10 Or. 198 | Or. | 1882
By the Court,
The appellant, the Douglas County Road Company, is a private, as distinguished from a distinctly public, corporation. (Douglas County Road Company v. Abraham, 5 Or., 518.) Its object, as specified in its articles of incorporation, was “to build and keep in repair, a good and substantial plank, clay and gravel wagon road through the big canyon, in Douglas county, state of Oregon, and to receive tolls for traveling over said road.” The object of this action is to annul the existence of the corporation.
Section 351 of the code of civil procedure abolished the writ of quo warranto and the quo warranto information. But it is only the form of the proceeding that is done away with by that section. The remedies formerly had under those forms are now had, under the civil action specified in sections 353 and 354. (People v. Hall, 80 N. Y., 119.)
The action lies only for franchises exercised without or in violation of legislative grant, by which, in this country, all franchises are held. (The People v. Utica Insurance Co., 15 John, 358; Bank of Augusta v. Earle, 13 Pet.. 595; Aug. and Ames on Cor., sections 731, 737; United States v. Lockwood, 1 Pinney’s Rep. [Wis.,] 363; Territory v. Lockwood, 3 Wall., 236; Cole on Informations, 111.)
This act required the i*elato2*s name to be 2ne2itio2red in the information, .and this, and the previous act of W". and M., l-equiring the person at whose suggestion the suit had been instituted, to give an undertaking for costs, should prosecution fail, gave ruse to the practice of filing quo warranto informations, entitled on the relation of private per*
But an information against a corporation as a body, to annul its corporate existence, could not be filed by the master of the crown office. Such informations were filed by the attorney general; and leave was not required- — he was the sole judge of the propriety of filing the information. The law requiring leave of the court before an information could be filed, applied only to the master of the crown office. (Rex v. Carmarthen, 2 Burr, 869; Murphy v. Farmer's Bank, 20 Penn. St., 415; Commonwealth v. Turnpike Co., 6 B. Monroe, 397.)
With us, the filing of quo warranto information, the several district attorneys possess the powers as well as those usually exercised by the attorney general, as by the master of the crown office; but the statute preserves, with few exceptions, the distinction between actions by them, acting ex-offieio in the former capacity, and ez-relatione in the latter. (Attorney General v. Railroad Co., 9 Vroom, 282; The State v. Stewart, 32 Mo., 379.)
Our statute limits the power of the district attorney, acting ex-offieio, in requiring him to get leave. But when leave has been -granted, the discretionary power of the court has been expended. (The State v. Brown, 5 R. I., 6.)
The district attorney is the law officer of the state, within the limits of his district, with the powers, in the absence of statutory regulation, of the attorney general at common law. (Constitution of Oregon, art. 7, sec. 17.) Therefore, when, as in the case before us, the district attorney files a quo warranto information in a distinctly state action, he has as much the sole control over it as the attorney general would have in a like case at common law. A relator cannot be a
The reason is plain: the state, out of its sovereign power, has created the corporation for the purposes declared in its charter, and the same power must preside at its dissolution. The state may waive the forfeiture of the charter, and its power to do so, acting through its attorney, cannot be controlled by the court. (State v. McConnell, 3 Lea., [Tenn.,] 339; Commonwealth v. Union Insurance Co., 5 Mass., 232; The People v. Attorney General, 22 Barb., 117; The People v. Tobacco Co., 42 How. Pr., 162; The People v. Fairchild, 8 Hun., 334; S. C., 67 N. Y., 334.