This is a statutory action, in the nature of quo warranto, commenced for the purpose of ousting from membership in the board of education of the city of Bessemer certain individuals named in the application as respondents. An act of the General Assembly, approved February 11, 1891 (Laws 1890'-91, p. 558), provided for a “board of education” for the city of Bessemer and prescribed the duties thereof. Under this act all the persons in whose interest the application is made in this cause, were duly elected; and they, together with the mayor, composed the board of education of the city of Bessemer, as constituted and existing on the dates of March 3, 1908, and April 21, 1908. The return or answer to the writ in this case shows that on the 3d day of March, 1908, the then city of Bessemer, by an ordinance passed in conformity to section 199 of the act known as the “Municipal Code Act,” approved August 13, 1907 (Laws 1907, p. 892), organized its city government under the provisions of that act; and it is further averred in the return that on the 21st day of April, 1908, the city council, in accordance with section 1.69 of the act mentioned (section 1349 of the Code of 1907), proceeded to elect and did elect the respondents members of the board of education, and that they hold office under said election and by virtue of that section of the act of 1907.
Although, upon the passage of the ordinance as provided by section 199 of the act of 1907, the city government became organized under the provisions of the act, yet that section provides that “the then existing offices and officers of said city or town shall continue to exist and to hold such offices until the time fixed herein for their term to expire as provided in section two of this act.” Section 1047, Code 1907. While the application for the writ does not aver the precise date when the *89members of the old board of education, were elected, nor show the term of their office and the dates of expiration thereof, yet, as has already been pointed out, it shows they were lawfully entitled to hold the office of members of the board of education, and were in office, with undisputed right, at the time of the passage of the ordinance and when the respondents were elected by the city council. These averments, together with the averment that the respondents have usurped and are now unlawfully holding office as members of the board of education, placed upon the respondents the burden of showing, by their return to the writ, a clear title to their office. This they have attempted to do only in the manner heretofore stated, and have not, in their return, undertaken to show the terms and expirations of terms of office of the persons who constituted the board of education on April 21, 1908, the date when respondents were elected.
Such being the condition of the record, and such the nature of this proceeding, we are authorized to assume that the terms of office of the members of the board of education had not expired when the ordinance of March 3, 1908, was passed, nor when the election was held on April 21,1908, and, further, that they were holding office on January 1, 1908. Therefore under section 2 of the act in question, their terms of office were continued at least until the first Monday in October, 1908, and they were entitled to hold until that date. It may be that they are entitled to the office for even a longer period. It is true that section 169 of the act provides that “at the first regular meeting of the council in April, or as soon thereafter as may be practicable, at any regular meeting, the council shall elect the members of the board of education.” Manifestly, this refers to April, 1909, because section 2 postpones the going into effect of the act, generally until the officers elected at the general *90municipal election on the third Monday in September, 1908, enter on the discharge of their several official functions. And section 199 of the act of 1907, under which the city of Bessemer became organized (which section, as we have held, should be regarded as a proviso to section 2 [Ward v. State, 154 Ala. 227, 45 South. 655]), provides for the election by a city coming in under its terms, of only such officers as are required by the act and are not provided for by the charter of such city or town, thus impliedly prohibiting the election of any officer provided for by the charter of the city.
The act of February 11, 1891, operated as an amendment to the charter of the city (Cobb v. Vary, 120 Ala. 263, 24 South. 442; City v. Birdsong, 126 Ala. 632, 28 South. 522); and, the board of education being already provided for, there was therefore in this instance no necessity or authority for electing the respondents members of the board. There were no vacancies. There can be no doubt that, when the act of 1907 becomes effective as to the city pf Bessemer in respect to the subject of board of education, it will repeal the provisions of the act of 1891 on that subject. The two acts are inconsistent in many respects, and it is evident the Legislature intended that the latter act should supersede the former. • — City, etc., v. National, etc., Co., 108 Ala. 336, 18 South. 816.
It must follow, from what has been said, that the return to the writ fails to show in respondents a legal right to membership on the board in question; and the court should have so held.
Reversed and remanded.
Haralson, Simpson, and Anderson, JJ., concur.