Campbell v. Hunt

FRANKLIN, C. J.

The inquiry involved in this proceeding imposes upon the court the duty of determining which *445one of two persons, being rival claimants, respectively, to tbe office of Governor of this state, shall be recognized and given temporarily the status of a de facto officer. It goes no further. This solemn duty may not, in the popular comprehension, be entirely dissociated from a political aspect, but in this court it is, in its very essence, viewed strictly as a judicial question proper for the judgment of the court. The equity of the court must from the most trivial to the most solemn occasions be strict, even to apparent severity, whence partiality and prejudice are totally to be excluded, and the true state of the law alone, so far as it may have the light to discern it, preside in its tongue. To this end we must give it that same patient and conscientious attention, before pronouncing judgment, that every ease presented in this court deserves, no matter what the matter involved. That must be our purpose. The conduct of affairs in Arizona is practically in the hands of majorities, and accordingly the right to vote, the conditions under which the right can be exercised, the qualifications of the voters and the officers for whom they vote, the safeguards against an improper exercise of the franchise, the laws under which elections are held, the results determined, corrected or set aside, and the effect thereof, the penalties imposed on those who abuse the system, and above all the nature of the tribunals to whom the decision of all these matters is committed — all these things must, or ought to be, of vital importance to every thoughtful citizen and lawmaker. This to a degree no whit less than the deep concern of those charged with the direct responsibility of the exposition of the laws as they exist with such implements as may be at hand, and the application of the principles underlying those laws to the ascertained facts of this case.

Abridging much that is in the papers before us, but, as I take it, omitting nothing of the uncontroverted facts that is essential to dispose of the application, the plaintiff claims: That a general election was held on November 7, 1916, at which election he ’and defendant were rival candidates for the office of Governor, their respective names so appearing upon the regular ballot, and each was thus voted for by large numbers of the qualified electors of the state. That the election officers in the various election precincts of each county canvassed the votes and made tabulations and returns of the *446results of such canvass to the respective boards of supervisors of the various counties in the state. That the boards of supervisors each made a canvass of such returns so transmitted to them and did declare the result of said canvass. That said boards of supervisors did thereafter transmit the respective results of their canvass to the Secretary of State of Arizona, and in so doing did transmit to the secretary their canvass of the returns at said election in their respective counties for the office of Governor as canvassed and counted by said election officers, and as canvassed by said respective boards of supervisors. That the Secretary of State thereupon, and on the sixth day of December, 1916, canvassed the said returns for the office of Governor, and did declare that plaintiff, Thomas E. Campbell, received for the office of Governor at said election the highest number of votes given to any candidate for that office, and did declare the said Thomas E. Campbell elected to the said office of Governor, and did issue to him a certificate of election, certifying and declaring the said Thomas E'. Campbell to be elected at said general election to the office of Governor of the state of Arizona, the certificate being under the hand of the Secretary of State and under the seal of the state of Arizona. That plaintiff is eligible under the Constitution and laws of Arizona to be elected and hold the office of Governor, and has qualified by taking the oath of office prescribed by the law. That upon demand the defendant unlawfully precluded the plaintiff from his right or office to which he is entitled.

Under this state of facts and in this proceeding it is the contention of plaintiff that he has shown prima facie his right to be recognized as the officer clothed with the power to discharge temporarily the necessary duties of the office of Governor, and to obtain possession of the books, records, and property pertaining to the office, until it may be determined in an appropriate proceeding who is the real Governor of the state.

The defendant does not deny the facts as above substantially set forth, but he does challenge the legal effect of such facts. Further, to overcome the case made by the plaintiff, the defendant shows: That in the year 1914 he was legally elected Governor for the definite and fixed term of two years from the first Monday in January, 1915, with a further term *447contingent on the election and qualification of his successor, and he is now in possession of the office and performing its duties because such contingency has not happened, to wit, that no person has been legally elected and qualified as his successor. That plaintiff is disqualified from holding the office of Governor. That a contest is now pending in the superior court of Maricopa county, having jurisdiction thereof, wherein the defendant is the contestant and the plaintiff the contestee, and wherein the person receiving the highest number of legal votes and the ultimate title to the office of Governor will be definitely determined. That so far as such contest has progressed the defendant verily believes and asserts the fact to be that it is shown that he has received the highest number of legal votes cast at said election for the office of Governor, and that under the law and of right and justice he is the lawful Governor of the state, and ought to be recognized as such until there be a final judicial determination otherwise.

