169 Ind. 61 | Ind. | 1907
On January 5, 1907, John M. Clawson, as relator, filed a complaint in the lower court, in the nature of quo warranto, for the purpose of contesting the election of appellee to the office of county assessor of Henry county, and of obtaining a judgment ousting him from said office, and awarding the possession thereof to the relator, together with damages in his favor against appellee for the detention of the office in question. Appellee unsuccessfully demurred to the complaint upon the ground of insufficiency of facts. Thereupon he filed an answer in two paragraphs, the first being a general denial, and the second alleging affirmative matter. Upon the issues joined under the pleadings there was a trial by the court and a finding in favor of appellee, and, over the relator’s motion for a new trial, assigning the statutory grounds, the court rendered judgment that he take nothing and that appellee recover of him his costs laid orrt and expended.
The only error assigned and relied upon for a reversal is the overruling of the motion for a new trial. The complaint alleges facts to show the eligibility and qualification of the relator, John M. Clawson, to be elected to and hold the office of 'county assessor. It further avers that at the general election held on November 6, 1906, at Henry county, for the election of county assessor and other officials, the defendant, Jesse Bell, and the relator and Will
The complaint discloses that the relator demanded possession of the office on January 5, before the commencement of this action on that date. The following, among other facts, is shown by the evidence in the record: Appellee was nominated by the Republican party of Henry county, Indiana, as a candidate for county assessor, at the primary election held by that party in 1906. Relator was nominated as a candidate for the same office by petition as a candidate of the Citizens party. William A. Smith was also nominated for the office by the Prohibition party. The board of election commissioners of Henry county, in pursuance of law, appears to have caused the names of each
Conceding, without deciding, that appellee, under the facts, is shown to have been ineligible at the date of the election, on the ground as claimed by the relator,' nevertheless the latter, under the. facts and the law applicable thereto, as hereafter shown, is not in a position successfully to maintain an action to contest the election of appellee and to oust him from the office in question. It will be noted that by §1189, supra, the prosecuting attorney is authorized, upon his own relation, to file the information provided by §1188, supra, or the same may be filed by “any other person on his own relation, whenever he claims an interest in the office.” (Our italics.) The claim to the office which the relator asserts under the facts as alleged in his complaint, and as shown by the evidence, cannot be held to be such ap interest therein, within the meaning of the statute, as will authorize him to become the relator in this case. The interest claimed must be shown to be such as will, in the eye of the law, give him a standing in court to maintain, the action. State, ex rel., v. Ireland (1891), 130 Ind. 77; Reynolds v. State, ex rel. (1878), 61 Ind. 392; 15 Cyc. Law and Proc., 406.
At the election in question relator neither received a majority nor plurality of the votes cast by the electors of Henry county for county assessor, while, in fact, appellee
This rule is in harmony with the holding in Gulick v. New (1860), 14 Ind. 93, 77 Am. Dec. 49, which is the first decision in this State to assert and follow what is recognized as the English rule. The same rule was affirmed and followed in Carson v. McPhetridge (1860), 15 Ind. 327. All other cases in this State involving the same question rest upon Gulick v. New, supra, and they must be limited to the rule as therein recognized and affirmed, and cannot be considered as extending beyond the holding in that case. The court, in the case last cited, in considering the question as there involved, said: “Whilst it is true that the votes of the majority should rule, the tenable ground appears to be that if the majority should vote for one wholly incapable of taking the office, having notice of such incapacity, or should perversely refuse, or negligently fail, to
We find no error. Judgment' affirmed.