State ex rel. Meek v. Gleason

WESTCOTT, J.,

dissented from the foregoing opinion of die court, and delivered the following opinion:

The fifth cause assigned is, that Harrison Reed, Governor of Florida, had been impeached, and that his appointment of Almon R. Meek as Attorney-General was made after Ms impeachment, and before acquittal. The sixth cause is, that since this impeachment and before acquittal, and before this suit was instituted, F. A. Dockray had been appointed Attorney-General by the acting Governor, William H. Gleason, Lieutenant-Governor of the State.

Section 9, Article XVI., of the Constitution of this State provides that “ any officer when impeached by the Assembly shall he deemed under arrest, and shall be disqualified from performing any of the duties of his office until acquitted by the Senate,” .and in case of the impeachment of the Governor the duties of his office devolve upon the Lieutenant-Governor. These answers allege that Harrison Reed, Governor,has been impeached, and that since his impeachment, and before acquittal, he has appointed Almon R. Meek Attorney-General, who institutes this suit. Tf the matter alleged ivas that a judgment of ouster had *236been pronounced against tbe Governor, and that this appointment had been made since that'judgment', then it could not be insisted that the parties could not produce that judgment by-reason of the rule that a right to an office cannot be made the subject of acollateral inquiry, because a collateral examination is admissible to the extent of producing a judgment of ouster if one is alleged. The reason why a collateral inquiry as to the right cannot be had is, because the person whose right is in question, and is to be affected, has no notice, is no party to the suit, and it would be to determine his right in his absence; but when a judgment of ouster is offered, the court is not to inquire into the right, because the record shows that after hearing there has been a judgment by a court of competent jurisdiction settling the question. Impeachment, when perfected, completely suspends all power of the. Governor, and he can no more exercise any duty of his office after impeachment, and before acquittal,, than he can after a judgment of ouster. I am of the opinion that the court should go so far into the 'examination as to ascertain whether the Legislature has taken such action as to place the Governor “ in arrest, and to disqualify him from performing any of the duties of his office.”

The appointment of the Governor, after impeachment, cannot confer any more authority than an appointment by an individual, and if an impeachment was disclosed, and the appointment was after that date, the appointee would occupy no better position than if his appointment was made by some citizen. He would be in the position of one presuming to discharge the duties of an office to which he had no color of title or right.

The.case from Wisconsin, mentioned in the opinion of the court (9 Wis., 264), states the principle in reference to such an inquiry. That court says: “ Every person assuming to exercise the authority of an officer does not thereby necessarily make himself an officer defacto, but when it appears that the person exercising the powers of an officer is in by such a color of right, and has such possession of the office as makes him an officer de *237facto, his right to hold the office can only be inquired into in some direct proceeding for that purpose.”

In 5 Wendell, 231, the court say that the mere claim to be a public.officer, and the performance of even a number of acts in that character, would not constitute an individual an officer de facto. There must be some color of election or appointment, or an exercise of the office and an acquiescence on the part of the public for a length of time which would afford a strong- presumption of at least a colorable election or appointment.

Whatever may be the rule in other cases as to officers defacto, after an impeachment, under the Constitution of this State the «Governor cannot by appointment create such an officer. When officers are impeached, the purpose of the Constitution is to deprive them of power. The views of the court, if I am not mistaken, would give the appointees of an impeached Governor the standing of officers de facto holding under color of an appointment, and the public must submit to their acts until direct proceedings are instituted and they are removed b j the courts, and if it happens, as in this case, that the Attorney.General, the officer in whom the discretion, to institute these suits is vested, is one of such appointees, we should have a remediless violation of the Constitution by his failure to use that discretion to accomplish their removal, while it would be at least doubtful whether any other officer could file an information against the Attorney-General himself. Taking judicial notice of the principal officers of the State government does not affect the question. The Governor is still Governor, though impeached; the office is not vacated until conviction. The Lieutenant-Governor simply discharges the duties of Governor as the result of an act of which the court does not take judicial notice. The court does not take judicial notice of impeachments any more than it. does of other contents of legislative journals. They are proceedings judicial in their character, followed by a “judgment,” and should be proved like other judgments. They are proved as ■other contents- of legislative journals. I cannot agree with' the *238court in its judgment, but think that we should inquire into the matters alleged to the extent indicated.

WESTCOTT, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court upon the remaining causes assigned by respondent, numbered seven, eight, and twelve:

The foregoing opinions cover the ground set up in the answers numbered seven and eight.

The twelfth ground alleged, is because the Constitution has given the power to the Assembly to impeach the Lieutenant-Governor, and the Senate to try and remove from office, and. that the said bodies will soon be in session, and exercise the power if necessary.

This is purely a matter of judicial cognizance, and if the Legislature is to try judicial questions of this character, if it is a power legitimately within their constitutional authority, then we cannot exercise it. If it is judicial in its character, and within our powers, then the Legislature cannot. No person properly belonging to one of the departments of this Government can exercise functions appertaining to either of the others unless expressly authorized. The powers of the Legislative, Executive, and Judicial Departments are distinct, independent, and supreme in their legitimate sphere within the Constitution;. neither can exceed it.

The cause alleged is insufficient.

Upon the announcement of the foregoing opinions of the court deciding the answer to the rule insufficient, the Attorney-General made and entered of record his certain motion, in the words and figures following, to wit:

In ti-ib Supreme Court or the State op Florida.

And now comes Almon R. Meek, Attorney-General of the State of Florida, in the matter of an information in the nature of a quo warranto, filed by the said Attorney-General in said *239Supreme Court against William II. Gleason, and moves the said court to make the rule nisi heretofore made in this court absolute, the remaining causes or grounds shown against said rule being insufficient; and that said rule being made absolute, proper process do issue requiring said Gleason to answer to said information. Almon R. Meek,

Attorney-General of the State of Florida.

Tuesday, 3 o’clock, P. M., Dec. 2d, 1868.

Motion granted.

Whereupon attorneys for the respondent, in the presence of respondent, waived the issuing and service of process, and appeared generally, and filed the following petition, counsel stating that with this act their connection with the case ceased:

To the Honorables the Justices of the Supreme Gourt of the State of Florida:

Petition of William II. Gleason, Lieut. Gov. State of Florida:

Your petitioner, William II. Gleason, Lieutenant-Governor of the State of Florida, respectfully represents unto this honorable court, that an information in the nature of a quo warranto has been filed in the said court, by leave thereof,'on the motion of one Almon R. Meek, representing himself in the said information as the Attorney-General of the said State.

That upon the filing of the said information as aforesaid, a rule nisi was issued by the said court and served upon the said petitioner, requiring the ^aid petitioner to show cause why a writ of quo loarranto should not issue against the said petitioner, requiring the said petitioner to show by what authority he enjoys, exercises, and performs the functions, powers, and franchise of Lieutenant-Governor of the said State.