It is true beyond the peradventure of a doubt that the person who received the largest number of legal votes cast for the office of Governor is the lawful Governor of this state. Such person is now and always will be such until the term prescribed by law expires or a vacancy occurs. Under the Constitution and laws of this state, the real right or title to the office comes from the will of the voters as expressed at the election. If the office was in fact given by the voters to another, the mere canvass of the returns and declaration of the result and the issuance of a certificate of election — any or all these things — do not and cannot invest one with the right which belongs to another. In this sense, if one has not the right and the real title, he holds unlawfully, though he may be recognized for a time as the officer de facto; it being the fact of election by the highest number of legal votes which gives title to the office, and this fact may be established, not only without, but against, the declaration of the result and the evidence of the certificate based thereon. There are two ways of doing this. Under chapter 14 of title 12, Revised Statutes of 1913, any elector of the state may contest the election of any person who is declared elected to a state office. Under chapter 8 of title 6, Revised Statutes of 1913, it is made the duty of the Attorney General to bring *448an action in quo warranto whenever he has reason to believe that any public office has been usurped, intruded into, or unlawfully held or exercised, and a private person claiming a public office may exercise the writ of quo warranto to try his title to the office, provided he first obtains permission of the court. Here we have two methods provided for trying the title to a public office, two methods for determining who is the real and lawful Governor of the state when a dispute arises thereabout, and in either method pursued the successful party must show that he has received the highest number of legal votes for the office, that he was eligible to the election and has duly qualified, and that the term of an incumbent, if any, has legally expired.

Such matters concerning conflicting claims to the legal or ultimate title to office, however, are forejgn to the scope and purpose of mandamus. Paragraph 1553, Revised Statutes of 1913, provides:

“1553. The writ of mandamus may be issued by the supreme or superior court to any inferior tribunal, corporation, board (whether the Governor is a member of such board or not) or person, to compel the performance of an act which the law specially enjoins as a duty resulting from an office, trust or station, or to compel the admission of a party to the use and enjoyment of a right or office to which he is entitled, and from which he is unlawfully precluded by such inferior tribunal, corporation, board or person.”

This statute is the basis of the present application. The writ hereunder is not, except in a limited sense, prerogative in character. I think it may accurately be said that it issues of right, but not as a matter of course. It does not issue where there is a plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the •ordinary course of law, and ought not to issue as a matter appealing to the legal discretion of the court, when the applicant does not substantially demonstrate the propriety and justice of his case. It is rather an extraordinary and expeditious legal remedy, which proceeds in every case upon the assumption that the applicant has an immediate and complete legal right to the thing demanded. If the applicant here has shown an immediate and complete legal right to be •admitted temporarily to the office of Governor, and there are no compelling circumstances to frustrate it, then he has sub*449stantially demonstrated the propriety and justice of his case, and the writ ought as of right to issue. It is no part of the functions of the writ of mandamus to determine contested elections, or settle the ultimate title to a public office when disputed. As we have seen, the remedy provided therefor is a statutory contest or the writ of quo warranto.

It is clear, therefore, that the methods provided for the trial of such matters are not speedy or adequate, if the laws of this state invest one with a legal prima facie title to public office, complete in everything but possession, and that legal prima facie title may be tried and determined in a certain proceeding to the exclusion of those matters that are properly involved when, and only when, the ultimate or complete title is disputed and is to be determined by other methods.

If the law provides for a canvass and a certificate of election as evidence of title to an office, it is a clear principle of law deducible from all the authorities I have read that such constitutes a prima facie title; that it is necessary that there should be some expeditious remedy for or method of putting every office in the possession of the person who is prima facie entitled to it, without waiting for the determination of the ultimate right to such office. The remedy by mandamus is such a method, and has been used for this purpose from the earliest times. High on Extraordinary Legal Remedies, 3d ed., § 67; Blackstone’s Commentaries, 110; Street v. Gallatin County Commrs., 1 Breese (Ill.), 50; Dew v. Judges, 3 Hen. & M. (13 Va.) 1, 3 Am. Dec. 639; Ex parte Diggs, 52 Ala. 381; Ex parte Wiley, 54 Ala. 226; Singleton v. Commissioners, 2 Bay (S. C.), 105; People v. Board of Police, 35 Barb. (N. Y.) 535; Banton v. Wilson, 4 Tex. 400; Lindsey v. Luckett, 20 Tex. 516; Felts v. Mayor of Memphis, 2 Head (Tenn.), 650; Harwood v. Marshall, 9 Md. 83; Strong’s Case, 20 Pick. (Mass.), 484; State ex rel. Curtis v. McCullough, 3 Nev. 202; People v. Hallett, 1 Colo. 352; State v. Common Council of Watertown, 9 Wis. 254. It is unnecessary to quote the more modern authorities, because this principle of law is not disputed, nor well could it be under the statute quoted; the defendant’s contention being that there is no law in this jurisdiction upon which such a prima fade title may be founded as will justify the issuance of the writ of mandamus.

