6 Indian Terr. 505 | Ct. App. Ind. Terr. | 1906
(after stating the facts). The first error assigned is the action of the court in overruling the demurrer to the petition. It appears that, under the Constitution of Arkansas, art. 7, § 5, the power to issue the writ of' cjuo warranto was lodged in the Supreme Court of that state, and that there is no statute of that state authorizing the grantng of that writ that has been adopted and put in force in this-jurisdiction by any act of Congress. While it may be contended that, under the power granted by the act of 1895, the District Courts of the Indian Territory have the same power as the District and Circuit Courts of the United States under the statutes of the United States to issue the writ, it appears that the District and Circuit Courts of the United States, under the statutes, only had the power to issue the writ in cases for removal from office of any person holding office contrary to the provisions of section 3 of the fourteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States, and these are superseded by the removal of the disabilities by act of June 6, 1898;. that, so far as any statutory authority exists for the proceeding-
There has been no legislation of the state of Arkansas •touching the subject of that writ adopted in this jurisdiction, .and, if the courts of the Indian Territory have any authority, it must be by reason of the power granted in the act of 1895, placing them on a par with the District and Circuit Courts of •the United States. The petition in this case seeks to use tins writ as a remedy by a private citizen to test the title of himself .and defendant to a private office. Mr. High says: “Before the statute of Anne the information in the nature of a quo warranto was employed exclusively as a prerogative remedy, •to punish the usurpation upon the franchises or liberties granted <by the crown, and it was never used as a remedy for a private citizen desiring to test the title of persons claiming to exercise .a public franchise. And, although such informations were -exhibited by the King’s Attorney General long before this statute, yet the remedy thereby given was never enlarged beyond the limits prescribed for the original writ of quo warranto, which extended only to encroachments upon the royal •prerogative. Hence the information as a means of investigating
It thus appears that the statute of 9 Anne, c. 20, was never in force in this jurisdiction, and that this proceeding invoked by a private relator could only be brought under that statute. Mr. High, in section 608, says: “Informations in the nature of a quo warranto as now used in England, in lieu of the ancient writ, are of two kinds: First, such as are exhibited by and in the name of the Attorney General, ex officio, without any relator, and which are filed without leave of the court and without entering into any recognizance; second, informations in the name of the queen’s coroner and attorney, sometimes known as the master of the crown office, upon the relation of private citizens. The latter class may be filed only by leave of court, first obtained for that purpose, as provided by the statute of Anne.” If then, under the common law, informations in the nature of a quo warranto were only permitted to be filed by the Attorney General, ex officio, and without a relator and without leave of court and only to “vin
If it be insisted that these proceedings should be a civil action under the Code, the appellant cites the following: In Capital City Water Co. vs State ex rel. McDonald (Ala.) 18 South. 66, 29 L. R. A. 745, in commenting on a statute similar to Mansfield’s Digest § 4915 (Tnd. Ter. Ann. St. 1899, § 3120) the court say: “The sole purpose of the statute at first, all along, and now, was and has been and is to substitute a summons and complaint for the common-law writ and declaration, and not to require proceedings, which at common Taw were prosecuted by information or petition and the like such as mandamus, prohibition, certiorari, supersedeas, habeas 'corpus, etc., to be commenced by service of summons and complaint. * * * Moreover, quo warranto is not a civil proceeding at the common law, but criminal in its nature, involving severe pains and penalties, and now that it is shorn of these consequences, it still cannot be said to be a civil action.” Again in State ex rel. Clapp vs Minn. Thresher Co. (Minn.) 41 N. W. 1021, 3 L. R. A. 515, the court says: “It must therefore be considered as settled that the ‘remedial cases’ of which the Legislature may give this court original jurisdiction includes all those special or extraordinary proceedings under which are usually called original remedial writs, such as habeas corpus) mandamus, prohibition, quo warranto, and the like, of which the Constitution of most states (including the state of Arkansas, art. 7, § 4) * * * gave original jurisdiction to the highest Appellate Court.”
As the third assignment is now regarded as simply academic by the appellant, .and relates to the supersedeas upon a judgment of ouster, we will not examine the questions pre
Reversed and remanded.