That the said petitioner specially offered to the said rule nisi, and in answer thereto set forth and showed to the said court that by reason of anything coutained in the said information, he should not be required to show by what authority he exercises, *240enjoys, and performs the powers, duties, functions, and franchises of Lieutenant-Governor of the said State, for divers reasons and causes in the said answer specified, and for other reasons ; and thereupon moved the said court to discharge the said rule nisi, and that the proceedings instituted in the said court by the said Almon R. Meek against the said petitioner by the said information and rule nisi be quashed.

Y our petitioner further represents unto the honorable court, that among other reasons stated in the said answer to the said rule nisi, your petitioner set forth and stated that the said Almon R. Meek was not Attorney-General; that Harrison Reed had appointed the said Meek Attorney-General after the said Harrison Reed had been impeached by the. Assembly of the State of Florida, by virtue of the power therein vested by the Constitution of the said State; and was therefore, under the said Constitution, and by the authority thereof, under arrest and disqualified from performing any official power or duty until acquitted by the Senate of the said State.

That the said Harrison Reed had caused the said jn'oeeedings to be instituted against the said petitioner for the purpose of revenge and malice against the said petitioner, as therein stated and appearing; that the said Reed urged the nomination and election of the said Gleason as Lieutenant-Governor of the said State, and voted for his election, and lias acquiesced in his election as valid ; and that the said Reed had caused the said proceedings to be instituted for vindictive purposes after he had been impeached as aforesaid, and for the reason that the said Reed charged the said petitioner with having influenced Ms impeachment.

Your petitioner further represents that he alleged in the said answer that the public policy and interest of the said State did not require the action of the said court upon the case made by the said information; and that the said Almon R. Meek was not prosecuting the said petitioner as the legal Attorney-General of the said State.

*241That the said court had illegally granted leave to file the said information upon the said motion; that the said court had no jurisdiction over such proceedings as aforesaid against this petitioner as Lieutenant-Governor; that if it had jurisdiction it would be an improper use of the powers of the said court to allow the proceedings aforesaid to proceed and be prosecuted against the said petitioner.

Your petitioner states that this honorable court held that the said information was legally instituted; and that the motives and purposes aforesaid of the prosecution against your petitioner could not be inquired into; and thereby held that the same did not constitute any sufficient defense against the said information; and that the said court had jurisdiction over the said information,

Your petitioner further represents that the said information admits that this ¡petitioner has been elected to the office of Lieutenant-Governor by the people of the said State; and insists that he was not three years a citizen of the State when he was elected by the- said people.

Your petitioner further shows to this court that the said question of ineligibility stated in the said information, for want of three years’ residence, was decided by the people in their sovereign capacity in the said election; and for that reason, which this honorable court should take judicial notice of, the said court should not have granted the said rule, nor allow the said proceedings to be prosecuted.

That the said court should have taken judicial notice of the fact that this court cannot, in the exercise of any constitutional power, call upon this petitioner to show his authority to act as Lieutenant-Governor, inasmuch as the said information admits that he was elected by the people of the said State, by which he is vested with his authority as Lieutenant-Governor.

Your petitioner further respectfully represents that there is no person in the State of Florida claiming the office of this petitioner nor contesting his election; and that this said informa*242tion is not prosecuted in the name and by the authority of the people of the said State, nor do they require, ask for, or demand the said prosecution.

Your petitioner further represents that he has been wronged and injured in the premises, and subjected to great expense in defending the said prosecution instituted against him contrary to the constitutional and legal rights and privileges of this petitioner.

And your petitioner respectfully informs this honorable court that he does hereby remove the case made by the said information against this petitioner to the United States Circuit Court in and for the Northern District of Florida, to be held at Tallahassee, in said State, in the exercise of his right under and in prarsuance of the third section of an act of Congress of the United States, entitled “ An Act to Protect All Persons in the United States in their Civil Rights, and Furnish the Means of their Vindicationand the fifth section of an act of Congress entitled “ An Act relating to Habeas Corpus, and Regulating Judicial Proceedings in Certain Cases,” approved March 3d, 1863, and the third, fourth, and fifth sections of an act of Congress entitled “ An Act to Amend An Act relating to Habeas Corpus, and Regulating Judicial Proceedings in Certain Cases,” approved March 3d, 1863, and approved May 11th, A. D. 1866 ; and under all and every the sections and provisions of the said acts of Congress of the United States, and all other laws applicable thereto. W. H. Gleason.

.Before me, Sherman Conant, United States Commissioner, in and for the Northern District of Florida, personally came William H. Gleason, the subscriber to the foregoing petition, who being by me first duly sworn, made oath that the statements contained in the said petition were true, so far as the same are stated of his own knowledge, and that those matters stated on information and belief are true according to the best of his knowledge, information, and belief. Sherman Conant, '

United States Commissioner.

*243RANDALL, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court upon the foregoing petition:

After consideration of the matter of this petition avc cannot see that this act of Congress has anything to do with this case.

Upon its face it has nothing more to do with the subject than an act of Congress making appropriations for the expenses of the government, or the construction of a light-house. It enables persons avIio, by the rules of practice of courts, acts of the Legislature, or fundamental constitutional proAÚsions, are denied equal rights, such as to inherit property, to give eAddence, to make contracts, and other rights enumerated, to carry their cases to a tribunal where they Avill have equal right to be heard, to giAre evidence, &c. As in this State there are no denials ofthis kind by any tribunal, but all have equal rights under the Constitution, there is no more necessity to construe this act in this case than any other act of Congress. The respondent is not such person as is denied any right; all courts are open to him, and he has full and equal benefit of all laws.

The construction of the act as contended for, is such that it vests defendant with a discretion whenever he thinks a court, after a full hearing, has decided a question of Irav wrong, before final judgment, to stop its proceedings. With such a construction no case can be decided finally by the State courts, and all questions, whether arising under an act of Congress or the Constitution of the United States, or under a purely local statute, and State Constitutions, become the subject-matter of revieAvin the United States courts.

Are avo to-admit this construction and stay proceedings Avhen we are trying a matter of constitutional construction, and \Arhich can in no manner be affected by an act of Congress, this State being a.recognized member of the Union?

To do so Avouíd be to destroy all necessity for and poAver of State courts, and destroy all harmony betAveen the courts of the *244United States and the State courts. It would result in a revolution in the judicial system.

This petition affirms that respondent has been “ denied justice ” by this court. The fact is, that the court has in this case subjected itself to just and well-deserved censure by those who know something of judicial proceedings, for the privileges extended, which the strict rales of law prohibited. This record is but a repetition of enlargements of rales, and the answers to some of them consist of matter already determined, and which for that reason should have been stricken out, and in any other case it would have been done.

What is complained of here as a denial of justice is its simple administration, which is never a denial, except with that class to whom its administration is the greatest wrong.

By the strict law of the case, as has been shown, respondent had no right to be heard until the summons in this case issued The rule to show cause, and all of these proceedings up to this time, have been ex gratia. The rales of law would have justified the court in striking out all of the answer to the first rule and making it absolute, as the Attorney-General was entitled to it upon the simple filing of his information.