*450If this he true, the contention is sound. The position taken by defendant has a basis for good faith and reasonableness in an expression by this court in the case of State v. Osborne, 14 Ariz. 185, 125 Pac. 884, unfortunate in the respect that it is somewhat ambiguous and its language might lend some color of reasonableness to the interpretation given to it by defendant’s counsel.

Section 11, article 5, of the Constitution, provides:

“The returns of the election for all state officers shall be canvassed, and certificates of election issued by the secretary of state, in such manner as may be provided by law.”

An interpretation of this clause of the Constitution was not called for in that case, and a close analysis of it was not made or attempted but the court, ex gratia, and by way of argument merely, used this language:

“The duty of canvassing the returns of the election for all state officers devolves upon the Secretary of State, and no other officer can perform such duties. . . . This section of the Constitution is, however, not self-executing. It requires that the Secretary of State shall perform such duties in such manner as may be provided by law. Clearly it was the duty of the legislature to provide the manner in which the secretary should canvass the votes.”

The only thought in the mind of the court was to give accent to the required action of the legislature in providing a definite mode of procedure to guide the secretary and enable him the more expeditiously and within definite lines to perform his constitutional duty, rather than leave it to his own devices, to fulfill the requirement. It is perfectly clear, upon reflection, that the duty of canvassing the returns cannot be taken from the secretary, and, that being true, it demonstrates that the only officer with power to declare the result of the canvass is the secretary who makes the canvass, for the performance of the duty must inevitably end in the result of the canvass. It follows, therefore, that the specific duty cast upon the secretary to canvass the returns of the election for all state offices and issue certificates of election cannot be defeated by the legislature, and in this sense the provision is clearly self-executing; but nevertheless it is an instance wherein supplementary legislation is highly desirable, if not absolutely necessary, to prescribe the particular details attendant upon and *451the mode of procedure to be followed in making the canvass and declaring the result thereof. The duty to canvass clearly implies the duty to declare the result thereof, for it would be the most idle thing to make a canvass of the returns, if no result would be accomplished thereby; also the duty of issuing a certificate of election on the result of the canvass is a duty of the secretary which cannot be defeated by the legislature, and in the absence of specific regulations the duty to issue would clearly imply the duty to execute the certificate. The duty to issue a certificate, however, does not necessarily include the power to execute the certificate. As a noun, in the ordinary sense, it means the act of sending or causing to go forth; in short, delivery. Subsequent legislation might provide for the form and contents of the certificate and the manner of its execution, as, for instance, whether under the hand of the secretary alone, or under the hand of the Governor, countersigned by the secretary, with the seal of the state affixed. To my mind it is clear that the provision in question was intended as a present enactment, complete in itself as definitive legislation so far as the duty to canvass the returns, declare the result thereof, and issue the certificate of election based thereon, and in this respect self-executing. But it does contemplate subsequent legislation to furnish a mode of procedure to guide the secretary in the particulars or methods of the canvass, declaration of the result, and the execution and issuance of the certificate of election, and not leave too much concerning such matters to his discretion and to his own devices.

