delivered the opinion of the court.
The controversy in the case at har is in all respects, both of law and fact, analogous to the case of People ex rel. McKenna v. City of Chicago,
King was a policeman of the city of Chicago, put upon the force under civil service procedure, and after due notice and a hearing before the Civil Service Commission, on charges duly made, was on February 23, 1904, removed 'from the police department for violation of Rule 67. On December 28, 1904, King filed a petition for a mandamus to compel his reinstatement upon the police force. The city of Chicago interposed a general demurrer to relator’s petition, which being sustained, his petition was dismissed. Relator now brings the record to this court for our review, seeking a reversal of the judgment of the Superior Court.
To entitle relator to an award of the writ of mandamus it was incumbent upon him to state in his petition every necessary and essential fact, which prima facie at least showed that he was entitled to the writ. An essential and indispensable averment was that the office of patrolman existed and was created either by statute or an ordinance lawfully enacted by the city of Chicago. This the petition utterly failed to do. Stott v. City of Chicago,
While the above reasons are all sufficient for denying relator the writ prayed, still there is another insuperable obstacle in his path to success, and that is the laches. imputable to relator for a delay exceeding ten months between the time of his dismissal and the filing of his petition for a writ of mandamus.
Confronted with the decision in Clark v. City of Chicago,
These remarks are of equal force and pertinency to relator’s petition for the writ of mandamus, for by this writ he is seeking the same review as Clark did by his certiorari proceeding.
For the reasons assigned above, relator is barred from the relief prayed in his petition. The sustaining' of respondent’s demurrer to relator’s petition was without error, and the judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
