisc. LEXIS 48 (Wis. 1900).

Opinion

Dod<3®, J.

It is primarity contended by -the respondents and conceded by the appellant that a court of equity cannot try the title to public office, and appellant insists that his action may be maintained as one to merely enjoin a public disturbance or an unseemly interference with those in fact exercising the duties of an office. The prominent facts alleged and the relief prayed are all of the former character. The contesting claims to the office are alleged, and the relief prayed is the enjoining of the city clerk from issuing certificates of election, and the enjoining of the aldermen-elect from intruding into the office “ during the term of the aldermen now sitting.” Neither of these forms of [48]*48relief would be justified by anything short of an adjudication that the defendant aldermen had not been lawfully elected to the office. The relief to which plaintiff might have been entitled upon the cause of action he now seeks to construe out of the complaint would not have included any injunction against the city clerk from issuing election certificates, and could only have included injunction against the aldermen-elect until their title to the office had been established by law. That is the utmost extent to which any of the authorities cited by appellant extend, namely, to justify the maintenance of an original suit in equity for an injunction pending legal proceedings and ancillary thereto. We need not, however, decide whether or not there may be facts alleged to justify some form of injunctional relief other than that demanded, for the case comes here, not upon demurrer, but on an appeal from the refusal of an injunction pendente lite, an order resting in the sound judicial discretion of the court below. Neither is it necessary to decide whether, in any case, a court of equity may intervene by injunction to-protect one or the other of contending claimants for an office in possession and enjoyment thereof. On that subject the states differ radically. Some of the more leading authorities on both sides of the question are the following: Huntington v. Cast, 149 Ind. 255; Parsons v. Durand, 150 Ind. 203; Brady v. Sweetland, 13 Kan. 41; Braidy v. Theritt, 17 Kan. 468; Guillotte v. Poincy, 41 La. Ann. 333; Beebe v. Robinson, 52 Ala. 66; Moulton v. Reid, 54 Ala. 320; Sheridan v. Colvin, 78 Ill. 237; Poyer v. Des Plaines, 123 Ill. 111; Karr v. Trego, 47 Pa. St. 292; Appeal of Gilroy, 100 Pa. St. 5; Goldsworthy v. Boyle, 175 Pa. St. 246. Suffice it to say upon the general subject that it is a field which courts of equity should enter with their drastic injunctions with gi’eat hesitation. Even if such action is maintainable in the name of the individual, the interests to be affected are most essentially of a public char[49]*49acter, and the interest of the individual, or coterie of individuals, in an office, especially in a legislative office, sinks into insignificance in comparison with the vast public interests to be affected by excluding therefrom those whom the popular will has designated. By such injunctions the most overwhelming expressions of popular will in favor of or against some policy may be thwarted, enough of the members of a city council — nay, even of the legislature itself— may be excluded to wholly reverse the true majority, and long enough to enable the issue of bonds or passage of acts which may have been the real subject of an election and been forbidden by the popular vote. Such a catastrophe is all the more possible because of the imperfect character of the evidence on which, under our practice, preliminary injunctions issue. The recklessness with which parties verify the most vehement pleadings and affidavits at times is appalling, and may well cause hesitancy in issuing perhaps ruinous restraining orders in reliance thereon. The law has provided machinery by the orderly progress of which the election and certification of public officers are to be had, and to those tribunals has delegated both the authority'and power to act. If that machinery is inadequate to protect the rights of the people, it is for them, through the medium of their legislature, to correct its defects ; and neither the authority nor the duty is upon the courts to seek to supply them. The legislature has not said that, in case of a contest in the forms prescribed by statute, nor even in case of proceedings by quo warrcmto, the officer whom the machinery of the law has declared by its certificate entitled to the office shall refrain from exercising its functions, and for a court to assume to so declare trenches closely upon the function of the legislature. State ex rel. Jones v. Oates, 86 Wis. 634. Yet to such extent go appellant’s argument and remarks in some of the cases. We do not say that a court may not protect him who by the [50]*50statutory machinery is placed in the office against violent disturbance or usurpation by another having not the prima faeie right, but that it must be a clear and urgent case in which the judiciary should feel obliged to supplement the methods and guards provided by the legislature.

The only question before us on this appeal, however, is whether the superior court was clearly guilty of an abuse of its discretion in declining to issue the injunctional order prayed in this case. That discretion is of the broadest, and is seldom interfered with’. The latest of the very few instances of such interference in this court is the case of Valley Iron Works Mfg. Co. v. Goodrick, 103 Wis. 436. There the action of the trial court was reversed. It was there held that where the complaint states a cause of action for affirmative remedy, and judgment will otherwise be rendered fruitless, and the injury to the defendant or others likely to result from the injunction pendente lite is not serious in comparison with that to be suffered by the plaintiff in the event of denial, and if the rights of the party to be enjoined can be protected by an undertaking or otherwise, it is an abuse of discretion to refuse it. The court in that case was speaking of a temporary injunction ancillary to the relief sought in the same action, namely, the specific performance of an agreement to convey a patent which the insolvent defendant was threatening to convey away pending the litigation, from which great injury was liable to be suffered by the plaintiff, and from restraining which but trifling injury was likely to be suffered by the defendant, which was of a pecuniary character and might well be protected by a money security. In the case at bar the situation is very different. The right of the plaintiff to his office or his establishment •therein could not be the relief to be ultimately obtained. Indeed, no final relief was sought, if we construe the complaint as we must in order to find any cause of action,— merely th¿ keeping defendants out of office till their right [51]*51be legally established. There was no reason to suppose this action need ever proceed to judgment, for the proper statutory action in nature of quo warrcmto could obviously reach trial much sooner; it being entitled to special speeding, both by statute (sec. ‘3469, Stats. 1898), and by custom. So that there was no certainty, nor much probability, that there ever would be any judgment at all in this case, to be rendered unavailing in absence of the order refused. It is in effect a restraining order requested in one action because the judgment in another action, not yet begun, may otherwise be futile,— a purpose not recognized by our statute (sec. 2774), and not that present in Valley Iron Works Mfg. Co. v. Goodrick,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 N.W. 169, 106 Wis. 44, 1900 Wisc. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-sweeney-wis-1900.