33 La. Ann. 263 | La. | 1881
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This proceeding was instituted by the State, under the intrusion into office act, at the instance of J. T. Ford, who claims that he is rightfully entitled to the office of Recorder of the Second and Third Districts of New Orleans. Upon that fundamental averment the charge is made that the defendant has nevertheless taken possession,of that office, holds the same, and exercises the functions thereof, as though elected thereto, all this unlawfully, by usurpation of, and intrusion into, said office. Prayer is made for judgment, decreeing that the defendant is a usurper and an intruder; that the relator is entitled to the office, and that the defendant do turn over to him the said office, together with all the books, papers, appurtenances, etc., thereunto belonging.
In bar the defendant pleads that the relator has not been returned as elected, and has not been commissioned to the office; that the respondent has been returned as elected thereto, and has been accordingly commissioned; that the relator has not even a prima facie right to the office, and could not occupy it even if it were unquestionably vacant, and that he cannot assert his pretensions to the office in this proceeding.
The defense was sustained, and the suit dismissed. The judgment thus rendered was not appealed from by the State, the Attorney General refusing to do so, but it is brought up for review by Ford, the relator, whose right in the premises is not questioned. 21 An. 755; 30 An. 70.
An admission in the record is to rhe effect that the defendant was, at the time of the election and promulgation of the result thereof, Recorder of the lower districts of the city; that the plaintiff holds no commission as such Recorder, the defendant having been declared
The pretensions of the relator are predicated upon sections 2593, 2597, of the Revised Statutes, relative to intrusions into office. The law, as found in those sections, has already been subjected to legal analysis, and has received a judicial construction which establishes that in a proceeding under it the courts are without authority to go beyond an examination of the titles set up by the contestants to the office in controversy; and' that the only power which they can exercise, is to decide which, if any, of the litigants has a legal title to the office. The ■commission of each has been held to be the evidence of such title. 25 An. 264, 268.
We do not think, however, that a commission is invariably the only -or conclusive evidence of the right of a contestant to the office in controversy, though we hold that he must exhibit a prima facie complete muniment of title.
Such party may allege and produce what is equivalent, if not superior, to a commission, viz: a definitive judgment of a competent court -decreeing him entitled to the office.
Independent of such a ease, the party claiming to have been elected to a public office may hold and rely upon an official return duly ■published by the proper officer as the result of the election at which he was a candidate.
It is a fact likely to occur, as it is not without precedent, that after the rendition of such judgment or the publication of such return, the Executive may, with or without valid cause, hesitateor refuse to issue a ■commission to the party recognized by the judgment or return, as entitled to the office, and that the courts may be powerless to compel the issuance of such commission. It is possible that the judgment may not be conclusive upon the incumbent because he was not a party to it, or that it be otherwise inoperative, or that the legality and •correctness of the return be questioned.
In such cases, the right of the party judicially recognized, or in whose favor the return was made, to require a test proceeding under the intrusion act, would have to be acknowledged, and his muniment of title, judgment or return, would be as much prima facie, as a commis•sion regularly issued to him by the Executive under the great seal of the State.
Prior to 1868, the only mode in which the right to an elective office ■could be asserted and determined, was by proceeding under the law regulating the contestation of an election.
Its purpose was to subject the rights of the latter to inquiry and: to scrutiny at the demand of the State, either on its own motion or at the instance of parties claiming to be rightfully entitled to the office, and then only upon exhibition to the State attorney first, and to the-State judicial officer next, of same apparent title, sufficient on its face-to justify an induction into office in the event of an actual or of a declared vacancy.
Were it not so, it would follow that by a proceeding which is summary in its character, in which no jury trial can be had, the law relative-to the contestation of elections would prove a dead letter, and that a party entitled, as a matter of right, to a trial by his peers, would be-frustrated of tbat high privilege so precious in cases of that character.
It cannot be admitted tbat such ever was the intent of the lawmaker.
In a proceeding under the intrusion act, by the State alone, the inquiry is: Has the defendant usurped and intruded into the office ? If he heve, he is excluded and ejected from it; the office is declared vacant, and remains to be filled as provided by law. If the defendant is found not to have usurped or intruded, then he is quieted in the possession of' the office, and in the exercise of his functions.
In a proceeding under the same act, by the State, on the relation of an “ interested person,” the first inquiry is: Has the relator a muniment of title to the office held by the defendant ? If he have, the court passes at the threshold upon its sufficiency and effect; and if it establish a prima facie right to the office, the next inquiry is into the right of tenure of the defendant; but if the relator have no such muniment, and if the State do not press on its own behalf an investigation, the litigation drops, the contest ends, the proceedings are to be dismissed, and the incumbent must not then be disturbed.
It is not because an incumbent is an intruder or usurper that a relator is entitled to the office. The relator must first satisfy the court
If he cannot do so, he has no interest in the proceeding, and cannot" prosecute it when the State does not.
In the present instance the State has refused to prosecute an appeal,, and the relator has exhibited no muniment of title which would authorize his induction in case the defendant were pronounced a usurper or intruder. Were the defendant to desist from any opposition, were he-to resign, or to die, the suit would abate; but the relator could not, on that account, be inducted into the office to which he lays claim; for he-holds no commission, exhibits no return or judgment declaring him entitled to it. Sec. 2598, B. S.
On the contrary, by a judicial admission, which cannot be misconstrued, which is entitled to more weight and effect than questionable evi- ' dence, he formally admits that he is the holder and bearer of no commission, of no judgment, of no return, and that the defendant was-returned and commissioned as elected to the office in dispute.
We do not consider that the rulings in 21 An. 655, 710, and 26 An. 374, clash with those made in 25th Annual. They were made in cases in-which commissioned complainants were the actors, unless perhaps it be-in the case of Wickliffe, in which the commission is not alluded to, but . can be inferred to have been relied on.
In connection with the decisions in 25 An., see Franklin vs. Allain, No. 4634; Nichol vs. Webre, No. 4633; Comeaux vs. LeBlanc, No. 4632, maintaining the same doctrine. 32 An. 934.
Whether the relator could have resorted to another proceeding,, either under the law relative to the contestation of elections, or under any other law, in order to assert and vindicate his alledged rights to the-office held by the defendant, is a question which it is not necessary to-solve, to determine the present litigation.
He has not contested the election of the defendant either by attacking the return, as was done in the Babin case, 32 An. 579, or by any other proceeding, save the present one, in which the assault, as we have-explained, cannot be entertained.
If he had a right to bring a suit, under any law, he should have-instituted it. If he had not, he finds himself in no worse predicament, than those who once thought that they could have recourse to' the-same, and who were disappointed in their expectations, as in theBousseau case. 13 An. 89.
If the relator have rights in this case, otherwise than as a claimant of the office, he has not shown that the defendant is a usurper and an intruder in the sense of the intrusion act. The commissions which the defendant holds show the contrary. If the defendant was not -re-elected,.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed with costs.