Court Opinion

ID: 6508830
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:20:33.536048+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:48.774397
License: Public Domain

BBICKELL, J.
(dissenting.) — The constitution of 1819 conferred on this court, as the present constitution confers, the “ power to issue writs of injunction, mandamus, quo warranto, habeas corpus, and such other remedial' and original writs as. may be necessary to give it a general superintendence and control of inferior jurisdictions.” In the exercise of this power, it was determined in Ex parte Morgan Smith (23 Ala. 94), that the common-law writ of prohibition was a remedial writ, which this court could rightfully issue, and that the chancery court was, within the spirit and meaning of the constitution, an “ inferior jurisdiction,” to which such writ could be directed.
A prohibition is defined as a writ issued by a superior court, directed to the judge and parties of a suit in an inferior court, commanding them to cease from the prosecution of the same, upon a suggestion that the cause originally, or some collateral matter arising in it, does not belong to that jurisdiction, but to the cognizance of some other court. 2 Bouv. Law Dic. 391. The injury the writ proposes to correct is the exercise or encroachment of jurisdiction, or calling one coram nonjudice to answer in a court that has no legal cognizance of the cause. 3 Cooley’s Blackstone, 111. Or, as it is elsewhere expressed, “ The object of prohibition, in general, is the preservation of the king’s crown and court, and tbe ease and quiet of the subject.” For it is the wisdom and policy of the law to suppose both best preserved when everything runs in its right channel, according to the original jurisdiction of every court; for, by the same reason that one court might be allowed to encroach, another might, which would produce nothing but disorder and confusion in the administration of justice. Therefore, it was always said, in all prohibitions, that the cause is drawn “ ad alium examen, contra coronam et dignitatem regiam.” 8 Bac. Abr. 207.
The mode of proceeding to obtain the writ is by application to a superior court, ‘setting forth, in a suggestion upon the record, the nature and cause of the relator’s complaint, in being drawn ad alium examen by a jurisdiction or manner of process disallowed by the law of the land; upon which, if the matter alleged appears to the court to be sufficient, the writ of prohibition immediately issues, commanding the judge not to hold, and the party not to prosecute the plea. 3 Cooley’s Blackstone, 113. The writ may be issued at the instance of the plaintiff or defendant to the unauthorized proceedings, or even *274at the instance of a stranger to it. 7 Com. Dig. 141; 8 Bac. Abr. 211; Thomas v. Mead, 86 Mo. 232; Mayo v. James, 12 Grattan, 17.
As a writ of prohibition proposes only to prevent usurpation, and the unseemly conflicts between jurisdictions, which would necessarily arise, if there was not an adequate and speedy remedy for the usurpation, and also to save the citizen from having his right's drawn in question by a tribunal without capacity to adjudicate and enforce them; the only inquiry presented by the application for the writ is, whether the proceeding complained of is before a tribunal having cognizance of it; or, as is said by this court in Ex parte Greene & Graham (29 Ala. 58): “ Our power, under this application, is confined to the inquiry, Has the inferior tribunal assumed to act upon a matter, or upon the rights of a party, that could not be determined or proceeded against in that forum ? ” The right involved in the unauthorized proceeding, whether it pertains to the one party or the other, is not the subject of inquiry and determination. No allegation that such right pertains to the relator is necessary. If it was, the writ could not issue at the instance of a stranger, who could not assert such right, and whose intervention would disclose that he did not have it. If an inquiry into the right could be indulged, a prohibition would be made to serve the purpose of a writ of error, or an appeal, and could never properly issue until the full merits of the case had been disclosed, and the injury it proposed to correct had been consummated. Therefore, it was unnecessary for the relator, in his application to this court, to have alleged that he .was elected to the mayoralty of the city of Mobile ; and if the fact is, as supposed by Petebs, C. J., so averred as not to be issuable, the right of the relator to the writ of prohibition is not thereby affected. If he shows that a tribunal, not having the jurisdiction to inquire into his election, has drawn him before it to make the inquiry, then he presents a case for prohibition ; the injury which the writ proposes to correct, an encroachment of jurisdiction, exists.
