152 Mo. 466 | Mo. | 1899
This is an original proceeding in this court, the object of which is to obtain a writ of prohibition directed to the circuit court of the city of St. Louis to forbid its entertaining jurisdiction of a certain suit particularly described in the petition of relators, the genei*al nature of which may be thus stated: Louis B. Aloe and others, citizens and taxpayers residing in the city of St. Louis, filed their petition in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, in the nature of a bill in equity, against these relators, and the individuals then composing the board of election commissioners of St. Louis, wherein they referred to the Act of the General Assembly of May 31, 1895 (Laws 1895, Extra Session, p. 5), creating boards of election commissioners for cities having over 100,000 inhabitants and prescribing their duties, and the several amendments to that act, and stated that three of the defendants in their petition named, to wit, McOaffery, Brady and Wurzburger, had been duly appointed, qualified, inductedinto office and were themembers composing theBoardof Election Commissioners for the city of St. Louis, in possession of the office and all the property and appurtenances belonging to it, ballot boxes, booths, registration lists and books and all records of the office, all of which were the property of the city and of the value of $10,000; that their terms had not expired, no successors had been appointed, and they were the legal and actual incumbents of the office, and that the act of the General Assembly of 1895 above named, with the amendments mentioned, constituted the only law on that subject in the State, and that it was then in full force and effect in the city of St. Louis.
The petition then goes on to refer to the act of the General Assembly entitled “An act to provide for the registration of voters in cities now having or which hereafter may have 300,000 inhabitants or more; to provide for the creation of a
The Act of the General Assembly complained of in that petition, not having passed with an emergency clause, did not take effect until August 21, 1899, which was ninety days after the adjournment of ¡the legislature. The injunction was issued, therefore, five days before the Act became a law.
The relators MeCaffery, Xingsland and Kobusch, who .were appointed by the Governor under the Act of 1899 to be election commissioners for the city of St. Louis, finding themselves barred out from the offices to which they were appointed and enjoined from attempting to obtain possession and from performing any of the duties of the offices and from claiming to be such officers, on August 21, 1899, caused this original suit to be instituted here, to arrest the proceedings of the circuit court in the suit above mentioned, and dissolve the temporary injunction therein granted. A rule to show cause why a writ of prohibition should not issue was made by judges of this court in vacation, directed to the judge of that court-who granted the injunction, and to the plaintiffs in that suit, returnable October 11, 1899. The returns of the judge and the plaintiffs in that suit are to the effect that the circuit court is a court of general jurisdiction in law and equity, having-jurisdiction in that kind of cases with power to issue injunctions, and that the Act of 1899 was unconstitutional, and therefore in the case made by the plaintiff’s petition the court had authority to issue the injunction as it did, and in doing so did not transcend its jurisdiction, and for that reason, if the relators are aggrieved, they have a remedy by further proceedings in that court or by appeal on final judgment. The cause is
The pleadings and motions, with their recitals and exhibits, make a voluminous record, but their substance is contained in the foregoing statement. And the question involved may be briefly stated thus: Is it lawful for a chancery court, or a chancellor in vacation, upon the filing of the bill, at the very threshold of the case, on the motion of one and in the absence of the other party, to enjoin the defendant from asserting his right to, or taking possession and performing the duties of, a public office to which he has been regularly appointed, upon the mere suggestion that the statute under which he claims the office is unconstitutional, when there has been no adjudication to that effect?
Upon the oral argument it was contended that the relators’ position in this court is such that the statute under which they claim is confessed to be unconstitutional. By this we understand the contention to be that the motion to strike out the return is to be. treated as a demurrer confessing the facts pleaded. Whilst it is true that a demurrer confesses the facts well pleaded in a plea againstwhich it is directed,yet it does not confess conclusions of law drawn from those facts, and even statements made as of facts designed to show the invalidity of a statute are not to be taken as true upon demurrer like other statements in a case. A public law is not the property of any man and can not be confessed away. When the judiciary undertakes to pass judgment on an act of the Legislature in the light of the Constitution, it exercises the highest function of government known under our free institutions. In such case, parties and counsel may aid the court in its search for truth, both as to facts and law, but the responsibility for its findings and conclusions is upon the court alone. There is nothing in the pleadings, briefs or arguments of counsel for the relators to indicate that they regard the law under which they claim, to be in violation of the Constitution; on the contrary, by the
The petition in the circuit court on which the injunction issued undertakes to trace the Act of 1899 through, the Legislature, from the introduction of the bill in' the House of Eepresentatives to its passage in the Senate and final approval by the Governor, and makes statements in regard to its progress to show that certain provisions of the Constitution directing the method of procedure by the General Assembly in passing a bill were ignored or violated, and chiefly for those reasons the act is charged to be unconstitutional, and it is the statements in regard to those matters, that the relators are supposed to confess by their motion to strike out. But this court as early as 1855 decided that a judgment of invalidity of a statute could not be predicated on an admission (State v. Rich, 20 Mo. 393), which ruling has been approved and followed in State v. York, 22 Mo. 462, State v. Wiley, 109 Mo. 439, Ex parte Renfrow, 112 Mo. 591, and State v. Searcy, 46 Mo. App. 421.
