59 Mo. App. 41 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1894
This is ah information, in the nature of a quo warranto, to determine the right of the defendant to. the office of delegate to the municipal assembly of the city of St. Louis. The information was exhibited by the city attorney of the city. It was averred substantially that on the twenty-first day of June, 1893, the relator had been duly elected a delegate to the municipal assembly of said city from the fifth ward; that the recorder of votersfior the city had issued to him a certificate to that effect, and that he had qualified, by taking the prescribed oath of office; that afterwards, to wit, on the fourteenth day of September, 1893, the municipal assembly being then in session, the relator presented his said certificate of election, with evidence that he had taken the oath of office, to the speaker of the house of delegates, and demanded a seat in that body, as the duly elected delegate from the fifth ward, and that this demand and right were refused to him. It was. then averred 'that the defendant, at the time of filing the information, was wrongfully and illegally assuming to and did exercise the rights and franchises of the office to which the. relator had been elected. Judgment of ouster was prayed.
On application of the defendant the venue of the cause was changed to the circuit court of St. Louis county, where judgment of ouster by default was entered. .The defendant has appealed.
By the scheme and charter, the legislative power of the city of St. Louis is vested in a council and a house of delegates styled the “Municipal Assembly of the city of St. Louis.” The charter, in defining the powers and duties of the two branches, provides that “each house shall appoint its own officers, except the
It is insisted by the appellant that the judgment of ouster against him is void, for the reason that exclusive cognizance of the qualifications and election of delegates to the municipal assembly of the city is, by virtue of the foregoing provision of the charter, vested in the house of delegates. It may be conceded for the purpose of this case that the weight of authority in this country is to the effect that, by the use of the word “sole” in the above section of the charter, exclusive jurisdiction was conferred, on the house of delegates to decide upon' the legality of the election of its own members. But no case, of which we are advised, has gone so far as to hold that common law courts have no supervisory control in such matters, when it appears that the subordinate tribunal has departed from, or exceeded, the power given in the charter. All of the authorities are to the contrary. Kendell v. The City Council of Camden, 47 N. J. L. 64. Therefore it can not be said that the circuit court was entirely without jurisdiction of the cause.
The appellant made no return, but suffered a judgment of ouster by default to go against him. The record nowhere shows the circumstances under which he held the position. It only appears from the information that he unlawfully exercised the office of delegate. It is the well settled law that in quo tvarranto proceedings the burden is on the defendant to show title to the office. State ex rel., etc., v. McCann, 88 Mo. 386. Under this rule a default to the information admits the usurpation, and must necessarily result in a judgment of ouster. The question is whether the de
The judgment of the circuit court will he affirmed.