140 So. 740 | Miss. | 1932
Appellant filed his bill in the chancery court of Covington county against appellees, Mrs. Homer McLeod, Mrs. R.H. Watkins, and Mrs. T.W. Cranford, county election commissioners of that county to enjoin said election commissioners from placing on the official ballots to be used in the approaching general election of the county the name of W.J. Warren as the Democratic nominee for the office of sheriff of said county. A temporary injunction was issued without notice. Appellees answered and demurred to the bill, and the cause was heard on bill, answer, demurrer and motion to dissolve the temporary injunction, which motion was sustained by the court. From that decree appellant prosecutes this appeal.
The bill alleged, in substance, that appellant and W.J. Warren were both candidates for the Democratic nomination for the office of sheriff and tax collector of Covington county; that they received the highest number of votes in the first party primary election; that their names were placed upon the ballots to be voted for in the second primary; that after the second primary the Democratic Executive Committee of Covington county met and canvassed the returns and declared W.J. Warren to be Democratic nominee for the office; that thereafter and within twenty days appellant filed a contest of *446 the nomination of Warren, charging that his nomination had been secured by fraud in that Warren, who was the sheriff and tax collector at the time, had certified certain persons to be qualified electors of the county when in truth and in fact they were delinquent for their taxes; that the hearing of the contest was delayed from time to time until the 22d of September, 1931, when an order was entered by the Democratic Executive Committee sustaining the contest and declaring appellant to be the nominee instead of Warren; that the appellees, as election commissioners of the county, would meet in accordance with the provisions of the statute for the purpose of determining whose names should be placed upon the official ballot to be used in the general election to be held in November of that year, and (quoting from the bill) "that part of the duties of said election commissioners will be to determine the names of candidates for the respective offices of Covington county, and its political subdivisions, to be placed upon the ticket as the nominees of the several political parties, and the names of such candidates as may have been petitioned by the qualified electors in accordance with the provisions of said Chapter 157 of the Laws of 1930, to become candidates for any of the offices of the county or its subdivisions."
The bill further charged that appellees were threatening to put the name of W.J. Warren on the ticket as the Democratic nominee for sheriff and tax collector of the county, and sought to enjoin them from so doing, and alleged that there had been filed with the appellees a certificate of nomination of Warren, which certificate appeared to have been signed by some person acting as temporary chairman and not by the regular chairman of the Democratic Executive Committee of the county. On the filing of the bill, as stated, a temporary writ of injunction was issued enjoining appellees from placing the name of W.J. Warren on the ticket as Democratic *447 nominee for the office of sheriff and tax collector of Covington county.
Appellees immediately filed an answer denying the material allegations of the bill, and alleging that, in addition to the certificate of nomination referred to in the bill of complaint, there had also been served upon them a certificate signed by the regular chairman of the Democratic Executive Committee of the county certifying that appellant's contest had been rejected by the Democratic Executive Committee, and that Warren had been declared the nominee. To this certificate was attached what purported to be a copy of an order passed by the Democratic Executive Committee of the county signed by eight members thereof and also by the regular chairman, making nine in all, constituting more than a majority of the committee. It was alleged in the answer that it was the purpose and intention of the appellees as election commissioners to meet at the time and place required by law, and then as a judicial or quasi-judicial body to hear all the evidence and determine the question as to whose name should be placed upon the ticket as the Democratic nominee for the office of sheriff and tax collector of the county. With the answer, and as a part of it and separately set out, was a demurrer questioning the jurisdiction of a court of equity to entertain the bill.
A motion to dissolve the injunction on bill, demurrer, answer, and exhibits thereto was made, and notice served on appellant. On the hearing the chancellor held that the chancery court was without jurisdiction and dissolved the injunction. From that decree appellant was granted an appeal by the chancellor without supersedeas. Thereupon appellant made application for a writ of supersedeas to a member of this court who granted the writ, stating at the time that he considered the matter of sufficient importance to be passed upon by the court, and that the only way he knew of to get the matter judicially determined before the election was to grant the supersedeas *448 and permit an immediate motion to discharge the same to be entered and heard. Accordingly a motion was made before this court to discharge the supersedeas, which was overruled, and now the cause is here on appeal from the judgment of the lower court sustaining the demurrer and dissolving the injunction.
In considering whether courts of equity have jurisdiction in cases of this character, we think it would be well to review the decisions of our court bearing on the question, and in doing so we shall follow rather closely appellees' brief which contains a fair and accurate analysis of the decisions. In considering this question it should be borne in mind that under our system of jurisprudence the chancery courts have only such jurisdiction as was conferred by the Constitution, all other jurisdiction both civil and criminal not vested by the Constitution in some other court is vested in the circuit courts. Sections 156, 159, 160, and 161 of the Constitution.
The first case having to do with the question was Ex parte Wimberly,
Gibbs v. McIntosh,
Conner v. Gray,
In the Power v. Ratliff Case, the court quoted with approval the language of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma in City Council of McAlester v. Milwee,
In Power, Secretary of State, v. Robertson,
In Town of Sumner v. Henderson,
In Native Lumber Co. v. Board of Supervisors,
In State ex rel. Brewer v. Abbay,
In Ramey v. Woodward,
In Howard v. Sheldon,
Appellant cites several cases from Montana, one from Wisconsin, one from Texas, and one from Kentucky, to sustain the jurisdiction of a court of equity in cases of this character. The Texas case, Gilmore v. Waples,
The contention that the writ of prohibition was the proper remedy in this case, and that the chancery court ought to have transferred the cause to the circuit court in order that the latter court might convert it into a *456 proceeding for a writ of prohibition, is without merit. Section 162 of the Constitution provides: "All causes that may be brought in the chancery court whereof the circuit court has exclusive jurisdiction shall be transferred to the circuit court." In this cause injunctive relief is the sole relief sought. The principal office of the writ of prohibition is to prevent an inferior court or other tribunal from assuming jurisdiction with which it is not legally vested. 22 R.C.L., page 4, section 3. Section 162 of the Constitution has no application to causes in the chancery court where injunctive relief alone is sought. The circuit courts have no jurisdiction to try such causes. If the cause had been transferred by the chancery court to the circuit court and by the latter court converted into a proceeding for a writ of prohibition, under the law the relief sought could not have been granted by the circuit court under that writ.
Affirmed.