143 Ga. 283 | Ga. | 1915
(After stating the foregoing facts.) We are of the opinion that the court correctly held that the petitioners, the plaintiffs in error here, were not entitled, upon the petition presented, to leave to file an information in the nature of a writ of quo warranto against the defendants. Section 5451 of the Civil Code reads: “The writ of quo warranto may issue to inquire into the right of any person to any public office the duties of which he is in fact discharging, but must be granted at the suit of some person either claiming the office or interested therein.” But the writ of quo warranto is not the remedy to oust one holding an office who has been elected and inducted therein. There is no denial in the petition or the information that the defendants were duly elected and inducted into the office from which it is sought to oust them. Nor does the commission of the acts which are charged against them ipso facto determine the period of their office. They did not cease to be public officers by the commission of those acts, and by the continuance of the discharge of the duties of the office they were not guilty of any act of usurpation. It is true that malpractice in office and certain acts of official misconduct are charged against the defendants, but-these acts of malpractice and official misQonduct do not render the writ of quo warranto, or information in the nature thereof, the appropriate remedy for the evils complained of in the petition and in the statement of facts called an information, accompanying the petition, which plaintiffs in error sought leave to file. In High’s Extraordinary Legal Remedies, § 618, p. 573, it is stated: “Since the remedy by quo warranto, or information in the nature thereof, is employed only to test the actual right to an office or franchise, it follows that it can afford no relief for official misconduct, and can not be used to test the legality of the official action of public or corporate officers. Thus, in the case of breaches of trust alleged to have been committed by trustees of an incorporated association, relief should properly be sought in equity, and not by proceedings in quo warranto.” The latter statement of this quotation is based upon the authority of a Georgia case, Dart v. Houston, 22 Ga. 506. And the. rule stated in the first part of the passage quoted seems to be the general one, though here and there are to be found dicta in the decisions of some of the courts which
Having taken the view of the case announced above, it is unnecessary to consider and pass upon another question raised by the defendants, as to whether or not the proceedings should have been instituted in the name of the solicitor-general of the circuit in which Chatham county is, or in the name of the attorney-general of the State. In this connection see High’s Extraordinary Legal Remedies, § 697, p. 653; also § 489, Mechem’s Public Offices and Officers.
Judgment affirmed.