If a constitutional provision directly imposes a duty upon an officer, no legislation is necessary to require the performance of such duty. From the bench, when another phase of the matter was before the court on appeal from a judgment or order of the superior court dismissing the contest proceedings, because no declaration of the result had been made or certificate of election issued, and the Secretary of State was threatening to issue to plaintiff a certificate of election, it was intimated, with no occasion to decide the matter, that it was perhaps not within our power to prohibit the secretary from so doing, and, on the other hand, if he refused to execute the certificate, it was perhaps beyond our power to compel that officer to do so. If there is a duty to canvass the *452returns, it is an indispensable adjunct to the process to' have a declaration of the result thereof; and it matters not how this may be made, or whether left to the devices of the secretary, or the manner of his doing it regulated by the legislature, if the thing was done, it would be only a question of competent and satisfactory evidence to prove the doing of it. Obviously no one but the Secretary of State can canvass the returns and declare the result as affecting all elected state officers, and if we yielded to the argument of defendant’s counsel, the pending statutory contest in the superior court could not be maintained, in the absence of an official declaration of the result of the election, and the conflicting claims to the office would then be relegated to quo warranto.

There is no question in this proceeding of the genuineness of the returns canvassed by the secretary; that is, that the papers presented to him are forged or spurious, that they are not the returns, and all the returns, and signed by the proper officers. His simple function, then, was to add them up, ascertain and declare the apparent result of the voting, and in no wise is the good faith of the secretary in the premises sought to be impeached in the doing of all this. It must follow that all other questions must be tried before the court or other tribunal for contesting elections or in quo warranto proceedings. The members of the court seem to foe in harmony upon the proposition that the acts of the Secretary of State, under the constitutional provision, in canvassing the returns, declaring the result thereof, and delivering to plaintiff a certificate of his election gives plaintiff a prima facie right to be admitted temporarily to the office until reversed or set aside by a court of proper jurisdiction in appropriate proceedings, provided only that plaintiff is not shown to be disqualified under the law from holding the office of Governor. There is some discord in the boobs as to whether or not in mandamus proceeding's the disqualification of the officer holding the certificate of election may be urged to defeat his temporary admission to the office; in fine, whether his alleged disqualification may properly be put in issue in such a proceeding to overcome his prima facie title evidenced by the canvass and certificate. In my view, if the applicant under the uneontroverted facts was clearly ineligible to be elected to or dis*453qualified from holding the office, I would not hesitate to refuse the writ. The court ought not to do a useless thing.

But, however this may be, it is plain to my mind that no such ineligibility or disqualification exists in plaintiff. The qualifications for Governor are specifically detailed in the Constitution, and the legislature is therefore powerless to add to or detract from the qualifications prescribed. No citation of authority is necessary here. There is no provision in the Constitution making a member of the tax commission or the holder of any other state office ineligible to be elected to or hold the office of Governor, except it be a judge of the supreme court or a judge of the superior court. It is not contended that plaintiff is ineligible under the Constitution, or that he does not possess the qualifications therein prescribed; but his disqualification is said to be found in paragraph 4822, Revised Statutes of 1913, as follows:

“No member shall hold any office under the government of the United States, or of any other state. Each of said members of the said commission shall devote his entire time to the duties of the office and shall not hold any other position of trust or profit, engage in any other occupation or business interfering with, or inconsistent with his duties, or serve on or under any committee of any political party. ’ ’

Members of the tax commission are not constitutional officers. The state tax commission is a creature of the legislature. It may prescribe what qualifications its members shall possess, when vacancies shall occur — in short, the legislature is all-powerful over it, even to the abolition of the commission. But the legislature cannot say who shall be ineligible to be elected to the office of Governor, or who shall be disqualified from holding that office, and it has not even pretended to do so in the statute quoted. Obviously the effect of the statute is not to prohibit a tax commissioner from holding any other position of trust or profit during his term of office, but the effect of the provision is that if a member of the tax commission does so, he by that very act vacates his office as tax commissioner — creates a vacancy in the tax commission. At common law, if a person while occupying one office accepts another incompatible with the first, he ipso facto vacates the first office, and his title thereto is thereby terminated, without any other act or proceeding. If necessary, mandamms would *454issue to install Ms legally appointed or elected successor. Public policy is clearly announced in this statute to the effect that a member of the tax commission is arbitrarily prohibited from holding two offices of trust or profit or the like at the same time, whether or not the two offices would be deemed incompatible. Upon receiving the certificate of election and taking and filing the oath of office prescribed by law, the plaintiff unqualifiedly accepted the office he is now contending for and ipso facto he vacated the office of tax commissioner. It is well settled by an overwhelming array of authority that the holding of one office does not render the incumbent ineligible to another, but that the acceptance of the second office, when prohibited, ipso facto absolutely vacates the first office. The following authorities may be consulted: McCrary on Elections, 3d ed., § 304, p. 206; State v. Thompson, 122 N. C. 493, 29 S. E. 720; State ex rel. Walker v. Bus, 135 Mo. 325, 33 L. R. A. 616, 36 S. W. 636; Shell v. Cousins, 77 Va. 328; Attorney General v. Oakman, 126 Mich. 717, 86 N. W. 151, reported in 86 Am. St. Rep. 574, with extended notes on the loss of one office by accepting another.

