The language of the statute authorizing actions in the nature of a
quo warranta
to try the title to office is very guarded and does not give the action as of right to every individual who may think that an office to which he has been legally chosen or appointed, has been usurped by another or who may volunteer to become an informer. It says, the action
“
may be brought by the attorney-general ” upon his own information or upon the complaint of any private party. (Code, § 432.) Prior to the Revised Statutes leave of the Supreme Court was required for the institution of proceedings of this character. (1 R. L., 108, § 4.) Under that system, the court in this State exercised a sound discretion in granting or withholding leave to file an information in the nature of a
quo warranta. (People
v.
Sweeting,
2 J. R., 184.) A like
*336
discretion was exercised by the courts in England under similar statutes.
(Rex
v.
Sargent,
5 T. R., 467.) By the Bevised Statutes, the necessity of an application to the court was dispensed with and the discretion before then vested in the court was transferred to and vested in the attorney-general, whose province it was at the common law to determine whether a case had arisen in which the public interests required the proceedings to be instituted. (2 R. S., 581, § 28; Rev. Notes, 5 State at Large, 516.) The primary object of the action is to protect the public against the usurpation of office without legal authority, and the determination of the right of another to the same office is merely an incident to the action and is permitted for the reason that ordinarily the judicial ouster of the incumbent in effect establishes the right of the adverse claimant to the office, and if the attorney-general brings an action to eject an alleged usurper from an office, he may be compelled to join with the people, as plaintiff, the name of the person on whose relation the action is brought. (Code, § 434.) He has a discretion whether he will bring the action, but not as to the proper parties if an action is brought. It is evident that the legislature used the words “may” and “shall” intelligently and with a purpose and that no positive duty is imposed upon the attorney-general to bring an action upon request of a party claiming office from which he is expelled. The statute does not give the individual claiming the office or any other person the legal right to compel an action to be brought by the law officer of the State, or to bring an action in the name of the people. The control over the action and the right to bring it is with the attorney-general, and the courts cannot sit in judgment upon the exercise of his discretion or coerce his action. The language of the act is very circumspect and precludes the idea that the legislature intended to subject the action of the attorney-general in a matter thus affecting the public interest to the dictation of individual interests or to judicial reviews. Judge Haebis, in a well-considered opinion (reported in
The order must be affirmed.
All concur.
Order affirmed.
