15 N.M. 544 | N.M. | 1910
OPINION OP THE COURT.
The question here is, can a de jure officer recover from a de facto officer the fees and emoluments of the office without having first had his title established by a proceeding in the quo warranto?
It will be observed that in this case at the time this suit was brought the term of office to which Vigil had been elected had expired.
This is an action solely for the recovery of the fees of an office.
In the case of Allen v. McKeen, 1 Sumner 276, in which Allen sought to recover from the treasurer of the college fees and emoluments of the office of the president, of which office he, Allen, had been unjustly deprived and another intruded upon him, Justice Story said:
“It is a very clearly established principle of the law that if one man receive money, which ought to be paid to another or belongs to him, this action for money had and received will lie in favor of the party to whom of right the money belongs, so it is laid down by Lord Chief Justice Willes in Scott v. Surnam, Willes R. 400, and the doctrine has since been adhered to. Nor is there any difficulty in maintaining such a suit, simply because it involves a trial of the title to office, if the party has been onoe in possession. Upon this point nothing more is necessary than to refer to Arris v. Stuckley, Mod. R. 206, and Boyter v. Dodsworth, 6 Term R.”
In the case of Glascock v. Lyons, 20 Ind. 1, which was a suit brought by a de jure officer against a de facto officer to recover fees, the court said:
“As before observed, the office had,been rightly in the possession of the person entitled thereto, and he had been ousted by an intruder, an action for money had and received would lie in his favor against the usurper to recover the fees, when fixed or customary fees are incident to the same; and in that action the title to the office may be determined. This was settled as long ago as the time of Charles the Second, Howard v. Wood, 2 Levinz’s Rep. 245, see Lightly v. Clounston, 1 Taunton 112, in which Heath, J., lays down the broad proposition, that the title of an office under an adverse possession, may be tried in an action for the fees of the office had and received.”
In Hunter v. Chandler, 45 Mo. 456, suit was brought by a de jure officer to recover of the de facto officer, the de jure having under a statute allowing a private person to have his rights to an office adjudicated, to exhibit an information and on his own motion have proceedings in the nature of a quo warranto; plaintiff had commenced proceedings to adjudicate his title but before final determination the defendant had voluntarily withdrawn, after which plaintiff dismissed his information and brought suit for money had and received and the court in its opinion after citing Glasscock v. Lyons, supra, Allen v. McKeen, supra, and the other eases cited by them as authority for holding that:
“An action for money had and received would lie in favor of a person really entitled to an office, against one who had usurped and intruded into the same, for the recovery of the known and fixed fees that such intruder may havé received.”
Further said that: “Where a j>arty had once been in possession, and he was unlawfully ousted by an intruder, there might be no difficulty in apphdng the rule laid down by Justice Story, in Allen v. McKeen. But where such is not the fact, and the title was in doubt, such a principle would be productive of the greatest confusion and would lead to unnecessary litigation. I am aware that there are very respectable authorities holding that the title to an office may be determined in a suit for fees. The old English cases strongly sustain this view; but I think the better doctrine and reason is to the contrary. In the case of the state to the use of Bradshaw v. Sherwood, et al., 42 Mo. 179, we decided that an action would not lie to recover damages for being deprived of an office where the plaintiff did not claim the office and another was in possession; that it was necessary for the plaintiff first to establish his right in a proceeding for that purpose in order to show that he was damnified. With that decision we are satisfied, and see no good reason for departing from it. The right or title to an office ought not to be determined in a civil action of this kind. A party should not be permitted to sleep on his right and let another person perform services and then claim the compensation which was the result of the labor performed. When the defendant obtained possession of the office, the plaintiff should have either proceeded to contest his right, or resorted to his quo warranto; and upon judgment rendered in his favor, he then might have maintained his action for the recovery of the fees and emoluments of which he had been unjustly deprived.”
Also in this case Vigil had been in possession so that the Missouri cases cited by appellee seem to be rather favorable authority for the appellant’s contention.
Our attention is called by counsel for appellee to numerous cases which in his view" sustain the proposition that, where the title to an office is in dispute, the right to the salary, fees and emoluments thereof cannot be tried until the right to the office itself has been determined. All of them differ from the case at bar in, first, being cases where the term of office had not yet expired; second,, being in states where the person out of possession might on his motion have the writ of- quo warranto and under the same statutes in the same proceedings recover his fees.