It is urged, however, that under paragraph 221, Revised Statutes of 1913, an office does not become vacant by resignation until the lawful acceptance thereof, and to hold that the first office becomes vacant by the acceptance of the second is permitting an officer to do indirectly what he may not do directly; that is, vacate an office without the consent of the appointing power. A little thought will at once demonstrate the position to be unsound. It was a rule of the common law that an officer cannot avoid his office by accepting another, unless Ms office be such as he could terminate by his own act simply, or unless that authority concurs in the new appointment, which would accept the surrender of, or removal from, the old one. See Rex v. Patterson, 4 Barn, & Ad. 9, 24 E. C. L. 15. But we observe here that the very authority, to wit, the legislature, wMch prescribed in paragraph 221 that no vacancy in office should occur by resignation until the lawful acceptance thereof, also prescribed in section 4822 that a member of the tax commission who accepts any other office of trust or profit or the like ipso facto vacates the first office. The law-making power has spoken in general terms as to a vacancy in one instance, and *455particularly as to the existence of a vacancy in another instance. It is self-evident that, if the provisions of paragraphs 220 and 221, Revised Statutes of 1913, are exclusive, and not to be construed in pari materia with paragraph 4822, the latter is of no effect whatever, and the very mischief which the public policy of the state aimed to cut out by the roots, by the inhibition against a member of the tax commission holding two offices at the same time, is permitted. There is no ground for any such holding.

The other matters going to the belief of the defendant that he received the highest number of legal votes cast at the election, and is therefore the lawful Governor of the state, cannot, under the law, in this proceeding be permitted to overcome the showing on the part of plaintiff that he has been declared by the proper canvassing officer to be elected to the office, that he has received the proper certificate of election, and has duly qualified. If it could be established here that the defendant was in fact elected Governor, mcmdamus, of course, would not issue; but the insurmountable difficulty is that such fact cannot be determined here, but must be adjudicated in another proceeding and before another forum. The canvass and certificate of the Secretary of State are no evidence of who was in truth elected; but they are prima facie evidence of the result, and they constitute the highest evidence of the prima facie title that the law requires. In this proceeding we are precluded from determining who was in fact elected to the office of Governor. Such controversy cannot here be put in issue. We are limited strictly to the issues involving the prima facie right or title only, and herein is comprehended the necessity for the prompt and efficient remedy of mandamus. I fail to find the proposition anywhere denied in the books that mandamus ought to issue to compel the delivery of official belongings of a public office to a successor holding the prima facie title emanating from the authority constituted by law to convey it, and this applies to one holding over in an office in a contest between himself and a person who had been declared elected to that identical office as his successor. That the right of plaintiff to the writ under such circumstances is clear may be seen from the following authorities: Supervisors of Town of La Pointe v. O’Malley, 46 Wis. 35, 50 N. W. 521; Jones v. *456Oates, 86 Wis. 634, 39 Am. St Rep. 912, 57 N. W. 296; Cameron v. Parker, 2 Okl. 277, 38 Pac. 14; State v. Callahan, 4 N. D. 481, 61 N. W. 1025; Matney v. King, 20 Okl. 22, 93 Pac. 737; Huffman v. Mills, 39 Kan. 577, 18 Pac. 516; 9 R. C. L., “Elections,” § 116; 13 Modern American Law, p. 289; 6 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 1st ed., “Elections,” p. 373; Constantineau on the De Facto Doctrine, § 443; High on Extraordinary Legal Remedies, 3d ed., §§ 73, 74. The very able counsel for defendant have directed our attention to no authority holding the contrary.