Lord Mansfield, in the case of Rex. vs. Wilkes, (2 Eng. Com. L. R., 2,) where he was threatened with assassination, and made the subject of libellous attacks in the press, saw proper to refer to these matters, and while we think that we cannot very properly criticise other assaults which the respondent may make, it is yet within our proper and legitimate province to subject his acts in. these proceedings to judicial criticism when such assaults, however futile and absurd, are made here.-

The persons entitled to the benefit of the act referred to in this petition, commonly known as the “ civil rights bill,” are enumerated in said act, and are as follows: “ All persons bom in the United States and not subject to any foreign power * •* are declared to he citizens of the United States, and such citizens, of every race and color * * * * shall *245have the same right to make and enforce contracts; to sue, be parties, and give evidence; to inherit, purchase, lease, sell, hold, and convey real and personal property, and to the full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings, for the security of person and property, as is enjoyed by white citizens, and shall be subject to like punishment, pains, and penalties, and to none other, any law, statute, ordinance, regulation, or custom, to the contrary notwithstanding. ’ ’

The third section, in pursuance of which, and other acts in Congress referred to, the respondent assumes to remove this - cause to the Circuit Court of the ITnitod States, provides that the Circuit Courts shall have cognizance of all causes, civil and critaiinal, affecting persons who are denied, or cannot enforce in the courts or judicial tribunals of the State or locality where they may be, any of the rights secured to them by the first section of this act; and if any suit or prosecution, civil or criminal, has been or shall be commenced in any State court, against any such person, for any cause whatsoever, * * * such defendant shall have the right to remove such cause for trial to the proper Circuit Court of the United States, in the manner prescribed by an act relating to habeas corpus, &c., approved March. 3,1863, and all acts amendatory thereof.

Now who are the persons mentioned in the “civil rights bill?” They are “citizens of the United States,” and none other. The petitioner does not allege that he is a person of that description — and here we might stop; but the petitioner does not state in his petition which of the “ rights ” to which citizens are entitled under the act, has been denied him by this court, by or under “ any law, statute, ordinance, regulation, or custom of this State,” or otherwise. He does not point out one, and his able counsel did not deign to state before the court any right or privilege secured to him under said acts of Congress which he had not had the full benefit of.

Indeed the respondent has not, up to this time, demanded anything whatever, except that the suit be dismissed upon grounds *246not warranted by law; and that we shall stop and first try several other suits against persons who were not before the court.

We are not called upon to pass upon the validity of an act of Congress, or upon any matter growing out of an act of Congress, and we have therefore not done so. The respondent has, by counsel, made a motion, and it has been denied, solely upon questions of practice in the court. If any act of Congress confers in terms or by implication upon any other tribunal an authority to wrest from the courts of a State their jurisdiction solely because a question of common law practice, or of construction of the State Constitution or laws, may he decided against a party, and, as in this case, not involving any law or treaty, or the Constitution of the United States, we shall be wanting in self-respect and common intelligence, if we do not resist it by all proper and necessary means; and we are confident that this respondent would join in that feeling of contempt which the members of the bar and the country would feel for the conduct of this court, if wc do otherwise than to disregard this petition.

The petition is set aside.

After considering the matter of the petition, the following demurrer was found on the files in this cause, viz.:

IN THE SUPREME COURT, STATE OE FLORIDA.

Iii the matter of the Information filed by Almost R. Meek, representing himself to be Attorney-General of the said State, vs. William H. Gleason, Lieutenant-Governor State of Florida.

And now the said defendant, William H. Gleason, Lieutenant-Governor of the said State, in propñap&rsona, says that the said information is bad in substance, and for cause of demurrer says that

*247First. That the said information is not prosecuted nor instituted as required by the 2d section of Article Six of the Constitution of the State of Florida. • •

Second. That there is no cause of action alleged in the said information sufficient in law to sustain the said prosecution against defendant. W. H. Gleason.

Sworn and subscribed to before me this third day of December, A. D. 1868. Chas. Kenmore,

Deputy Clerk Supreme Court.

And thereupon, the said Almon R. Meek, Attorney-General, filed his joinder in demurrer in the words and figures following, to wit:

Almon R. Meek, Attorney-General of the State of Florida, says that the information filed by him in this cause is good in substance. Almon R. Meek,

Attorney-General of the State of Florida.

December 3d, 1868.

After argument of counsel for the State upon the demurrer, the respondent having abandoned his case,

WESTCOTT, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The first ground taken in the demurrer is :

“ That the said information is not prosecuted nor instituted as required by the second section of Article Six of the Constitution of the State of Florida.”

The article referred to is in the following words: “ The style of all process shall be ‘ The State of Florida,’ and all prosecutions shall be conducted in the '/tame and by the authority of the same.”

Strictly speaking, this matter has been “ prosecuted ” by the State of Florida, and it has been “instituted” by the Attorney-General of the State, which is a substantial compliance with the *248requirements of the Constitution. So far as the use of the terms- “ The State of Florida ” is concerned, there is a substantial compliance with it in the information, the terms rrsed being the “ People of the State of Florida,” which for the purposes of this proceeding is sufficient; yet the court is of opinion that to comply strictly with the constitutional requirement, the formal words therein required, viz.: “ In the name and by the authority,” should properly appear upon the face of the information. The proper signification of the termconducted” as here used is, that the pleadings should be conducted in the name of the State, the case should be so docketed, and upon the records when stated should be so described, and hence that there is no-defect.

While the judgment of the court sustained the demurrer as to the first ground taken during the progress of the trial, and such must be the character of this record for that reason, yet subsequent investigation has led us to a different conclusion.

During the dependence of the American Colonies indictments were “ conducted ” in the name of the King. Our first State Constitutions, after throwing off the Royal Government, provided that prosecutions should be carried on “ in the'name and by the authority of the Commonwealth.”

It should appear sufficiently from the record that this is conducted by the authority of the State of Florida, and not by the authority of any other power. That is what the Constitution means.

The court held, in Grierson vs. the State, 5th Howd. Miss., S'?, that “ it was sufficient, if it appeared in theTreeord that the prosecution was in the name of the State, and that a formal statement of the fact that the indictment was found by its authority was not necessary.”

The court being clearly of the opinion that the defect set up, if one at all, is one of form simply; that this was a civil, as distinct from a criminal casethat the information was amendable in this particular, and that an amendment placing these words *249in the caption would be sufficient, sustains the demurrer, with leave to the Attorney-General to amend his information.

This being the first case of the kind in this State, a short review of the authorities upon the two points; first, as to the constitutional requirement, and second, as to the matter of amendment, is not deemed inappropriate.

