Cleary v. Deliesseline
Cleary v. Deliesseline
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The grounds of the present motion embrace an extensive range of objections, relating to the incompetency of a majority of the managers to decide on the grounds of the protest, and the incorrectness of their decision. But it is objected, on the part of the defendant, that whateyer may be th‘e merits of this motion, it cannot be investigated in this form of proceeding ; as an information in nature of a quo warranto, it is insisted, will not lie at the suit of an individual, but must be carried on in the name, by the officer sffid under the authority of the state j and the Court being
With this definition before us, I think there-can be no difficulty in determining the character of the wrong complained of in this case. The appointment to office is (if I may so express it,) one of the prerogatives of the supreme authority of the state ; and it.follows, that any usurpation of it is a public, and not a private wrong, except so far as the individual is affected as one of the community, and that, a public remedy ought to be pursued.
So much for the character of the wrong complained of here„
The proceeding by information in nature oí a quo war-ranto, so far as the character of the proceeding itself is involved, is no doubt the legal appropriate remedy ; but the objection in this case is, that it proceeds in the name oí an individual, and uot.in the name or by the authority of the state. The same learned author before quoted (4 Black. 312,) in speaking of this proceeding, observes, that it is “generally made use of to try civil rights to franchises, though it is commenced in the same manner as other infor-mations are, by leave of the Court, or at the will of the attorney-general : being properly a criminal prosecution, in order to fine the defendant for his usurpation as well as to oust him from his office ; yet usually considered as merely a civil proceeding.” (Vide also, 3 Bacon's Abr. 635. Tit. Information A.) If then the wrong complained of bo of a public nature, and the remedy also, it follows that the relator ought not to be at liberty to usurp it to serve his individual purposes. The state have selected from among its citizens men distinguished for their learning and integrity, to whom alone is intrusted the conduct of all public prosecutions; and the constitution itself provides, that they shall be carried on in the name, and by the authority of the State ; (3 Art. 2§. State Constitution,) and so far from this being a prosecution of that character, we find the attorney-general, in the ranks of the counsel, opposed to the motion..
It is said, however, that this mode of proceeding was allowed in the case of Hays vs. Harley, (1 Const. Reports, 271.) The answer is, that no objection was made on that ground, and I well remember, that the objection then occurred to some of the members of the Court, but it was thought better to lay hold of that occasion to-decide the important question involved in that case, than to turn the parties around on an objection not going to the merits, especially as the judgment of the Court was hot to affect the incumbent. This argument proves, however, that the
This motion is therefore refused.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- N. G. Cleary v. F. G. Deliesseline
- Status
- Published