State ex rel. Davis v. Davis

*81The opinion of the court was delivered by

Reed, J.

The information sets out the provisions of the statute of May 25th, 1894 (Pamph. L., p. 53), which statute repealed the act passed in 1892, under which act respondents-were elected chosen freeholders. It also sets out the provisions of the act of May 9th, 1894 (Pamph. L., ch. CXLV.), which act also repeals the act of 1892, and provides a new plan for the organization of the board and for the election or appointment of its members. The information further sets out the appointment of the relators as members of the board of chosen freeholders under the provisions of the last-mentioned act.

The plea is that the respondents, or members of the old board, were elected under the act of 1892, and that their term has not expired; that they are, and the relators are not, entitled to hold the said offices.

The plea sets out no title in the respondents, for the act of 1894 in explicit terms not only repeals the act of 1892, but further provides that the terms of office of all persons elected or appointed under the provisions of the act of 1892 are terminated.

So, conceding the constitutionality of the act of 1894 — and it is not questioned in this case — the terms of office of the members of the old board were extinguished when the act of 1894 went into effect. City of Hoboken v. Gear, 3 Dutcher 265; Love v. Jersey City, 11 Vroom 456.

The plea fails to show any title in the respondents, and the ordinary rule is that such title must be exhibited or the plea is bad. High Extr. Rem., § 712; Com. Dig., Quo War., tit. “Plea;” State v. Utter, 2 Gr. 84.

In instances where the information is filed by the attorney-general, or by leave of this court, this failure to set out a title in the respondent would be conclusive against the plea.

But the present information is not so filed, but is filed under color of section 1 of the act of 1884. Rev. Sup., p. 819. This .section provides that it may be lawful for any citizen *82who believes himself lawfully entitled to an office alleged feo be unlawfully held by another, to file an information.

It is perceived that the statute strips the court of its discretionary power over the allowance of the information in one instance only, namely, where the relator himself claims the office. In all other cases, although the relator’s interest, by reason of his citizenship, or his liability for taxes, or other causes, may entitle him to stand as relator, the discretionary power of the court over the institution of the proceeding, to be exercised in view of the public interests, is reserved.

It could not have been the legislative intent to permit a person who files an information as a claimant of an office to recover a judgment of ouster, although it may be that such claimant has no title whatever, and the public interests will be injuriously affected by such ouster.

In this class of informations, I think the respondent may challenge the right of the relator to file his information. Whether 'the method of interposing this objection should be by motion to quash the writ, or by a plea in abatement of the writ, need not now be decided. Nor, if it can be objected by plea, need it be decided whether this plea is in form for that purpose. For if it be assumed that the right of the relators is brought in question by the plea in the present case, it appears beyond all manner of doubt, from the information, that the standing of the relator is unassailable.

The facts set out in the information show that the relators are the legal appointees to the offices now in dispute. These facts are the following: An act of 1894 (Pamph. L., p. 248) provides for an election of a member of the board of chosen freeholders in each ward and township and in each borough possessing complete autonomy of local government, in the manner provided for municipal and township elections. This act took effect on May 9th, 1894. The time for municipal and borough elections for that year had then passed. On May 25th, 1894, the act terminating the terms of the old members of the board went into effect. After that date, the old members being functus offidi, and no one having been *83elected to membership in the board under the act of May 9th, 1894, there were offices and there were no legally-qualified incumbents. This constituted a vacancy. Mech. Pub. Off, § 125; State v. Stocking, 7 Ind. 329; Am. & Eng. Encycl. L., vol. 19, p. 430.

Now, the act of May 9th, 1894, provides, in section 5, that the board of aldermen or council in any city, the borough •council in any borough, and the township committee in any township, shall have power to fill any vacancy in these offices, and that the person so appointed shall hold the position of chosen freeholder for the unexpired term.

The relators set out in the information that, since May 25th, the various municipalities in Camden county have made appointments in conformity with this provision of the act to fill such vacant offices, and that the relators are such appointees.

Conceding the accuracy of the facts set out in the information, as the plea does, there' is no substance in the defence set up, and the plea must be struck out.