The -Constitution of the State of Illinois required, that “all prosecutions shall be carried on in the name and by the authority of the people of the State of Illinois, and conclude against the peace and dignity of the same.” The statutes of Illinois gave authority to the courts to fine in their discretion in quo warranto proceedings. We have no statute of this character here, and it is very doubtful whether, in the light of the Constitution, and the limitation which is made in our statute adopting the common law, this power of fining at the discretion of the court exists. Our statute is, “ All offenses known to the common law, the punishment whereof is not provided by law, shall be punished by a fine not exceeding one hundred dollars, or imprisonment not exceeding twelve months, at the discretion of the jury.” Thomp. Dig., 489.

In treating of an information.of this character, 11th Ill., 553, Mr. Justice Catón says, “ This proceeding is a proceeding within the meaning of the clause of the Constitution recited above. In its broadest sense the word. prosecutions would embrace all proceedings in the courts of justice, or even elsewhere, for the protection or enforcement of a right, or the punishment of a wrong, whether of a public or private character. Our statute expressly provides, not only for judgment of ouster, but also that the defendant shall be punished for his usurpation by fine.”

The information in this case concluded with the words “ contrary to law, and to the damage and prejudice of the said people of the State Illinois.”

The Constitution required, if a prosecution, that it should *250“ condudd’’ in different words, and the court reversed the judgment which had sustained the information as sufficient.

The court in this case held that “ whatsoever certainty is requisite in an indictment, the same, at least, is necessary in an information,” citing 2d Hawks’ P. C., 357, Sec. 4.

The citation will show that this language was used with reference to informations generally.

There is a marked difference between criminal informations generally, and informations in the nature of a quo warranto. Indeed, there are informations of intrusion and debt in the exchequer which are purely civil in their character. The extent to which the doctrine is carried in the above case would* seem to bring a proceeding of this character within that clause of the old Constitution of the State of Illinois, providing “ that no person shall be proceeded against a’iminally by information for any indictable offense except in cases arising in the land and. naval forces, &c.,” and hence the act of 1845, authorizing quo warranto informations, passed before the now Constitution, was of questionable constitutionality.

The court, in 11th Ill., 553, hold that a prosecution by information under the statute would be a bar to a prosecution by in - dictment under a distinct criminal statute imposing a fine for usurpation.

If the trial under one is a good bar to a trial under the other, it should operate both ways, and a remarkable result would seem to follow, viz.: that if a party was convicted and fined as an usurper under the criminal statute, there could be no proceeding to oust him from office afterwards under the quo warranto statute, and hence, no power in the courts ever to give a judgment of ouster.

With this construction it would also seem that the proceeding by information at the instance of the Attorney-General would have been unconstitutional, as a grand jury was requisite if it was a criminal offense within the meaning of that clause of the new Constitution of Illinois, providing that “no person *251shall be hold to answer for a criminal offense unless on the presentment or indictment of a grand jury,” except in certain cases in which this is not embraced.

The decision in Illinois carries the doctrine too far.

The proceeding is essentially civil, and the fine is never more than nominal, at common law, and it cannot be called a criminal case.

In the case of the State Bank vs. The State, 1st Blackford, 272, a more correct view, not leading to such conclusion, is taken. The court, at the time considering the objection that “ an information in the nature of a quo warranto is a mode of proceeding not warranted by the Constitution, which provides that no person shall be put to answer any criminal charge but by indictment,” says, “We have no need of resorting to the general doctrine on information, for a quo warranto information is a criminal proceeding only in name and in form; in its nature it is purely a civil proceeding,” citing 2d Kid. on Corporns,, 439; King vs. Francis, T. R., 484.

“ In the language used in the” King vs. Mayor, &c., of Cambridge, cited in 2d Kyd., 483, the corporation is called upon to answer no crime or offense, but only touching its liberties. The primary and only material object of the proceedings is not the infliction of piains and penalties as in criminal proceedings, but to deprive the individual members of the supposed corporation of the privileges they claim to enjoy above the lot of the citizens in general. The fine inflicted on conviction is merely nominal. It is so immaterial a part of the proceedings that the books on the subject have almost lost sight of it.

The conclusion of the judgment, it is true, is said to be with a “ capias pro fine," but this is more the form than the substance of the judgment, as in all civil actions founded in tort. When the proceedings are by writ of quo warranto, the conclusion of the judgment is that the defendants be in mercy, &c., as in civil actions founded on contract. 2d Kyd., 409. So that with us the fine may be very properly left out of the case, *252and then the proceedings are so exclusively of a civil nature as to form no colorable pretense for this constitutional objection.

In State on relation Brison vs. Lingo, 26 Mo., 496, the question arose in this way: There was a statute providing that the “ Circuit Court of St. Louis shall not hereafter exercise original jurisdiction in any criminal case,” a quo warranto information was filed therein, the question of jurisdiction was raised, and the case carried to the Supreme Court of Missouri. >

The Supreme Court say, “ The inquiry arises, is this a criminal case ? For a great while, it has been applied to the simple purpose of trying a civil right, and regarded as a remedy to try the right to office.” The jurisdiction was sustained.

In the case of Rex vs. Francis, 2 D. &. E., 484, where a new trial was granted for the King, the court remarked, “ The proceedings have been considered merely as civil proceedings of late years.” The history of the information in the nature of a quo warranto, as detailed in a previous portion of this case, shows that it is essentially a civil proceeding.

The next question to be considered is whether the information is amendable.

In “ The People vs. Clark, 4 Cowen, 95, the Attorney-General was permitted to amend by adding a new count to the information, the court remarking that the ordinary principles of amendment applicable to other actions were to this. After demurrer to an information, a judge’s order may be obtained to amend. 4th Burrow, 2532.”

Amendments on special motion, in these actions, appear to have always stood on the same footing as in other actions. Com. Dig., Quo Warr., (E. 4,) Rex vs. Blatchford, 4 Burr., 2147.

In the very celebrated case of Rex vs. Wilkes, 2 Eng. C. L., 320, which was a highly criminal information, an amendment in substance was made by Lord Mansfield at Chambers upon motion. When this matter came up before him afterwards in term, for consideration, he says, “ There is a great difference be*253tween amending indictments and amending informations. Indictments are found upon the oaths of a jury, and subject only to be amended by themselves, but informations are as declarations in the King’s suit. An officer of the crown has the right of framing 'them originally, and may, with leave, amend in like manner as any plaintiff may do.” 2d Viner Ab., 394, Title Amendment, pl. 12; 12 Mod., 229; 6 Mod., 281.

The doctrine of amendments has been extended in this State to a point much beyond what it was in England at the time these decisions were made, and we think the question clear.

As to the second point of the demurrer, we have only to say that the information appears sufficient, and no defect has been pointed out other than what has been considered.

The judgment of the court upon the demurrer is:

Upon considering the matters arising upon the demurrer of’ the respondent to the information’filed herein by the said State of Florida by its said Attorney-General, it is ordered that the said demurrer is overruled, excepting so much of the first ground therein as relates to form, and as to the same, it is ordered, upon motion of the Attorney-General, that lie have leave to amend the samo instanter, so that the said information shall read, “ In the name and by the authority of the State of Florida.”

