45 Mo. 17 | Mo. | 1869
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a proceeding in the nature of a writ of quo warranto. The information alleges that the defendants have “unlawfully usurped, and are now wrongfully holding and exercising the franchise of passing ordinances providing for the levy of taxes on the property of the inhabitants” of the town or village of Shelbina, in the county of Shelby, under the false pretense that the “inhabitants of said town are a body politic and corporate, under and by virtue of the provisions of chapter 41 ” of the General Statutes of the State of Missouri; that the defendants are also, in like manner, unlawfully exercising the franchise of appointing persons to collect such taxes, etc., and prays that the defendants may be required to show by what authority of law these franchises are being exercised by them; that judgment of ouster may be awarded, a suitable fine imposed, and costs recovered. The return denies the alleged usurpations, but admits the doing of the specific acts charged; and then proceeds to allege that the defendants were therein in the lawful and proper exer
1. The demurrer to the return was properly overruled. It was not necessary, in alleging the existence of the corporation, to set out the facts preliminary to the grant of the order, and upon which the order was founded. (12 Barb. 573.) The order, and not the antecedent facts, brought the corporation 'into being.
2. The question of the existence or the non-existence of the supposed corporation was put directly in issue by the pleadings, and, in my opinion, properly. The information alleges, and it proceeds throughout upon the theory, that there was no such corporate existence as the defendants claim. The inquiry whether there was such a corporation, was not collateral, but primary and direct. It is not charged that the defendants intruded into an offi.ce, but that they usurped a franchise — no corporation, and, consequently, no corporate office existing. In England a franchise is concisely defined to be a “r.oyal privilege in the hands of a subject.” In this country it is defined as a privilege of a public nature, which can not be exercised without a legislative grant. With us, therefore, the wrongful assumption of powers, which can alone be rightfully exercised when granted by the sovereign authority, is a violation of a sovereign franchise. (Ang. & Am. on Corp. 697.) The violation of such sovereign franchise is precisely what the defendants are charged with doing. They admit the assumption of the powers, but aver the grant of authority. In other words, they allege the existence of the corporation (which the relator denies), and that they are legal officers of that corporation, and that as such they exercise the franchise in question. The controversy turns wholly upon the question of the existence or non-existence of the alleged corporation. The replication itself admits that existence de facto, and de jure as well, for it admits the order calling the corporation into being. That order is spread upon the records of the
3. But the relator insists that the statute (Gen. Stat. 1865, ch. 41) providing for the incorporation of towns, under which the Shelby County Court acted, is unconstitutional and therefore void, and consequently that the order of the Countv Court based
The other judges concurring, the judgment of the court below is affirmed.