The defendant’s definite term of two years under the Constitution having expired, the further term contingent upon the election and qualification of his successor is, under the law, inferior and subordinate to the right of the plaintiff, founded upon the official canvass and delivery of the certificate of election by the Secretary of State. The plaintiff has, therefore, a present right to the official belongings of the office, to which the present status of the defendant must yield, at least temporarily, until the ultimate title to the office may be determined. The clear authority of the law so demands. If successful in the contest, the defendant loses no right by doing this, not even the salary and emoluments of the office while out of possession, for, under the law, one holding by virtue of the prima facie title only, where it is contested, is, under the circumstances, a makeshift merely— locum tenens — temporarily filling an office which may belong to another. In a word, the plaintiff has the status only of a de facto officer, in contradistinction to an officer de jure, who is the legitimate officer by right and just title, but whose right is held in abeyance by command of the law, upon principles of public policy, until it may be vindicated by the proper constitutional authority. An author gives the general characteristics of an officer de facto as follows:

“Notwithstanding the above definitions, it may not be amiss to give a general description of an officer de facto, and exhibit what his status is in the English and American jurisprudence. In Rex v. Lisle [Andrews, 166], it is said that he ‘is a notional creature only, erected by the law, in order to answer the ends of justice and equity under particular circumstances.’ Hence he is a legal being, and although, as pointed out in State v. Carroll [38 Conn. 449, 9 Am. Rep. *457409], it is the quality and character of his acts, which induce law to afford them validity, and not because of any quality of character conferred upon the officer, or attached to him by reason of any defective election or appointment, yet it must be admitted that the law, in order to attain the end desired, is compelled to recognize in him a qualified official status. He is, therefore, ex necessitate a creature known to the law, possessing an individuality of his own, distinct from and independent of that of an officer de jure. He is invested with certain rights, powers, and duties, is under certain responsibilities to the public and third persons, and even his authority is protected by law to a certain degree. His official power is not the outcome of any relation between him and the rightful officer, as that between principal and agent, or officer and deputy, but is derived from the office itself. With respect to innocent persons dealing with him, he is a lawful officer, so far as the validity of his official acts is concerned. While he may be accountable to the de.jure officer for the fees and emoluments which he is illegally in receipt of, and to the public for unlawfully holding a public office, yet, so long as his title has not been adversely determined in a direct proceeding brought for the purpose, his assumed official character cannot be collaterally assailed, unless he attempts to gain a personal advantage from his incumbency, or to justify as an officer in civil actions brought against him. To sum up, it may be said that he is a good officer so far as the interests of the public and third persons require him to be so, and to that extent he is recognized by law, but no further, and therefore he is not a good officer as to himself.” Constantineau on the De Facto Doctrine, § 23.

Such a status is full of responsibility, and pregnant with much liability unless most discreetly exercised. Considerations of this character would seem to invite on the part of plaintiff and defendant every reasonable effort to expedite the ultimate determination as to who is the real Governor of Arizona. And beyond this is perhaps the greater responsibility to the public of a nonpartisan trial court, in which the real contest is pending, to grasp this in hand, discover the essential points in dispute, and quicken the solution of this most important question, affecting the purity *458of elections and the legally expressed will of the voters— I say to do this with such dispatch as will deprive neither party of a fair opportunity to be heard on essential particulars and compatible with a fair and impartial understanding as to which of the contending parties has received the highest number of legal votes for the office, and thereby, whatever the result may be, fearlessly to determine who is the de jure as well as the de facto Governor of Arizona. In the performance of this delicate duty I feel persuaded of the capacity of the learned judge of the trial court to further merit that public confidence to which he has already so largely attained.

Finally, I am of opinion that plaintiff is entitled to the writ prayed, but that it is unnecessary to issue it instantly. I am convinced that, upon being made acquainted with his duty under the law as uttered by this court, the defendant will gracefully yield a temporary possession, to depend upon a judicial determination of the ultimate right. This is but that deference and respect due from the supreme power in one department of the government, and which this court has and will show, to the highest authority in another and coordinate branch thereof. The distinguished citizen, in high station, now in possession of the office belongings, in good faith is convinced of his duty under the Constitution and laws to retain the possession of the place, subject to the judicial remedies; and this is not an improper temper, under the circumstances, to the end that he may lose no rights by voluntary surrender on the ground of estoppel or otherwise. If, upon judgment, the defendant is successful in the contest, the power of the law will promptly reinstate him; if not, that same power will recognize the plaintiff, if successful, as the lawful officer, and submerge his de facto character which now attaches into that of the de jure Governor having the ultimate lawful right and just title to the office.

If it should become necessary, however, a showing may be made to that effect, and the writ prayed will then issue as a matter of course.

ROSS, J. — I concur in the opinion of the Chief Justice.