It is further ordered that the said resjiondent, William H. Gleason, have leav.e to plead over to the said information by Saturday, December 12th, 1868, at 10 o’clock A. M., or show cause at that time why final judgment of ouster shall not be awarded against him.

It is further ordered that a copy hereof be served by th"e sheriff of this court upon the said William H. Gleason, the respondent.

And afterwards, to wit: On the ninth day of December, in the year A. D. 1868, the following return was made on the original order:

*254“ Executed the within by serving a true copy hereof on William H. Gleason, this the 9th day of December, A. 1)., 1868.
C. J. Porter,
Deputy Sheriff Supreme Court.”

And afterwards, to wit: On the 12th day of December, A. D. 1868, appeared the respondent by his attorney, David S. Walker, in answer to the rule aforesaid, and moved the court to enlarge the rule to plead, or to show cause why judgment of ouster should not be entered against him, upon the ground that the amendment authorized had not been made.

Whereupon the Attorney-General, with leave of the court, filed his amendment heretofore authorized in the words ar.d figures following, to wit:

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TIIE STATE OF FLORIDA, AT AN EXTRA AND SPECIAL TERM.

The State of Florida, upon the relation of Almon R. Meek, who prosecutes in the name and by the authority of said State, vs. William H. Gleason, Lieutenant-Governor of the State of Florida — Information in the nature of “quo warranto.”

And now this day comes the said Attorney-General, who prosecutes in above-entitled cause in the name and by the authority of said State, and pursuant to leave ‘of said Supreme Court this day given, amends the information heretofore filed by him in said cause, to wit, on the 8th day of November, 1868, by writing as a caption for said information the words, “ In the name and by the authority of the State of Florida,” so that said information shall read, “ In the .name and by the authority of the State of Florida.”

Almon R. Meek, Attorney-General.

Whereupon the rule was enlarged until three o’clock of this said 12th day, and respondent given until that time to answer *255the same. Upon the arrival of that hour further time was granted until the fourteenth day of December, at ten o’clock A. M., to comply with said rule and to plead.

And afterwards, to wit: On the fourteenth day of December, in the year A. D. 1808, the respondent filed in the Clerk’s office of this court his answer to the rule aforesaid, in the words and figures following, to wit:

IX THE SUPREME COURT OF FLORIDA, AT A SPECIAL TERM IN DECEMBER, 1868.

The State of Florida, upon the relation of the Attorney-General, vs. William H. Gleason, Lieutenant-Governor of the State of Florida — Information in the nature of quo warranto.

The respondent, William H. Gleason, Lieutenant-Governor, &e., protesting that this court has no jurisdiction to proceed further in this cause since he has filed his petition for its removal to the Circuit Court of the United States. Nevertheless, since this court has determined to proceed heroin, overruled respondent’s demurrer, and granted leave to respondent to “ show cause why final judgment of ouster should not be awarded against him,’’ respondent shows cause as follows:

First. Because at the time of his election, stated in said information filed in this cause, he was not ineligible as in said information is alleged, and of this he puts himself upon the country.

Second. Because, if respondent was ineligible at the time of his election, it was for the people in the exorcise of their sovereignty to determine whether they would elect him or not, and no Attorney-General, or other servant, officer, or agent of the people ought to be allowed to come into this court and ask it to undo that which the people themselves have done in their sovereign cajiacity.

Third. Because, supposing respondent to have been ineligible, the “ award of a final judgment of ouster against him ” would *256not conduce to tlie public good, nor be in accordance with the theory of our government; that the people are supreme, and the court are invested with a sound discretion as to when they will “ award a final judgment of ouster,” even though they may have the power to do so.

Fourth. Because the election and eligibility of respondent are purely political questions over which the electing power should Wallowed to have exclusivo control, and with which the Judicial Department of the government should have nothing to do.

Fifth. Because, though it should be conceded that respondent was ineligible at the time of his election, it is not pretended that he is not eligible now, so that if eligibility be all that is wanted, no one can be found more eligible than respondent.

Sixth. Because no one is contesting with respondent for the office of Lieutenant-Governor, and as respondent is the sole choice of the people, that choice should bo respected.

Seventh. Because within less than a month from this date the Legislature of the State will be in session, and the Constitution having vested in that body the power to remove respondent-from office, it would be best to leave tlie question connected with this cause for the consideration of that high tribunal.

Eighth. Because respondent w*as not elected under the provisions of the State Constitution, which had not then been adopted, but under tlie reconstruction acts of Congress and the orders of the Commanding General, and an ordinance of the Convention, neither of which proscribed any previous residence for them .who should be elected at said election.

Ninth. Because, at the time- of respondent’s election, the government of the State of Florida was provisional only, and not a constitutional government.

Tenth. Because it was not intended by the makers of the Constitution that tlie persons voting or elected at the first election should be subject to the provisions of the Constitution; hence, though all wore allowed to vote by the Constitution, all were not allowed to vote, but only those who could take a certain oath: *257and lienee, also, though none by the Constitution could hold office except registered voters, yet in fact at the first election not one of those elected was a registered voter within the meaning of the Constitution, nor indeed could bo, for the books of registration had not at that time been opened, nor officers appointed for that purpose.

Eleventh. Because respondent was eligible under the acts of Congress, and under the orders of the Commanding- General, and the ordinance of the Constitutional Convention, under which ho was elected, and the provisional State Government organized.

Twelfth. Because the government of the State of' Florida was “ provisional only,” and subject entirely to the will of Congress and the Commanding General, until some time subsequent to the election and qualification of respondent as Lieutenant-Governor. .

Thirteenth. Because Almon II. Meek, who files the information in this case, is not Attorney-General, as appears from a paper on file in this cause under the great seal of the State, and attested by the Secretary of State.

Fourteenth. Because if it bo held that the residence of' those who were appointed or elected to office at the first election, when the Government was provisional only, must be in accordance with the requirement of the Constitution, then the Chief Justice of this court was ineligible at the time of his appointment, he not having been a citizen of this State twelve months before his appointment, and not having been a registered voter at the time of his appointment, and therefore not capable of pronouncing a judgment of ouster in this eause.

Fifteenth. Because, if during the provisional government of this State the requirements of the Constitution as to eligibility must be complied with, then Associate-Justice Hart is not a Judge, he not having been a registered voter at tbe time of his appointment, and not therefore eligible, and not capable of pronouncing a judgment of “ ouster ” in this cause.

*258Sixteenth. Because this court has no original jurisdiction to award a final judgment of ouster in this cause.

Seventeenth. Because this cause cannot be decided without the intervention of a jury to' determine the question of fact arising herein, and the Constitution and laws of this State have not clothed this court with power to empannel a jury.

Eighteenth. Because it is manifest, from the records in this cause, that this attempt to oust respondent from office is not because he is ineligible, but from some concealed motive, and this court should not lend itself to become the instrument of effecting the concealed purpose of any one.

