Court Opinion

ID: 6505936
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:18:09.893581+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:44.028561
License: Public Domain

STONE, J.
In the case of the State v. Moore & Ligón, 19 Ala. 514, this court decided, in a well considered and well sustained opinion, that informations in the nature of quo warranto can properly be filed, ex officio, only by the attorney-general; he being the representative of the State. See, also, Wallace v. Anderson, 5 Wheaton, 291.
It is not our purpose to deny to the legislature the right to authorize persons other than the attorney-general to institute such proceedings. No such special authority is claimed in this case; and it cannot be sustained on any principle of the common law. Let us inquire if it has any sanction in the statutes of this State. The Code (§ 2651) has no application to municipal corporations. Hence its provisions do not affect this case. Section 2654 gives a right of action in the following cases:
1. “When any person usurps, intrudes into, or unlawfully holds or exercises, any public office, civil or military, or any franchise within this State, or any office in a corporation created by the authority of this State.
2. “When any public officer, civil or military, has done or suffered an act, by which by law he forfeits his office.
3. “When any association, or number of persons, act within this State as a corporation, without being duly incorporated.”
There can be no pretense that this case comes within the provisions of the first subdivision.
The only charge made against the intendant and council is, that they transcended their powers, in raising the cost of a retail license to one thousand dollars, and in inflicting fines and imprisonment on the relator.
Conceding, for the purposes of the argument, that the council went beyond the pale of their authority, yet there is nothing in the information which imputes to them *68willful abuse. Admitting all that is charged to be true, we feel bound to attribute the excess to an error of judgment, rather than to corrupt usurpation. There is nothing in the act incorporating them, or in the general law, which authorizes us to vacate their offices for the error alleged; and, -without intending to lay down any absolute rule as to what official misconduct would work a forfeiture by the intendant and council of their offices, we have no hesitation in declaring that a simple error of judgment can produce no such result.
It is not pretended that the town of Cahabá has not been “duly incorporated:” the averment is, that the franchise has been forfeited by non-user. "We are relieved from the consideration of this question, by the act of the relator, endorsed on the record, “abandoning his prayer for the forfeiture of the charter.”
Another fatal objection to this proceeding, instituted as it was on the relation of a private individual, is that no security for costs was given. — Code, § 2655.
Whether quo warranto is the appropriate remedy for vacating an invalid ordinance, we do not now determine. See People v. Hilsdale & Chatham T. Co., 2 Johns. 190; State v. Evans, 3 Pike, 585; Carroll v. Mayor of Tuskaloosa, 12 Ala. 173; Intendant & Council of Marion v. Chandler, 6 Ala. 899.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.