Wheat v. Smith

50 Ark. 266
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by96 cases

This text of 50 Ark. 266 (Wheat v. Smith) 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
Wheat v. Smith, 50 Ark. 266 (Ark. 1887).

Opinion

Cockkill, C. J.

B. B. Wheat was elected circuit clerk of Lafayette county at the general election in 1884 for a term of two years, and at the time of the institution of this action against him, in July, 1887, he was holding over without claiming tinder a subsequent election. On the date mentioned the appellee, V. V. Smith, instituted proceedings ill the Lafayette circuit court under the “Usurpation of Office Act,” to oust Wheat and recover the office held by him. The complaint alleged in effect, that at a special election to fill a vacancy in the office of circuit clerk of Lafayette county, duly and legally held on the 8th of January, 1887, the plaintiff received a majority of the votes cast; that regular and complete returns of the election were made and delivered by the proper election officers to the county clerk, and that said returns showed that plaintiff received a majority of all the votes cast for said office; that all the election returns — including the poll books and ballots — were abstracted from the office of the county clerk and carried away, and that a canvass of them was thereby prevented; that no certificate of the result’ of said election had been delivered to the secretary of state, and that no commission had ever been issued to any one; that at the time of the election and filing of the complaint the plaintiff possessed the qualifications required for holding said office ; that the defendant, "Wheat, was merely holding over until his successor should qualify; and prayed that he be inducted into the office.

Wheat filed a demurrer to the complaint, setting forth that the circuit court was without jurisdiction to try the cause, and that no cause of action was stated. The court overruled the demurrer, and Wheat, who has appealed, assigns this as error.

1. The contention of the appellant upon this feature of the case is, that the exclusive jurisdiction over all contests for local offices is vested in the county courts, and that the circuit court was, therefore, without power to investigate the matters set forth in the complaint. This necessitates an inquiry into the object and meaning of the act under which the action was instituted.

1. Usurpation of Office: statute providing remedy: Action for local office: Jurisdition. It was enacted in 1868 as chapter 12 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Mansf. Dig., chapter 151). The first section is as follows: “ In lieu of the writs of scire facias and quo warranto, or of an information in the nature of a quo war-ranto, actions by proceedings at law may be brought to vacate or repeal charters, and prevent the usurpation of an office or franchise.” The next section relates to the vacation of charters. Section 6466, under which this action is brought, provides that: “Whenever a person usurps office or franchise to which he is not entitled by law, an ac-J t tion by proceedings at law may be instituted against him, either by the state or the party entitled to the office or franchise, to prevent the usurper from exercising the office or franchise.” A subsequent section authorizes the court trying the action to adjudge the office to the plaintiff, and to induct him into it. Sec. 6470.

The design of these provisions was to enlarge the remedy formerly afforded by information in the nature of quo warranto. Wood on Mandamus, p 224 et seq.; State ex rel v. Messmore, 14 Wisc., 115; Patterson v. Miller, 2 Metc., (Ky.), 497; People ex rel. v. Thatcher, 55 N. Y., 529. That intention is expressed in the first section and is manifested by the nature of the remedy provided in the others. It opens-the way for the person who would have been the relator in an action by the state under the common law practice, to institute the proceeding to test his title to an office in his own name, without leave of court, or the intervention of the state or one of her officials, as a party. The remedy thus afforded, as was decided in Lambert v. Gallagher, 28 Ark., 451, was broad enough to include the ordinary election contest for office; and it was held in that case that the provisions conferred upon the circuit court jurisdiction to hear and determine a contested election controversy. But since that, decision exclusive original jurisdiction in the matter of election contests has been conferred upon the county courts. Mansf. Dig., sec. 2722. See Willeford v. State, 43 Ark., 67. It is argued that this jurisdiction is in•consistent with the power asserted by the circuit court in this case. The contention is too broad. The act under consideration is not repsaled. Actions have been maintained under it and judgments rendered therein for the recovery of offices, sustained by this court since the change in the law mentioned above. Falconer v. Shores, 37 Ark., 386; Elsey v. Falconer, 42 Id., 117; Alston v. Falconer, Ib. 114. It is operative in so far as it is not inconsistent with the jurisdiction conferred on the county courts. The plaintiffs action is not a proceeding to contest an election within the meaning of the statute governing contested elections. Williamson v. Lane, 52 Tex., 335; State ex rel. v. Swann, 12 Lea, 30. It is not a contest about the fairness of the election at all. It is a suit for the possession of ah office to which, as the complaint alleges, the election returns show the plaintiff has been elected. If there was a valid election, as the complaint alleged, and the returns made to the county clerk showed that Smith was elected to fill the vacancy, any competitor for the office .could have entered his contest in the county court as pointed out by statute, to prove that the returns did not express the will •of the electors. The loss or destruction of the returns did not prevent a contest. The statute requires the institution of the proceeding to contest within a limited time, regardless of the action or non-action of the canvassing board. Mansf. Dig , sec. 2723; Bowen v. Mixon, 45 Mo., 340.

But there was nothing for Smith to contest. The returns showed a state of facts satisfactory to him, and he had the legal right to stand upon the prima facie case thus made for him. People v. Minck, 21 N. Y., 539; ex parte Smith, 8 S. C. 495.

2. Same : Holding over against person elected. But it is said that the plaintiff had not qualified, that Wheat was, therefore, not a usurper, and that the action would not lie. It is necessary to recur to the object of the act to determine by and against whom an- action under it may be maintained. The remedy being a substitute for and a modification of the proceeding by information in the nature of quo warranto, we may look to that proceeding to determine its character. The term usurper is not there used merely to denominate one who intrudes himself into an office without color of title. A defective title in that proceeding is no greater protection than no title at all, and one exercising a public office without an absolute right to hold it is there regarded as a usurper, as against him who has the better right. People v. Ridgley, 21 Ill., 67; Hamlin v. Hassafer, M. S. Supreme Court Oregon, 1887, There is no reason to presume that the legislature intended to give the term a different meaning in enlarging the remedy, and it was expressly decided in Lambert v. Gallagher, supra, that it did not» Aside from the analogy found in the proceedings in the nature of quo warranto, the statute indicates that the action may be sustained against any one who is exercising the functions of an office which he cannot hold by reason of a superior right.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Ark. 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheat-v-smith-ark-1887.