Respondent having fully shown cause, prays to bo hence dismissed, with his costs by him about his suit in this behalf expended. W. II. Gleason.

Sworn and subscribed before me this fourteenth clay of December, 1868. Chas. Kenmobe,

Deputy Clerk Supremo Court.

Upon filing which said answer respondent entered of record his motion in this cause in the words and figures as following, to wit:

The State of Florida on the relation of the Attorney-General vs. W. H. Gleason.

Respondent moves the court for a continuance of the further hearing of this cause till the next regular term of this court, on the ground of the absence of Ms counsel, Horatio Bisbee, who is in attendance on the United States District Court at Jacksonville, as stated in the affidavit of respondent this clay filed herein.

Which motion was overruled and denied.

And upon the same day came the Attorney-General, and in behalf of the State of Florida, entered Ms certain motion in this behalf in the words arid figures following, to wit:

*259SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA, AT AN EXTRA AND SPECIAL TERM, DECEMBER 14TH, 1868.

The State of Florida, upon the relation of the Attorney-General of said State, who prosecutes in the name and by the authority of said State, vs. William H. Gleason, Lieutenant-Governor of said State — Information in the nature of a quo warranto.

And now conies the said Attorney-General, who prosecutes in the name and by the authority of said State, and moves the said Supreme Court to pronounce final judgment of ouster in said cause against the said respondent, said respondent having failed to plead to the information heretofore filed herein by said Attorney-General, or to show sufficient cause why said final judgment of ouster should not be awarded against him as required by the rule of said Supreme Court.

Almon R. Meek,

Attorney-General of the State of Florida,

After argument,

WESTOOTT, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The prindples of law involved in answers numbered respectively three, seven, thirteen, sixteen, and eighteen have been already considered, and the court sees no reason for repeating what it has said. The statement contained in the thirteenth, to .the effect that it appears from a paper under the great seal of the State on file in this cause, that Almon R. Meek is not Attorney-General, is incorrect. There is no such paper on file in the cause, and none has been offered in evidence during its progress.

The second and fourth grounds alleged are that the respondent was elected by the people of the State, and Ms eligibility is a political question not to be passed upon by the courts. *260This matter was not urged in argument, and wc presume much force is not attached to it. The respondent was elected to an office created by the Constitution which the people had formed, and in framing’ it they restricted their own power in selecting their agents to administer the government so far as the ofiice of Lieutenant-Governor is concerned, to a person who shall have been before his election to office three years a citizen of the State. Art. XVI., Sec. 22. Until this restriction upon their own power is removed in some legitimate and recognized legal method, it remains operative. The simple election of the respondent, whether with or without a knowledge of his ineligibility, cannot and does not operate to annul the constitutional requirements according to'any known rule of law upon the subject, and such a proposition is no less than revolutionary in its character.

We cannot see that the question of eligibility is a political question in the sense intended by the fourth ground.

The distinction between questions which are political and such as are within judicial cognizance, is stated clearly in Marbury vs. Madison, 1st Cranch, 165; in 4th Wheaton, 400, and in 1st Ala., 704. In the light of these authorities, this answer is insufficient.

The fifth answer is to the effect that while respondent may not have been eligible when elected, he is so now. The Constitution requires that he “ shall have been before his election to office three years a citizen of the State,” and this court has, wo conceive, no power to strike out the word “ beforeand insert the word “ after” in the Constitution. Because no one is contesting the office is the sixth ground. This action is by the State, and its proper officer is inquiring by what warrant respondent is exercising one of the State’s offices. It is never necessary that there should be a relator in such cases, nor that there should be a contestant. It is not proposed to determine here whether some person-else is entitled to the office, but whether respondent is.

*261The first portion of the tenth ground is considered with the eighth, ninth, eleventh, and twelfth as to the operation of the acts of Congress, the substance of it being that because there was a requirement to qualify voters under the reconstruction acts, and there was none under the Constitution, the matter of eligibility under the Constitution could not be inquired into.

The last portion of the tenth ground, and the matter of the fifteenth, is based upon the assumption that all officers are required by the Constitution, before they can become officers or discharge, any duty; to be registered under a registration law whicli the Constitution makes it the duty of the Legislature to pass at its “ first session after the ratification of the Constitution.” The statement of the proposition is its own answer. With this view no Legislature could ever have passed the law, as no Governor could have been elected to approve it; there would have been no Government, because there could be no officers.

The fifteenth ground taken, based upon the idea just stated, while not in the form of a challenge made, is yet an objection questioning the powers of one of the justices of this court to act. See 1st Ark. Rep., 279; 4th Ark. Rep., 562 ; 1st Eng., 228. Passing and not considering whether the question is raised regularly, it is deemed proper to consider it to the extent it has been raised. It is certainly not possible for a party to stop the proceedings of a-court by alleging any legal proposition absurd upon its face, as we believe this is. The purpose of this is other than' it imports. It purports to be an answer to the rule. It is a reflection upon a member of the court under the form of pleadings. The clauses in the Constitution referred to are Sec. 6, Art. XIV., of the Constitution of this State, “ The Legislature, at its first session after the ratification of this Constitution, shall by law provide for the registration by the clerk of the circuit court in each county, of all the legally qualified voters in such county, and for the returns of elections; and shall also provide that after the completion, from time to time, *262of sucli registration, no person not duly registered according to Jaw shall be allowed to voteconcluding clause of Sec. 22, Art. XVI., “ No p'erson shall be eligible to any office unless lie be a registered voter.” It is our opinion that tlie term “ registered voter” Jiere used, refers alone to the registration contemplated by the Constitution, and it could only be operative after the registration law was passed.

The objection made in the fourteenth to the eligibility of the Chief-Justice is considered by the other justices of tlie court. It alleges that he was ineligible at the time of his appointment. TJie court has at some length determined in a previous portion of tliis case that this question cannot be inquired into collaterally. ft is not in the form of a challenge, and there is an evident distinction between this and an inquiry into the question of competency. A determination upon the competency of one of tlie nieihbers of a court tries no right, such as a right to office, and can be made without tlie formalities of process upon a statement of the facts touching tlie competency admitted by the officer. Judgments of courts amount to something or they should not be made. What would a judgment hero amount to one way or tlie other? This is a question which can be determined only by a suit. Service is essential; without this and some mode recognized for a legal trial it cannot proceed. The court must waive process for the individual, hear liis case without a plea, or else postpone its consideration of the one now before it, until the Attorney-General sees proper to file an information, and it is determined, and if he never does it this is an end of the case. No right, such as tliis, can be determined effectually, without notice, trial by due course of law and judgment, and this cannot be done collaterally. Davis Exparte, 41st Maine, 58.

