An information in the nature of a quo warranto against Robert A. Holmes was filed in the superior court by Wooten, solicitor-general, on the relation of W. L. Sikes, after leave to file it had been duly granted. It was alleged in the information that at an election held for the office of mayor of the town of Sylvester, at which the relator and the defendant were candidates, the relator received a majority of the votes cast, and was duly commissioned as mayor; that on contest proceedings filed before the ordinary by the defendant, who was, prior to the election, the incumbent of the office, a judgment was rendered setting aside the election; that this judgment was void, for want of jurisdiction in the ordinary to render it; and that the relator is the lawful incumbent of the office. The prayer was that the defendant be ousted from the office and the relator installed therein. The information contained various other allegations which, under the view we have taken of the case, it will be unnecessary to set out. Nor have we deemed it essential to a proper determination of the case to pass upon the several grounds of demurrer filed to the information. The defendant filed an answer in which it was set up, among other things, that, after the judgment of the ordinary setting aside the election, the defendant, as mayor holding over, called a special election, as provided by law, and that at this election one G. J. Wallace was elected mayor; that he has regularly qualified and is discharging the duties of the office of mayor, and “this defendant no longer claims to exercise the office of mayor or any authority in the premises, but has surrendered to the said G. J. Wallace, who now occupies said office.” On motion, the court struck all that portion of the answer above referred to. The case was then submitted to the judge upon the facts appearing in the petition and answer, and he rendered a judgment in which, after stating that there was no issue of fact, it was adjudged that the defendant be “ousted from the office of mayor holding over.” To this judgment the defendant duly excepted. Among the errors assigned in the bill of exceptions are the rendition of the judgment and the striking of the portion of the answer of the defendant above alluded to.
But however this may be, it is absolutely certain that an information of this character will not lie against a person who is neither claiming title to the office, nor in fact assuming to discharge its duties. See Regina v. Armstrong, 34 Eng. L. & E. 288, s. c. 20 Jur. 211. In State v. Graham, 13 Kan. 136, it appeared that the defendant had been elected to the office of county treasurer, and had afterwards abandoned it. It was held that an action in the nature of a quo warranto could be instituted by the State to terminate the right of the defendant to further hold the office. It appeared, however, distinctly from the opinion (see page 142) that the court dealt with the case on the theory that the defendant was still claiming title to the office, and that the decision was expressly put on that ground, following Sir William Blackstone’s definition. In Queen v. Blizard, L. R. 2 Q. B. 55, it was held that where it appeared that the defendant was not legally entitled to the office, the court would make a rule for quo warranto absolute, although he had resigned and the resignation had been accepted before the rule was obtained, for the reason that he could not resign that which he never possessed. It would seem that a resignation would be sufficient to show that the person resigning no longer claimed the office, and that in such a case the writ would not lie where he had actually ceased to discharge the duties of the office. That decision, however, was placed upon the ground that as the relator claimed to have himself been elected to the office, he was entitled to have the defendant enter a disclaimer upon the record, in order to show that the election was invalid.
Applying what has been said above to the facts of the present case, we are clear that the court erred in striking that part of the defendant’s answer in which he set up that at a special election called pursuant to law his successor had been duly elected and had qualified, and that he no longer claimed title to the office. The State is concerned only with the usurpation. It takes no part in the controversy further than to have the office declared vacant, and the usurper ousted; and while this sometimes results in the installation