181 Ind. 660 | Ind. | 1914
Action by appellant, against appellee, prosecuting attorney of the Thirty-first Judicial Circuit, to remove bim from office, for tbe alleged negligent failure to perform bis official duties. This action is based on tbe
The various articles of the accusation are predicated on the alleged failure or refusal of appellee to perform his official duties relating to the prosecution of alleged offenses relating to gambling, gambling devices, houses of ill-fame, illegal sales of intoxicating liquor, and Sunday labor. In sustaining the demurrer to the accusation, the trial court filed a written opinion, which is copied in appellee’s brief, and from which it appears that the demurrer was sustained on the theory that §9662 Burns 1914, supra, does not warrant the removal of a prosecuting attorney from his office because of neglect to perform his official duties
It is contended by appellant that the court’s ruling was erroneous, because, as asserted, the section of the statute (§9662, supra) which denounces neglect of official duty on the part of “any officer within the jurisdiction of the court” must be held to include prosecuting attorneys, and that no valid constitutional objection can be urged against the enactment. Appellee seeks to meet this contention with the assertion that, construing the act as a whole, the section in controversy should not be held as declaring the legislative intent to apply to prosecuting attorneys, but that if such intention must be imputed, the act must be held unconstitutional to that extent.
Some other questions are presented by appellant’s brief, but their consideration is rendered unnecessary by our conclusion in relation to the statute on which the prosecution is grounded. Judgment affirmed.
Note. — Reported in 105 N. E. 228. As to mode of removing official from office for cause, see 135 Am. St. 256. For a discussion of the failure to enforce laws as grounds for the removal of a public officer, see Ann. Cas. 1913 D 32. See, also, under (1) 32 Cyc. 689, 694; (2) 8 Cyc. 730; (4) 32 Cyc. 693; (5) 8 Cyc. 774-776; (6) 8 Cyc. 742; (7) 8 Cyc. 804.