It is not amiss, however, to say that I do not think the relator’s application obnoxious to the objection taken by the chief justice — that it alleges, not the fact of his election, but his information and belief of that fact. It is certainly true, as a rule of pleading, that when the right of a party depends upon the existence of a fact, he must distinctly aver the fact itself, and an averment that he is informed and believes the fact to exist is not sufficient; but it is equally true, that he may aver the existence of the fact on information and belief. Nix v. Winter, 35 Ala. 309. In other, words, he may aver the fact, and state his information and belief as the source of his *275knowledge of it. In Lucas v. Oliver (34 Ala. 626), the facts were stated, with, the additional words, “ as your orators and oratrixes are informed and believe; ” and this was deemed sufficient as an averment, not of the party’s information and belief only, but of the fact itself. The averment in this application is, that the “ petitioner was, as he is informed and. believes, and therefore states, elected,” &c. I cannot construe this as less than an averment of the fact of his election, and information and belief as the source of knowledge of it. If an allegation that the relator had received a majority or plurality of the votes cast at the election was essential, as the chief justice supposes, the allegation that he was duly elected must be deemed equivalent to such an averment, and to include it; for he could not have been duly elected, unless he had received such majority or plurality.
The proceeding of which the relator complains is pending in the chancery court of Mobile county, commenced by original bill, filed by Cleaveland F. Moulton, against the relator and Rufus Dane, sheriff of Mobile county. This bill alleges, in substance, that the complainant therein and the relator were opposing candidates for the office of mayor of the city of Mobile, at a municipal election in that city held on the 2d day of December, 1873; that the complainant received the larger number of votes, and was in fact duly and legally elected, but that the returns made by the inspectors do not declare the true result; that at one of the wards, or voting places, the returns made were falsely and fraudulently made, so as to falsify the result of said election; that ballots, cast for the complainant, were abstracted from the ballot-box, with the knowledge of the inspectors, and in pursuance of a conspiracy between them and other persons, and other ballots inserted in lieu of them, purporting to be cast for the relator; that the result, but for these frauds, would have shown the complainant’s election by a majority of two hundred and fifty votes; that the election of the relator was, by reason of such frauds, declared by a majority of twenty-six votes ; that said Dane, as sheriff, is by law the supervisor of said election, and it is his duty to open, compare, and count the ballots cast, declare the result, and give certificates of election to those elected ; that he had taken the false and fraudulent returns aforesaid, and from them ascertained and declared the result of said election, and issued a certificate of election to the relator, Reid; that the charter of the city of Mobile provides that the election of municipal officers may be contested before the judge of the circuit or city court, but does not provide the manner in which it shall be tried, nor by what rules it shall be governed, nor for what causes it shall be made; and therefore the complain*276ant concludes, it is impossible for him to contest the election of said Reid under the city charter. The bill alleges, also, that the city charter does not provide for a trial of the contest by a jury, nor for an appeal to a court having power to empanel a jury for a trial of issues of facts, and, therefore, its provisions as to a contest are unconstitutional; also, that the ballot-boxes, ballots, and poll-lists are in the possession of said Dane as sheriff, who threatens their destruction; that these are material evidence for the complainant, and should be preserved, that they may be produced at the trial. The prayer of the bill is for an injunction, restraining the relator from entering upon the office of mayor, or exercising any of the duties and functions of the office, and from interference with the complainant’s right to that office; that the court will take jurisdiction of the whole case, and try the same; that the complainant may be declared duly elected mayor, and confirmed and continued in his office; that the defendant Dane be enjoined from permitting said ballot-boxes, poll-lists, &c., to be taken from his custody, or destroyed, and required to safely keep and preserve them, and to produce them when required ; and for general relief. On this bill, the chancellor ordered a temporary injunction to issue, conforming to its prayer ; and an injunction was issued in pursuance of his order.