We now come to the consideration of the eighth, ninth, eleventh, and twelfth answers to the rule. Without at length quoting them they amount in substance to an allegation that respondent was not elected under the Constitution, but under *263certain acts of Congress, and an ordinance of the Constitutional Convention of the State, which prescribed no such citizenship as a qualification for his office, and that at the date of his election the government was provisional only. It will be noted that ho does not claim to “ hold his office ” under these acts, but that he was simply elected under them. The election to an office, if elective in its character, is one of the requisites to the right of holding' it, but it is not the only one. Where do we look for the others but to that instrument, to that fundamental law which creates it ? Elections of representatives to Congress are held in the same sense under a proclamation of the Executive of a State, in obedience, to a legislative enactment as'to time and place. Do we look to these things, or to the Constitution of the United States, for their qualifications ? It is true that according to these acts any government in this State, anterior to the one under which we obtained admission to representation in Congress, was provisional, and subject to bo abolished; do these acts, however, so operate as to relieve the respondent from the operations oí constitutional requirements as to eligibility for the office lie holds, which was created by the Constitution framed under these acts, and which lias been approved by Congress, and the Representative and Senators from the State admitted to Congress ?

The enabling act places no such restrictions upon the power of the Convention which framed the Constitution, and it was as much within their power to prescribe qualifications for the office as it was to create it; the one is as clearly within their power as the other. The only legislation known to this country from, which to draw an analogy here, is the enabling act of a Territory. Acts enabling Territories to form State governments have been very frequent in the history of the government, but it was never held that a party was free from constitutional requirements as to eligibility under the Constitution formed, because elections were held under the provisions of the enabling act, and ordinance of the Convention. If there was no power in the makers of the Constitution to prescribe qualifications for offices *264under the State government, not inconsistent with the conditions in the act of Congress, hut in addition thereto, it is hard to perceive where they had the power to define the rights and functions of the officer, or indeed to ascertain what powers they did have, if any. If the Lieutenant-Governor of this State holds his office under the act of Congress, then he is an officer of the United States, and his answers amount to a plea of disclaimer, and a judgment should be awarded. We have authority or jurisdiction to inquire into the title to an office under the Constitution of this State, but none as to offices of the United States. We do not see that there is any necessity to examine or construe the act of Congress. We think it is only necessary to know that the office in question is created by the State Constitution; here is respondent’s title deed, and by this alone must it be tried.

These answers to the rule are insufficient.

The only remaining causes assigned not considered, are the first and seventeenth.

The first is: “ Because at the time of his election, as stated in said information filed in this cause, he was not ineligible as in said information is alleged, and of this he puts himself irpon the country.”

This comes in such questionable shape that it cannot be strictly called a plea, and in an ordinary case it would be stricken out, if for no other reason than that it is included in what purports to be an answer to the rule, while properly it should have been filed separately as a plea. The rule was in the alternative to plead, or to show cause, &c., and whatever was the proper subject of plea should have been made so, apart from the answer. What does this amount to, and is it such a plea as requires a reply or demurrer; or can issue be required to be joined ? It is the statement of a legal conclusion from facts which are not set forth, or brought to the attention of the court, to wit: That the respondent was not ineligible as in said information is alleged; and as in the information it is alleged that he was ineligible to the office of Lieutenant-Governor, the result *265is, that it is simply a statement of a conclusion, the facts upon which it is based being kept out of the plea in such manner that a demurrer cannot reach them. An issue joined would result, as is apparent, in respondent attempting to prove that he was eligible to the office of Lieutenant-Governor under the reconstruction acts. This Avas the basis of his general allegation that he Avasnot ineligible as in said information is alleged, namely, ineligible to the office of Lieutenant-Governor, because he was elected under the reconstruction acts. All of this is mere sophistry. The court has passed upon these questions; the respondent must plead facts, such as are responsive to the information, viz.; That he Avas three years a citizen, c%c. No demurrer can reach this question under this plea, no issue can be taken upon a -proposition of Iuav. The plea should set out the defendant’s title at length, and the rule as to the replication oven in this character of actions is, that it cannot take issue on the general traArerse “without this, that he usurped,” &c., but should be to the special matter, that the defendant may know how to apply his defense. Rex vs. Blagdon, Gibbs. Rep., 145. The defendant must either justify or disclaim; and not guilty, or non usw'pmit, are not good pleas, for they do not answer to the nature of the charge, A\iiich is to shoAV by what warrant or authority. Bull. N. P., 211. The defendant must shoAV title in himself. Com. Dig. Quo. Warr., C. 4; 9th Coke, 24.

In the State of Ohio vs. Beecher, 15 Ohio, 725, the plea ay as that “ ho Avas legally appointed, qualified, and entered upon the duties of the office, and that ho has ever since held and exercised the same, as he had the legal right to do.” The court say, “ the authorities require of him to set out all the facts necessary to constitute a good title specifically to hold the office,” and the plea Avas not good.

In general a plaintiff proves his claim or demand; not so hero Avith the State. The defendant must set up and must show that he has a good title. The State is only to answer his particular claim. He must at once show a complete title. If he fails, *266judgment must be given against him. He cannot say he was duly elected in general terms. Rex vs. Leigh, 4th Burrow 2, 143. See also as to requisites of the plea. Rex vs. Birch, 4 T. R., 608; 2 East., 75; Bullers, N. P., 211; 6 Dane. Ab., 360; Cole on Informations, 148, 149.

The State is entitled to judgment, and the motion of the Attorney-General should be granted according to the strict rules of practice; but the court is unwilling to deny the respondent the opportunity of setting up a defense, if he has any. He shall be given every opportunity, and further time until three o’clock P. M. of this day, the 14th December, 1868, is allowed him to file an issuable plea framed in accordance with the requirements of law. Such a plea not being filed, it will announce its judgment at that hour.

The seventeenth ground alleged is as follows: “ Because this cause cannot be decided without the intervention of a jury to determine the question of fact arising herein, and the Constitution and laws of this State have not clothed this court with power to empannel a jury.” , The authorities already cited show that a judgment follows a default in pleading in this class of cases. The State has to prove no title, but calls upon the citizen to show his. Until issues of fact are raised, this question cannot arise, and the court does not propose to decide it until it does arise. ‘ The respondent can claim no jury until he tenders an issue of fact; when that is done the proper determination will be made and the question considered.

The judgment of the court upon the matter of this answer to the rule, and the motion of the Attorney-General, is':

It is considered by the court that the grounds set up in answer to the rule, numbered respectively from two to eighteen inclusive, are insufficient, and are overruled.

It is further considered that the first ground set up, which to some extent partakes of the character of a plea, is insufficient in that it tenders an issue of law, and is otherwise inadmissible in this action, and the court allows the respondent until three *267o’clock this afternoon to file an issuable plea setting up matters of fact responsive to the information, the court also taking time to consider whether the first ground taken by the respondent, in which he places himself upon the country,-which the court considers insufficient, shall require a demurrer, or shall be overruled and set aside as insufficient.