When the validity of a statute is drawn in question, the court approaches the subject as one involving the gravest responsibility, and to be considered with the greatest .caution. The General Assembly is presumed' to have been as careful to observe the requirements of the Constitution in enacting the statute as the court in applying it. Every presumption is to be indulged in favor of the validity of the act, and that presumption is to continue until invalidity is made to appear beyond a doubt. [State ex rel. v. Railroad, 48 Mo. 468; State ex rel. v. Laughlin, 75 Mo. 147; Phillips v. Railroad, 86 Mo. 540; State ex rel. v. Railroad, 92 Mo. 137; State ex rel. v. Pond, 93 Mo. 606; St. Joseph & Iowa Railroad Co. v. Shambaugh, 106 Mo. 557; Deal v. Miss. Co., 107 Mo. 464; State ex rel. v. Wofford, 121 Mo. 61; Edwards v. Lesueur, 132 Mo. 410.] But in the case at bar these presumptions seem to have been reversed by the circuit judge, the statute held prima facie
What-was the object, the main, if not the only purpose of the suit in the circuit court ? The plaintiffs in their petition said they were citizens, property owners and taxpayers of the city of St. Louis, and that the defendants, if not enjoined, would, under the requirements of that statute, take possession of the personal property pertaining to the office of election commissioners, which belonged to the city, and would enter on the business of registration of the voters and preparation for elections, and incur "expense in that behalf to be borne by the city, from which would result great and irreparable injury to the city. It is not suggested in the petition that the city is unable to defend itself from the threatened irreparable pecuniary loss, or that the city officials having its interests in charge are unwilling to do their duty. The plaintiffs do not say that they brought the suit to protect their own property from extra taxation that would result if Mr. Kingsland were suffered to take Mr. Brady’s place and Mr. Kobusch that of Mr. "VVurzburger. Having set out in the beginning of the petition with the statement that they were property owners and taxpayers, they leave it to be conjectured what that has to do with the case. It is perfectly plain from the wholepetitionthatprotection to their property or pecuniary interest was not even a secondary object in bringing the suit and that those statements were thrown in to give them, as it were, a color of right to bring the suit, and under that fictitious guise contest the title of the relators to a public office. Fictitious issues are now almost obsolete in actions at law, and were never favored in suits in equity.
The real and only purpose of the suit in the circuit court was to bar the entrance to the office of board of election commissioners by injunction, and to obtain a decree of a chancery court declaring relators’ title to the office invalid. That is a subject over which a chancery court has no jurisdiction. The
It is said in support of the injunction, that since no one was in possession of the office, there was no one against whom a writ of quo warranto could be directed. But the petition in that case stated that these relators were about to enter into the office and would do so if unrestrained, as soon as the act of the legislature on its face should go into effect. Whilst the main virtue of an injunction is to anticipate and prevent a threatened wrong which if committed a court of law could not adequately redress, yet a court of chancery can not in excursions beyond its domain produce conditions to make jurisdiction for itself by forestalling events which would if left alone have no more injurious effect than to land the case in a court of law, whose process is equal to the emergency.
The petition in the circuit, court is aimed to be in the nature of a bill quia timet. Hnder that head of equity jurisprudence one may go into a court of chancery to prevent the occurrence of events which he fears will be so disastrous that they will be beyond remedy in a court of law, but he can not do so merely because he fears that if events are left to take their course he will be forced to plead in a court of law ample to afford all the remedy the case demands. According to their own statement, if these taxpayers had waited five days the conditions would have been such that the courts of law would have been wide open to them; and if the remedy should not be so speedy as an injunction issued on their ex parte hearing, it would at least have more the meritorious appearance of fairness and deliberation, and be not more inconvenient than the founders of the common law in their wisdom and experience
There is another aspect of that case that places it beyond the scope of the chancellor’s view, and that is the character of the interests involved. In their petition the plaintiffs in that case say: “That for said last named defendants” (the relators here) “to pretend to register citizens as voters and to divide the city into election districts, will produce irreparable confusion and mischief, and it will result in leading many citizens to believe they are legally registered, when in fact and in law such will not be the case, and they will be thus deprived of their rights and privileges as voters and citizens.” There is no disguise of purpose in that statement; the powers of the chancery court are there plainly invoked to protect by injunction purely political rights. No such jurisdiction has ever been conceded to a chancery court, either in the Federal or State judiciary. The political rights of a citizen are as sacred as are his rights to personal liberty and property, but he must go into a court of law for them. A court of equity is a one-man power, wielding the strong force of injunction, often issued at chambers and on an ex parte hearing. Neither in England nor America has this power been suffered to extend to political affairs.