In my view of this application, the material questipn is this: Has the chancery court jurisdiction of the matter in which it is thus proceeding ? Unless we are compelled to answer this question negatively, the writ of prohibition cannot issue. On principle and authority, it seems to me impossible to give any other than a negative answer to the question. The whole object of the bill is to try the right to a municipal office; to ascertain and declare judicially the result of a municipal election. Whence does a court of equity derive jurisdiction of this matter ? It cannot be asserted that it is a part of its original jurisdiction. The right claimed is legal, not equitable. The common law, careful to furnish an adequate remedy for the protection and enforcement of every legal right, gave the writ of quo warranto, or an information in the nature of a quo warranto, as the remedy for a usurpation or invasion of the office of a municipal corporation. Cole on Quo Warranto, 113; Dillon on Municipal Corporations, §§ 210, 680, 714; Cochran v. McCleary, 22 Iowa, 75; Hulman v. Honcomp, 5 Ohio St. R. 237; People v. Carpenter, 24 N. Y. 86; Reynolds v. Baldwin, 1 La. Ann. 163; People v. Matteson, 17 Illinois, 167. The right claimed being legal, not equitable, and the common law furnishing an adequate remedy for its enforcement, a court of equity cannot intervene, without a departure from the general principle, that it will not take jurisdiction of legal *277rights, where there is a clear, adequate, and complete remedy at law.
The supreme court' of Illinois, in considering a question not differing in principle from that presented in this case, said: “ Courts of equity assume jurisdiction, in cases where a wrong is done for which there is no plain, adequate, and complete remedy in the courts of common law. The origin of courts of equity was owing to the incomplete administration of courts of justice, to correct which they gained an establishment. They have, at all times, assumed the power only of enforcing the principles upon which the courts of law decide, where the powers of those courts, or their modes of proceeding, are insufficient for the purpose; in preventing those principles, when enforced by the courts of law, from becoming, contrary to the purpose of their original establishment, instruments of injustice; and of deciding on principles of universal justice, where the interference of a court of judicature is necessary to prevent a wrong, and the positive law is silent. Hence, as a general rule, where a court of law has jurisdiction, and its rules and inodes of proceeding enable it to do adequate and complete justice, equity does not assume jurisdiction.” On this principle, the court refused to restrain by injunction the election of municipal officers under an act of the legislature averred to be unconstitutional. The court declared that, if the law was unconstitutional, the remedy was by quo warranto to oust such officers after their election. People, ex rel. v. Galesburg, 48 Illinois, 485.
In the case of Hagener v. Heyberger (7 Watts & Serg. 104), a bill was filed, praying an injunction to restrain the defendant from exercising the duties of the office of school director, because of his acceptance jyt another and incompatible office. The bill was dismissed, the court holding that an injunction was a writ adapted to control and regulate officers in the discharge of their duties, when they are confessedly in office, rather than to try their right to hold and exercise their offices. The court declared, also, that an English court of chancery would not sustain an injunction to try the election or amotion of corporators of any description, but would leave that to the ordinary legal remedy.
In Markle v. Wright (13 Indiana, 548), the court held, that a suit for an injunction is not the remedy for obtaining possession of a county office, to which the complainant had been elected, and from which he is illegally excluded by a usurper.
In the case of Cochran v. McCleary (22 Iowa, 75), the court-said : “ In England, and in the different States in this country, the law, solicitous to furnish a remedy for every invasion of legal right, has provided that of quo warranto, or an information in *278the nature of a quo warranto, to determine the title of an officer to his office, and to determine the right of any person or corporation to exercise a public franchise. Unless the law is altered by our statute, it is perfectly well settled, that questions of this character cannot be tried and decided in any collateral or indirect proceeding; as, for example, by a bill to enjoin. And% the court of chancery goes so far as to hold that it will not interfere, before a trial at law, in favor of an officer de jure, against an illegal claimant, by enjoining the latter from exercising the functions of the office. Upon this subject the authorities speak a uniform language.”
