2 Mich. 348 | Mich. | 1852
This is an information in the nature of a quo warranto, filed by the Attorney General, on behalf of the people, on relation of Smith Falkenbury, charging Marcus H. Miles, the defendant, with usurping the office of County Clerk of the County of. St. Clair, and requiring him to show his right thereto. In addition to the usxral averments contained in a pleading of this nature at the common law, the information alleges “ that said Smith Falkenbury, by virtue $id warrant of due and regular election, is in law and in right entitled to have, hold, and exercise” ■said office. The defendant demurs, on the ground that the title of Falkenbury is not specifically set forth. The averment referred to is intended to be in conformity with Sec. 3, Ch. 136 of R. 8., 1846, which provides that in addition to the other allegations in an information for usurping an office, the Attorney General may “set forth therein the name of the person rightfully entitled to such office, with an averment of his right thereto.” The object of permitting this unixsual averment appears from section 4 of the same chapter, which provides that the Coxxrt “shall render judgment upon the right of the defendant, and also upon the right of the party so entitled, or only upon the right of the defendant, as justice shall require.”
We do not think these and other less important provisions on the same subject were, designed materially to change the nature of the proceeding by information in cases like the present. It is still a proceeding on behalf of the people against the defendant, to try his right to an office which he is alleged to have usurped. The sole issue must be as to his right. He cannot controvert the person alleged to bt entitled, nor can the Court adjudicate upon it unless it is necessarily involved in the determination of the issue between the people and the defendant. In a State like ours, where public officers are nearly all elective, and where pixblic opinion must usually be an effective check upon all xisurpations of office without some pretences of right, founded upon the suffrages of the people, it is obvious that the question most frequently to be tried on informations like the present, will be whether the defendant received a majority of the votes cast at an election. If he did not, some one else must have
It is sajd that under section seven of the chapter referred to, the latter judgment may he the foundation of a proceeding by the person in whose favor it is rendered, to recover damages against the defendant, arising from his intrusion, and that therefore the facts upon which it is based ought to be specifically set forth in the information, and the defendant should have an opportunity to controvert them. The answer to that is that they were set forth, and were or might have been controverted by the defendant in the issue between him and the people.
Demurrer overruled.