119 P. 763 | Or. | 1912
delivered the opinion of the court.
“An action at law may be maintained in the name of the State, upon the information of the prosecuting attorney, or upon the relation of a private party against the person offending, in the following cases: (1) When any person shall usurp, intrude into or unlawfully hold, or exercise any public office, civil or military, or any franchise within this State, or any office in a corporation either public or private, created or formed by or under the authority of this State. * * ”
Section 368 of the chapter mentioned states that:
“The actions provided for in this chapter shall be commenced and prosecuted by the prosecuting attorney of the district where the same are triable. * * ”
Section 369 reads thus:
“When directed by the Governor, as prescribed in Section 364, it shall be the duty of the prosecuting attorney to commence the action therein provided for accordingly. In all other actions provided for in this chapter it shall be the duty of the proper prosecuting attorney to commence such action, upon leave given where leave is required, in every case of public interest, whenever he has reason to believe that a cause of action exists and can be proven, and also for like reasons in every case of private interest only in which satisfactory security is*249 given to the State to indemnify it against the costs and expenses that may be incurred thereby.”
In 1891 the legislative assembly enacted what is now Section 2666, L. O. L.:
“There is hereby created the office of Attorney General of the State of Oregon.”
In 1901 that body prescribed the duties of the Attorney General in what is now Section 2670, L. O. L. So far as litigation is concerned, the provisions of that section are here given:
“The Attorney General, at the request of the Governor, Secretary of State, State Treasurer, Superintendent of Public Instruction or any of the said parties, shall, upon the breach thereof, prosecute any official bond or contract in which the State is interested. * * He shall appear, prosecute or defend for the State all suits, causes, or proceedings in the Supreme Court in which the State is a party or interested; and he shall, when requested by any State board, or board of trustees, or by the Governor or Secretary of State or State Treasurer appear, prosecute, or defend any action, suit, matter, cause, or proceeding in any court in which the State is a party or interested; and he shall, when requested, consult, and advise with the district attorneys in all matters pertaining to their official duties.”
It is the relators’ contention, in effect, that although the district attorney, before the creation of the office of Attorney General, had authority, and it was his duty, to commence and prosecute the kind of actions in question, yet, when the legislature in 1891 created the office of Attorney General, that officer at once, by virtue of his office, was vested with exclusive power in such matters. They argue that the Attorney General has all the powers belonging to his office at common law, and cite many authorities to that effect. A careful examination, however, of all the citations shows merely that the powers exercised by an Attorney General at common law are preserved in some form at the present day. There is no
“I do not recognize the doctrine that the Attorney General takes any power by virtue of his office except what the constitution and the laws confer. The powers of the officers of England are not vested in the executive officers of the United States government simply because they are called by similar names. It is the theory, and, I may add, the glory, of our institutions that they are founded upon law, and that no one can exercise any authority over the rights and interests of others except pursuant to and in the manner authorized by law.”
To sustain the contention of the relators would require us to hold that the act creating the office of Attorney General repeals by implication the provisions of the chapter just noted requiring actions of this kind to be commenced and prosecuted by the district attorney. In the language of Justice McBride in the State ex rel v. Malheur County Court, 54 Or. 255 (101 Pac. 907: 103 Pac. 446), “a repeal by implication only arises when both statutes cannot be reconciled ■ with each other by any reasonable interpretation, or where there is a clear intent shown by the terms of the latter act that it shall supersede the other. * * Repeals by implication are not favored, and repugnancy between two statutes should bb clear before a court is justified in holding that a later statute impliedly repeals an earlier one.” It is our duty, therefore, if possible, to reconcile these two statutes so that both may stand. Bearing in mind, then, that under the requirements of Section 368, L. O. L., in the very words themselves, it is stated that the actions of the kind in question shall be commenced and prosecuted by the prosecuting attorney of the district where the same
In the later case of State ex rel. v. Cook, 39 Or. 377 (65 Pac. 89), the question was more directly presented. That was a case of quo warranto to determine the title to the office of road supervisor. The complaint was signed by private counsel only; but, before the case was brought on for hearing, the district attorney had his appearance noted on the journal. After reviewing the authorities, Justice Wolverton laid down the rule in these terms:
“But unless there is some showing either by appropriate allegations or by the official signature indicating that the act has been commenced and is being prosecuted by the State officer, the complaint cannot be held sufficient.”
In People v. Oakland Water Front Co., 118 Cal. 234 (50 Pac. 305), Justice Beaty held that the proper practice would have been followed if the defendant had moved in the district court to dismiss the information upon the ground, among others, that the Attorney General had no authority or power to institute or prosecute proceedings in the name or on behalf of the people of the State. Although the question was not raised in this way in the district court, the Supreme Court held it to be a jurisdictional question, and proceeded to determine the matter in the Supreme Court. True enough, the court in that case held that, under the California practice, the Attorney General had authority to commence the action, but the principle applicable in this case is that the question of his authority is one of jurisdiction, which can be urged by demurrer as in the case at bar.
The matter of jurisdiction involves two elements: First, jurisdiction over the person of the defendant; and, second, jurisdiction over the subject-matter or the right to try the particular case presented to the court. Here by their
The decision of the court below is affirmed.
Affirmed.