Independent of statutory provisions enlarging the jurisdiction of a court of equity, it must.be conceded, on principle and authority, that it has not the jurisdiction which the chancellor is exercising in this case. It will not be asserted that we have any statute which, either expressly or by implication, confers such jurisdiction. The section of the Code of 1852 defining equity jurisdiction (Rev. Code, § 698) was, by many members of the bar, deemed restrictive, taking away the original jurisdiction where by statute any other tribunal could exercise it, and prohibitory of all concurrent jurisdiction ; and such was the opinion of a learned chancellor. But the decision in the case of Waldron, Isley & Co. v. Simmons (28 Ala. 629), settled the question, in effect declaring that the statute is but an affirmation of the preexisting jurisdiction, neither enlarging nor diminishing it.
A municipal corporation, whether deriving its existence from a special statute, or an incorporation under the general law, is the subject of legislative creation. It exercises delegated power, which, in the absence of the corporation, would reside in, and be exercised only by the general assembly, or some other department of the government. An appropriate definition of a municipal corporation, which has met with the approval of learned jurists, is found in Cuddon v. Eastwick (1 Salk. 192) : “ An investing the people of a place with the local government thereof.” Such corporations are created for civil or political purposes. Its officers are mere agencies, through which it exercises the powers conferred on it. They exist, not for the benefit of the officer, or of any particular individual or class, but for the public advantage. From the earliest history. of such corporations in this country, the principal offices have been elective by those residing within the territorial limits over which corporate powers are to be exercised, and who are qualified voters under the constitution and laws of the State. Dillon on Municipal Corporations, 174.
A municipal corporation being the subject of legislative creation, endued with powers pertaining to the government of the *279State, and its officers elective by popular vote, can a court of equity interfere with such election, either by restraining one claiming a municipal office from entering on its duties, or by an inquiry into the validity of an election, without obstructing and embarrassing the exercise of municipal power, which is but a part of the civil or political power of the State ? How can the court, if it shall appear on the final hearing that the temporary injunction in this cause was improperly granted, and a perpetual injunction is then refused, compensate the corporation, which is but the body of the electors, for the suspension of legitimate power ? What compensation can be made for the deprivation of municipal government, or the continuance in office, against the popular will legally expressed, of those finally ascertained to be usurpers ? Bonds, with penalties and sureties, may compel compensation to an individual, for an infraction or restraint of individual right. In the matter with which we are now dealing, individual right is lost in the higher public right. The office exists for public, not for individual benefit. The public, not the individual, is the chief sufferer. The loss of political or civil power is the great evil, and for this loss pecuniary compensation cannot be made. Its loss for a day, or for an hour, is an irreparable injury; for that time it cannot be recalled, or restored. If a court of equity can exercise the power which the chancery court is assuming in this case, it may embarrass every municipality in the State in the exercise of its legitimate powers, and draw to itself the supervision and control of every municipal election.