The Supreme Court of Illinois have said: “We would not be understood as holding that political rights are not a matter of judicial solicitude and protection, and that the appropriate judicial tribunal will not, in proper cases, give them prompt and efficient protection, but we think they do not come within the proper cognizance of courts of equity... .Wherever the established distinctions between equitable and common law jurisdiction are observed, as they, are in this State, courts of equity have no authority or jurisdiction to interpose for the protection of rights which are merely political, and where no civil or property right is involved. In all such cases the remedy, if there is one, must be sought in a court of law.” [Fletcher v. Tuttle, 151 Ill. loc. cit. 53.]
The Supreme Court of the United States has gone further than this and further than we are willing to follow, saying in effect that the judiciary is altogether unable to afford redress for the violation of political rights by an unconstitutional act of Congress. This is the language of that court: “By .the second section of the third article of the Constitution The judicial power extends to all cases, in law and equity, arising under Ithe Constitution, the laws of the United States, etc.,’ and as applicable to the case in hand. To controversies between a State and citizens of another State,’ which controversies, under the Judiciary Act, may be brought, in the first instance, before Ithis court in the exercise of its original jurisdiction, and we agree, that the bill filed, presents a case, which, if it be the subject of judicial cognizance, would, in form, come under a familiar head of r equity jurisdiction, that is, jurisdiction to grant an injunction to restrain a party from a wrong or injury to the rights of another, where the danger, actual or threatened is irreparable, or the remedy at law inadequate. But, according to the course of proceeding under this head in equity, in order to entitle the party to the remedy, a case must be presented appropriate for the exercise of judicial power; the rights
In denying those plaintiffs the right to prosecute the suit in question we do not deprive them of any right they have under the fourteenth amendment to the United States Constitution. Every State has the right to construct its judiciary as it sees fit, and the people of this State have seen fit to observe the distinctions that existed of old between legal and equitable jurisdiction, and. it is not denying plaintiffs due process of law nor equal protection of law, to tell them that when they wish to contest the title of another to a public office, or to vindicate their political rights, they must go into the law courts, and not into those whose jurisdiction is peculiar and limited, and not adapted to complaints of that kind.
Prohibition is the proper remedy to prevent a court from assuming a jurisdiction it has not, or exceeding a jurisdiction it has.
The point is advanced by learned counsel that this court exceeded its jurisdiction in dissolving the injunction when it issued the order to show cause why the writ of prohibition should not issue. After the circuit court and the parties were admonished to proceed no further in the case until this court could look into the matter, the maintenance of the injunction already issued would have been as unlawful as further procedure in the case. The order dissolving the injunction was only necessary for the information of those concerned, so that there could be no doubt as to the effect of the rule Do show cause. Undoubtedly this court or the judges in vacation could, if conditions had seemed to call for it, have qualified the rule to show cause by expressly leaving the injunction in force until the further order or final judgment of this court. But in the absence of such qualification the preliminary rule not only arrests further proceedings, but undoes what has been done.
It is also contended by learned counsel that relators had their remedy by motion to dissolve, and by appeal on final judgment.
Prohibition is an extraordinary remedy and will not lie where the party claiming it has adequate remedy by ordinary means. But the ordinary means that will defeat the application for this extraordinary writ must be sufficient to afford the relief the case demands. If the relators should await to'follow the course pointed out by their adversaries, it would in all probability be a year before their appeal could be heard and decided, and it would be perhaps two years if the cause took
It is said by an eminent law writer that before the writ of prohibition should issue it ought to appear that the party applying for it has applied in vain to the inferior tribunal for relief (High on Ex. Rem., sec. 765), and that author cites in support of the proposition a decision of the Supreme Oourt of Arkansas which does so declare. [State ex rel. v. Williams, 48 Ark. 227.] But whilst we agree to that general rule, we do not apply it as the counsel who invoke it here insist. It is not a jurisdictional requirement, it is not essential like a motion for a new trial before appeal. The writ of prohibition does not issue ex debito justitiae but only in the discretion of the court. When the applicant has made out his prima facie case, bringing it within the technical requirements of the law, the question still remains for the court, does the real right and justice of the case call for this extraordinary remedy? In determining the question, if there is anything in the circumstances suggesting that the party has neglected to apply for relief that -was reasonably available, the writ would'be withheld, • at least until such relief was sought. The Supreme. Court of California, in the case last cited, took this view of the-subject, and held that the failure to apply to the lower court to discharge the receiver did not justify a denial of the writ of prohibition. [Havemeyer v. Sup. Ct., supra, citing Mayor of London v. Cox, L. R. 2 H. L. 278-280]. The point is not presented in the briefs of the learned counsel accompanied with any suggestion on their part that an application to the circuit court would have availed, but they present it as a fixed bar to the relator’s application for this writ. We do not so regard it.
The record shows that the Honorable Daniel D. Eisher,