“When granting relief against one exercising a public office, the court will go no further under its common law powers than to oust the wrongful possessor of the office and will not give possession thereof to the relator or any other person; but it is generally provided by statute that in addition to a judgment of ouster of the holder of the office, the relator may be installed upon a clear showing that he is entitled to that office, and statutes sometime allow a judgment to be rendered for damages against respondent for loss of fees or salary to relator by reason of being deprived of his office.” 32 Cyc. 1464.
II. ít is further contended by the appellee, and he raised the point by his demurrer, that this case comes squarely within the rule laid down in the case of Hubbell v. Armijo, 13 N. M. 482, 490, for the reason that the reply admits that the defendant had in his possession the appointment and commission of the governor of the Territory to the office of superintendent of schools.
In Hubbell v. Armijo, Hubbell who had been duly elected treasurer of Bernalillo County sought by injunction to restrain Armijo, who, as Iiubbell alleged in his complaint, held a commission from the governor of the Territory of New Mexico, reciting a vacancy in the office of treasurer of Bernalillo County and appointing Armijo thereto, from exercising ¿the duties of that office or obtaining the paraphernalia, books, papers, etc., belonging to the said office. This court held that the complaint itself containing as it did a commission issued by the governor of 'New Mexico brought that case within the rule laid down by this court in the case of Territory v. Eldodt, 10 N. M. 141, and Conklin v. Cunningham, 7 N. M. 445, and therefore applying that rule this court said that it would not go behind the incitáis of said commission in a collateral proceeding and that Armijo was prima facie the treasurer of Bernalillo County and his right thereto could only be questioned by an action in the nature of a quo warranto. But this court further said:
“Whatever we may think of the authorhy upon which the cases of Territory v. Eldodt and Conklin v. Cunningham, are grounded, it is nevertheless true that the principle of those cases has become the settled law of this Territory under the decision of this court, and we are loath to disturb them. While those cases may not be upheld by the weight of authority elsewhere we believe that the doctrine of these decisions should be applied and that greater harm would be done to the interests of the public in this Territory by overruling them than by adhering to them.” 13 N. M. 490.
In the Territory v. Eldodt and Conklin v. Cunningham _ cases, both were actions in -mandamus by which the holders of prima facie titles, as represented by the governor’s commission, sought to compel the delivery to them of the books and other paraphernalia of the offices to which they had been appointed. The doctrine, of these cases is summed up in the Eldodt case, 10 N. M. 145, 6, as follows :
“The functions of the writ in such cases are narrow, but they are of vast importance in the orderly administration of government. It is in this'very narrowness that the peculiar power and efficacy of the remedy are founded. There must be some means- afforded by the law whereby officials, legally created and qualified may be enabled to enter, .without the delay upon the performance of the duties as the law required, and the -welfare of society demands that they fulfill, otherwise the course of public administration must be constantly obstructed, and its regularity and usefulness greatly impaired. It is, therefore, the established rule, in this jurisdiction, that the mandamus lies to assist to the possession of the insignia' and appurtenances of an office one who shows a clear, prima facie right to it, and that the only question proper to be raised in the proceedings is the question whether a sufficient showing of a prima facie right has or has not been made. The question of the actual or ultimate title is not an issue in the case, and no rival claimant may be permitted *to delay the relief sought by raising that issue. Conklin v. Cunningham, 7 N. M. 445.
"If it be argued that this rule, which forbids a full consideration of the legal rights of the respective parties, and refuses to go behind the prima facie showing adduced by the relator, may sometimes work injustice, by ejecting from office one who is actually and lawfully in possession of it, and inducting into his place another whose title thereto is defective and illusory, the answer is plain; the object of the rule is, solely, to secure the systematic and orderly administration of government, and not to adjust disputes of individuals. In the great majority of eases, it is actually true that he who exhibits the prima facie right has also the legal title to the office, and that his opponent is an usurper. In some cases, this is not true; and yet, even here, the general rule must be adhered to though it work temporary individual hardship; for, were it to be departed from-in one case, it must be ignored in all; the special value of the proceedings by mandamus —its rapidit}r would be lost; the relief by mandamus and quo warranto would become, in all practical aspects the same; and there would be no agency known to the law whereby in a grave and critical emergency, the implements, paraphernalia and property of a public office could be speedily delivered over to the lawful incumbent.”
For the foregoing reasons the judgment of the lower court is reversed with instructions to reinstate this cause on the docket and proceed in accordance with this opinion.