The policy of the legislature, in the creation of municipal corporations, has been to provide very limited terms for municipal offices, but seldom exceeding one year. Courts of equity, as organized in this State, are held in a number of the counties but once in a year. It is obvious that, if they can exercise the power of supervising and controlling municipal elections, a large part of the term of a municipal office must expire before they can finally adjudicate and determine the controversy. The public mind is kept in a state of feverish uncertainty, as to who shall rightfully exercise municipal power; and a temptation is offered to every defeated candidate for municipal office, if he is as incumbent entitled to hold until his successor is qualified, to prolong his official term by litigation. It is a sad and unfortunate chapter of public history, that popular elections have, of late years, been marked by reckless, unreasoning partisanship ; a careless (if not too often corrupt) exercise of the right of suffrage; an insatiable, degrading thirst of office, power, and place, and, as an inevitable consequence, frauds which are criminal, utterly destructive, and designed to be so, of the purposes of such elections, — a fair, honest expression of the will *280of the people. It requires no prophetic power to foresee that, unless there shall be a radical revolution, coming from the people, riotous violence will soon take the place of fraud, and air election will be but a wager of battle between contending parties. Judicial tribunals can contribute to the suppression of existing, or the averting of apprehended evils, only by a steady adherence to the law as it is written, and to the compulsory adoption by those seeking their interference of known and usual remedies. If they countenance a resort to an unusual remedy, dilatory in its character, prolonging the power of the one party or the other, the dangers are at once magnified, because the partisan mind, already inflamed, will regard it as affording countenance to the wrongs of which they complain.
This case is an illustration. If, pursuing the charter, the election had been contested, the contest would have been determined before any considerable portion of the term of office had expired; the public mind would have been quieted; the passions engendered by the canvass would have subsided ; the rightful officer, secured by the power of a judicial decision, would have been in the exercise of his rightful functions; and respect for law, and for the constituted tribunals of the land, begetting obedience and confidence, would have been inspired.
By the charter, or act incorporating the city of Mobile, as amended, the terms of office of the mayor, aldermen, common councilmen, and other officers expressly provided for, is limited to one year, and until their successors are duly elected and qualified. Session Acts 1869-70, p. 453, § 11. The charter as originally enacted, and yet remaining of force, provides for a contest, and the determination of the validity of any municipal election in the city, before the judge of the circuit court, or the judge of the city court. This contest must be commenced within fifteen days after the election. The jurisdiction conferred, it will be observed, is not conferred on the circuit court, or the city court, which have but semi-annual terms, and are capable of exercising jurisdiction only in term time. The legislature, solicitous to avoid the delay incident to conferring the jurisdiction on courts, whose terms are held only at stated intervals, and whose jurisdiction can only be exercised in term time, gave it to the judge, who could sit at such times as he might prescribe, or such as the exigencies of the case might require. Admitting to its fullest extent the general rule, that special statutory remedies are cumulative, and do not exclude the ordinary common-law remedies, or the ordinary jurisdiction of the courts, unless such is the manifest intention of the legislature, it nevertheless seems to me clear, that the intention of the legislature in providing this remedy can only be consummated by regarding it as exclusive. No right of appeal was given, *281and none was intended. It was within legislative discretion and power, in creating a municipal office, and providing the mode of contesting the validity of an election to such office, to give or withhold an appeal from the decision of such contest. That an appeal was not given, is an indication that the remedy was designed to be exclusive, and the decision final. Public policy, and the real interests of the parties to such contest, demand that they should be determined with the least possible delay and expense. If these had not been controlling considerations with the legislature, it is presumable that jurisdiction would have been conferred on a court, and not on a judge. Such was the decision of the supreme court of Texas, on a similar statute. O'Docherty v. Archer, 9 Texas, 295. Again, it is a principle too firmly established to be controverted, that when a statute creates a right, or confers the means of acquiring it, and prescribes a remedy for its enforcement, the statutory remedy is exclusive, and must be pursued. Sedgwick on Stat. & Const. Law, 94, 402; Dudley v. Mayhew, 3 Comst. 9; Smith v. Lockwood, 13 Barbour, 209; State v. Marlow, 15 Ohio, 114; Commonwealth v. Garrigues, 28 Penn. 9.