And afterwards, to wit: At three o’clock in the afternoon of the fifteenth day of December, A. D. 1868, the respondent having failed to plead, the following judgment was entered:

The court, after considering the question reserved as to the first ground presented by respondent to the rule, adjudge that the same is insufficient as a plea, and doth overrule the same, and the respondent having failed to file any plea as authorized and required by the court, it is now, on motion of the said Attorney-General of said State in this behalf for final judgment of ouster, considered by the court that the said William II. Gleason do not in any manner intermeddle, or concern himself in and about the holding of, or exercising the said office of Lieutenant-Governor of the State of Florida in said information specified, but the said William II. Gleason be absolutely prejudged and excluded from holding or exercising the said office, and that the said State of Florida do recover costs to be taxed by the Clerk in this behalf. And the coxrrt imposes no fine in this behalf.

The respondent claiming the right to prosecute a writ of error from the Supremo Court of the United States in this case, filed such writ, issued by the Clerk of the Circuit Court of the United States, with the clerk of this court, and prayed that a citation might be signed by the Chief-Justice of this court in accordance with the provisions of the act of Congress.

RANDALL, C. J.,

declining to sign the citation, delivered the following opinion :

This suit was commenced in this court and prosecuted by the *268Attorney-General of the State of Florida, and final judgment reudered on the fifteenth day of December, A. D. eighteen hundred and sixty-eight, ousting the respondent, William IT. Gleason, from the office of Lieutenant-Governor of said State, the said respondent having appeared herein and having failed to plead to the information filed by the Attorney-General, of to show legal cause why judgment should not be rendered against him. •

The respondent now seeking to obtain a review and reversal of said judgment by the Supreme Court of the United States by writ of error, has applied to the Chief-Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of Florida to sign the citation.

This the respondent is entitled to have done, if the case is one of those mentioned in the twenty-fifth section of the act of Congress passed September twenty-fourth, seventeen hundred and eighty-nine, relating to writs of error; but if the case is not one of that class, then the respondent is not entitled to the review sought, and I have no legal authority to sign the citation, and if signed it would be of no effect.

The Constitution of this State requires that the Governor and Lieutenant-Governor shall have been “ three years a citizen of the State of Florida, next preceding the time of his election.” Art. N-, Sec. 3 and Sec. 14.

The information charges that at the time of his election the respondent had not been a citizen of the State for three years, and therefore is not entitled to hold the office.

Under an order to plead or to show cause why judgment oí ouster should not be rendered against him, the respondent, by way of showing cause, alleged that he was elected to said office in May, 1868, at the same time that an election was hold under the reconstruction acts of Congress, upon the question of the adoption of the Constitution; that the election at the same time for State officers was held in pursuance of an ordinance of the Constitutional Convention and the reconstruction acts, and an order of the Commanding General of this Military District;, *269that he was then elected Lieutenant-Governor; and because the government formed upon the adoption of the Constitution was “provisional only," and the constitutional requirement as to eligibility not being in force at the time the election was held, the Constitution not yet being adopted, that he was eligible to said office under the said acts of Congress.

The respondent was sworn into office in July, A. D. 1808, after the passage of the act of Congress admitting the States of Gecfrgia, Florida, and other hitherto disorganized States to representation in Congress, and after the Commanding-General had surrendered the government of this State into the hands of Governor Reed, who had been sworn into office on the 8th day of June, when the Legislature met and organized. The election was held for the purpose of filling the offices created and provided for in and by the Constitution. The duties of those officers so elected were provided and prescribed in the Constitution. The persons elected could hold the offices provided in the instrument, and no others. Their right to hold the offices depended upon the adoption of the Constitution which was offered for the acceptance of the people at the same election. They were elected to hold such offices as they might be permitted to hold by the terms of the Constitution. They are thereby required to take an oath of office, in which they must swear that they are “ entitled to hold office under this Constitution.” It permitted certain persons to hold office, and prohibited certain other persons from so doing. Its profusions became operative (so far as it was possible to become so without legislation) the moment it was adopted by the people, and endorsed by Congress. If its prohibitions in one respect were inoperative, they were equally inoperative in other respects, except where legislation was contemplated to give them effect. It is demanded in effect that we should give such a construction to the law as that the qualifications of the officers first elected were prescribed by the reconstruction acts; but it is shofvn that these acts only contained a single restrictive provision, and that by the terms of the acts themselves they ceased *270to have any operation the moment the State Constitution was infused with the breath of life.

The Supreme Court, in deciding that the cause shown why judgment of ouster should not be rendered, was insufficient, determined that the right to hold the office depended upon the qualifications prescribed in the fundamental law under which, the respondent claimed to hold, and without which fundamental lawfthe office itself did not exist. By failing tó assert his right to the office in the only manner known to the law, a judgment of ouster was rendered, and in rendering such judgment it is not yet discovered in what particular there is “ drawn in question the validity of any treaty, or of any statute of, or an authority exercised under the United States, or that the decision is against the validity” of either; nor in what particular “ is drawn in question the validity of a statute of, or an authority exercised under any State, on the ground of their being repugnant to the Constitution, treaties, or laws of the United States, and that the decision is in favor of such their validity nor in what particular “ is drawn in question the construction of any clause of the Constitution, or of a treaty, or statute of, or commission held under the United States, and the decision is against the title, right, privilege, or exemption specially set up or claimed by either party under such clause of the said Constitution, treaty, statute, or commission.” For the respondent does not “ claim ” that he holds the office under any clause of the Constitution or any statute of the United States, such being offices of the United States, and not offices of this State. He claims to hold a State office on the ground that the laws of Congress did not prohibit him 'from holding it, and seeks to ignore the constitutional requisites.

The Supreme Court has not denied his right, title, or privilege under an act of Congress, nor questioned his right to hold any office conferred upon him thereunder; but the court has denied his right to hold the office of Lieutenant-Governor under the provisions of the Constitution of this State, not conflicting-*271in anywise with any act of Congress, treaty, or provision of the Constitution of the United States, it being conceded that he was elected to the office in question; but as it stands confessed of record that he was not eligible to fill the office under the Constitution of this State, the court could not otherwise decide.

The Supreme Court of the United States holds as follows: It is sufficient if it appears from the record that an act of Congress was applicable to the ease and was misconstrued, or the' decision in the State court was against the privilege or exemption specially set up under such a statute, to bring the case within the provisions of the 25th section of the act. 6 Peters, 48.

It must be shown on the record that such a question did arise and was applied by the State court. 10 Peters, 369,

The only question is, whether the record shows that the Constitution or treaty, or a law of the United States has been violated by the decision of the court. 9 Peters, 224.

It is sufficient to bring the case within the provisions of the act, if the record shows that the Constitution or laws of the United States must have been misconstrued, or the decision could not have been made. 2 Peters, 245, 380; 3 do., 302.

As I do not conceive that any question has arisen in this case, or been decided by the Supreme Court of this State, Avithin.the purview of the act of Congress, I cannot sign the citation. E. M. Randall,

Chief-Justice Supreme Court Flo^da.

December 16th, 1868.