161 Ind. 431 | Ind. | 1903
— This action, being a quo. warranto information, was brought by appellant as coroner of Sullivan county to oust appellee from the office of sheriff of said county. It is grounded upon the act approved March 6, 1899 (Acts 1899, p. 500), as amended by an act approved March 9, 1901 (Acts 1901, p. 311, §2065e Burns 1901), pertaining to the suppression of mob violence. The case comes here on the action of the circuit court in sustaining appellee’s demurrer to the information.
Ho objection is made to the form of the information, and only such facts will be stated as will exhibit the controlling question of law presented. Maxwell, the relator, during the period and events embraced, was the duly
At the very opening of the discussion we are' met with the question, does the relator exhibit such an interest in the office of sheriff as entitles him to the extraordinary remedy of quo warranto f All the interest he claims is derived from the amendatory act of 1901, supra, which is in these words: “Section 5. If any person shall be taken from the hands of a sheriff or his deputy having such person in custody, and shall be lynched, it shall be conclusive evidence of failure on the part of such sheriff to do his duty, and his office shall thereby and thereat immediately be vacated, and the coroner shall immediately succeed to and perform the duties of sheriff until the successor of such sheriff shall have been duly appointed, pursuant to existing law providing for the filling of vacancies in such office, and such sheriff shall not thereafter be eligible to either election or reappointment to the office of sheriff: Provided, however, that such former sheriff may, within
The relator’s.only claim of right to quo warranto is derived from §§1145, 1146 Burns 1901, which read as follows: “Section 1145. An information may he filed against any person or corporation in the following cases: * * * Second. Whenever any public officer shall have done, or suffered any act which, hy the provisions of law, shall work a forfeiture of his office.” “Section 1146. The information may he filed hy the prosecuting attorney in the circuit court of the proper county, upon his own relation, whenever he shall deem it his duty to do so, or shall he directed hy the court or other competent authority, or hy any other person on his own relation, whenever he claims an interest in the office,, franchise, .or corporation which is the subject of the information.”
The exercise of a public office affects the whole body of the public, and hence it is that the government assumes to regulate and restrain it, leaving to the individual citizen only the exceptional right to question it when he is able to show that he has an interest in the particular office different in kind from that of the citizens generally. It will he noted from the above statute that when an infor
It is said in the Ireland case, at page 18: “One of the facts, to be plainly stated in the information, is the nature of the interest claimed by the relator in the franchise or corporation.” This leads us to inquire, does the relator show in his complaint any interest at all in the office of sheriff of Sullivan county? He alleges that on November 20, 1902, a mob took James Dillard, a prisoner, from the custody of the defendant, who was then and there the duly qlected, qualified, and acting sheriff of Sullivan county, and hanged him; that the relator immediately after said hanging demanded of the defendant that he surrender to him, as coroner of said county, possession of the office of sheriff of said county, and the books, papers, and all appurtenances thereof; that ever since the said 20th day of November the .defendant has unlawfully and wrongfully usurped the office of sheriff of said county, and kept the relator therefrom, and still excludes him from said office, and deprives him of the fees and emoluments thereof, and kept’ him from performing the duties thereof, contrary, etc. The complaint clearly counts upon an interest in the office of sheriff — that is, in the official franchise, acquired solely through the action of the mob in lynching appellee’s prisoner. Assuming the view most favorable to the relator that the statute of 1901 permits us to take, it must be said
The constitutionality of the amendatory act of 1901, supra, has been called in question and ably discussed, but the conclusion we have reached above makes it unnecessary for us to consider it.
Judgment affirmed.
Monks, O. J., and Dowling, J., dissent.