The supreme court of Pennsylvania, in a case similar to this, said: “ It is a well settled principle of the common law, and of common sense, that where a statutory remedy is given with a statutory right, the common-law remedies are withheld.” Commonwealth v. Leech, 44 Penn. 332. The court further said: “ Does the allegation of fraud in the election, or in the conduct of the return judges, or in the conduct of any of the candidates in procuring votes, or in obtaining the certificate, give rise to any other remedy ? for all these are matters that can be fully tried in the special mode provided by the statute, and all of them are intended to be tried in that way. It would be quite absurd to suppose that the legislature had provided a mode of trying contested elections, and that by it the frauds that may occur, or be charged to have occurred in them, or in any part of the process of the election, cannot be tried. It would be quite absurd to say that the legislature has given the mode of trying title to an office, which cannot try whether the title of either party is tainted with fraud; for then the mode provided would almost always be inadequate and fruitless. The authority that tries the title, must have authority to try all averments that are made for or against it, that are necessary to the decision. Does the averment that the relator was thrown off his guard by the defendant’s declaration that he would not use his certificate, and thus failed to apply to court to prevent the defendant from using it — does this make a case that the court is authorized to hear and decide ? Clearly not. We cannot, of course, draw to this court jurisdiction of *282the case, on the ground of the allegation that the defendant presented a fraudulent certificate, and was fraudulently admitted on it; for, if we should do this on such grounds, we should open the way for the admission of all cases of contested elections, and should be fairly chargeable with usurpation.
“ The argument went a little out of the case presented by the information, in referring to the other contested seats in the same council, and in alleging that, unless we interfere, the political party which, in right, is entitled only to a minority of members, will have a majority of them, and will therefore have the control in the election of city officers. If this be so, it is much to be regretted; but we have no authority to inquire of the fact. It must be very plain, to every thinking mind, that there is nothing in this suggestion that tends to prove that the court has any authority to interfere. Where the whole duty of judging of any matter is committed to others, it would be sheer usurpation for us to take the decision out of their hands. Plain morality forbids it. The evil complained of can be only transient. But it is not so with the decisions of this court. They live after us. They stand recorded as examples to be followed in the future. And we desire it to stañd as an example, that we judge no man in matters wherein we are not authorized to judge him; that we assume no authority not given to us by the constitution and laws, even to effect a purpose that may appear greatly beneficial. We do good when we exercise a vested authority in the correction of wrong, though we may sometimes perform our duties erroneously. We do evil when we usurp authority, even in order to do good. If the election law is defective, the legislature is competent to amend it; we cannot do it. And if we set aside the law of the land, in order to effect a purpose, we become merely arbitrary.”
In the case of Hulseman v. Rems (41 Penn. 396), a bill was presented for an injunction, to restrain the defendants from the use of a certificate of election as members of the common council of .the city of Philadelphia issued to them, on the ground that the return judges had met at an unusual place, and had counted among the returns certain fraudulent and forged certificates, purporting to be returns of the votes cast by certain military companies in the service of the United States. The injunction was refused, and the court, in refusing it, in a carefully considered opinion, so fully decide the question under consideration, that. I make a lengthy quotation from it. The court said:
“We have, therefore, no ground left for our interference, but the single one that the return judges included in their enumeration returns purporting to be from three companies of volunteers, which were mere forgeries. We admit that, in the evidence before us, it appears clear to us that those returns are forgeries, *283and that it is only by their inclusion in the enumeration that the defendants have obtained certificates of their election. We admit, therefore, that the evidence proves that these certificates of the election of the defendants are founded in manifest fraud, the forgery of some unknown person ; but we do not find that the defendants had any hand in it, and we trust they had not.” [In the case before us, the bill, though abounding with allegations of fraud, nominates no persons, save the inspectors at one of the voting places, as guilty of the fraud, and abstains from imputing to the defendant Reid, or his co-defendant Dane, any connection with, or participation in it.] “ Can we, on this account, interfere, and declare the certificates void ? We think not. According