117 Ala. 150 | Ala. | 1897
By the charter of the City of Gadsden (Acts, 1882-83, p. 281) a mayor is required to be elected by the people. It is provided that no person shall hold the office of mayor of the city who has not resided therein one year preceding the election. Sec. 14. A prescribed certificate* of election is required to be givén the mayor-elect which, by the terms of the act, entitles him to possession of his office immediately upon the expiration of the term of his predecessor, as fixed by law; subject, however, to the contestation of his right as, at
Our Code, by a system separate from that- for the contest of elections just referred to, preserves the substantial features of the pre-existing remedy by information in the nature of quo warranto, adapting to it prescribed forms of procedure. — Code of 1886, § 3167, et seq.; Code of 1896, § 3417, d seq.
By section 3177 (Code of 1896, § 3431), a part of that system, it is provided that ‘ ‘The validity of no election which may be contested under this Code can be tried under the provisions of this chapter.”
Elliott’s election was not contested, but the relator, in this case, now proceeds, by the information in the nature of quo warranto, seeltingto oust him on the ground that lie was ineligible by reason of non-residence in the city for a year next preceding his election ; and the sole question presented is whether or not the remedy by contest, as in cases of probate judges, given by the charter, excludes the present remedy of quo warranto.
It seems to be well recognized that the general rule, established by the weight of authority is, that a special remedy given- by the statute, for the contest of an election, is cumulative, and not exclusive of the ordinary jurisdiction of the courts unless the manifest intention
Upon due consideration, we reach the conclusion that the right to contest the election of mayor of Gadsden was not conferred by the Code. It was conferred alone by the special charter of the city. It is not, therefore, brought within the provision of section 3177 of the Code. It is true, the charter by reference to the laws of the State for the contest of elections of judges of probate adopts those laws, as defining the manner in which the right to contest the election of mayor shall be exercised, but that relates only to the grounds of contest and methods of procedure provided by those laws, and not to the right of contest itself, which is alone conferred by the charter. It would be an undue extension of section 3177 to hold that it referred to contests provided for by special acts creating charters of towns or cities.
The quo warranto proceeding now being pursued, being a remedy independent of statutory contests of elections, except where said section 3177 of the Code makes.the latter exclusive, and as that section does not apply to the present case, the complaint, as amended, was properly filed. The judgment sustaining demurrers to the petition as amended, and dismissing the petition, is reversed and a judgment here rendered overruling said demurrers and remanding the cause.
Reversed, rendered and remanded.