to our laws, the election has passed completely through all its forms; the result has been, in due form, declared and certified; and the defendants have received their certificates of election, and are entitled to their seats as members of the common council. The title-papers of their offices are complete, and have the signatures of the proper officers of the law; and if they are vitiated by any mistake or fraud in the process that has produced them, this raises a case to be tried by the forms of a ‘ contested election,’ before the tribunal appointed by law to try such questions, and not by the ordinary forms of legal or equitable process before the usual judicial tribunals. It is part of the process of political organization, and not a question of private rights; and therefore the constitution does not require that the courts shall determine its validity. The law has appointed a special tribunal to try just such a question as this; and we can have no right to step in between the case and that tribunal, and alter the returns of the election judges, and annul their certificates. Plain as the fraud appears, and earnestly as we condemn it as citizens, it is no part of our functions as a court to sit in judgment on it. The common council is the proper tribunal to try cases of contested elections relative to its own members; and there the fraud and forgery must necessarily be tried and decided with final effect. They are appointed by law to try the whole case, and they alone can try it. We decided this last year at Philadelphia, in the case of Commonwealth v. Baxter (11 Casey, 264), a case from Bradford county, where a commissioner of highways had received a regular certificate of election, and where we decided that it could be avoided only by a regular process of a contested election case. Perhaps, that case may be found worthy of examination. If, in that way, we suffer a gross fraud to pass through our hands without remedy, it is not because we have any mercy for the fraud, but because we cannot frustrate it by any decree of ours without an act of usurpation. Another tribunal is appointed to administer the remedy, and we believe that, on *284proper application, it will administer it rightly, according to the evidence it may have. And if we have doubts of this, we should still not be justified in interfering.”
We must be prepared to declare these decisions grossly incorrect expositions of the law, or hold that the court of chancery is, in the proceeding of which the relator here complains, usurping jurisdiction withheld from it bylaw — “ judging wherein it is not authorized to judge,” assuming authority not given to it by the constitution and laws. Allegations of fraud, a pretence of respect for the purity of elections, and a desire to give effect to the popular will, however strongly expressed by a pleader, cannot hide the usurpation. If fraud has been committed— if the purity of an election is contaminated — if, by these means, the popular will is suppressed, the law appoints the tribunal to prevent the fraud, and to vindicate the purity and truth of the election. Obedience to law is the highest evidence a judicial tribunal can afford of its respect for the popular will, fairly and legally expressed ; for the law is the highest and most conclusive expression of the sovereign will.
It is scarcely necessary to notice the allegations of the bill that, as the statute does not declare the causes of contest, or specially prescribe the mode of proceeding, the remedy it provides is inadequate. It cannot be seriously doubted, that whatever is a sufficient ground of contest of an election under the general law, would be a sufficient ground of contest under the statute. Illegality, or irregularity in the conduct of the election, affecting its result, or fraud that deprives him who receives the larger number of legal votes of the office to which he was thus elected, would vitiate the election as effectually as if they had been specially nominated as grounds of contest. The rule is, whenever the provision of a statute is general, everything necessary to make such provision effectual is supplied by the common law ; and whenever a power is given by a statute, everything necessary to make it effectual is given by implication ; for the maxim is, Quando lex aliquid coneedit, concederé videtur et id per quod devenitur ad illud. 9 Bac. Abr. 219-20. Nor is it necessary to pay any consideration to the averment that the charter, in not providing for a trial of the contest by a jury, is unconstitutional. If this could be conceded, it would scarcely afford a reason for an appeal to a court of equity, of which a jury is not a constituent, and in which a trial by jury is impossible. Municipal offices are of legislative creation ; and it is the well settled law of this State, that the constitutional guaranty of a trial by jury does not extend to such offices. That guaranty is, in its operation, confined to cases known to the laws, and to which trial by jury was extended, at the *285adoption of the constitution. Boring v. Williams, 17 Ala. 510; Tims v. The State, 26 Ala. 165.
The result I have reached is, that the court of chancery has not jurisdiction of the proceeding of which the relator complains, and that the law commits to another tribunal exclusive jurisdiction of the matters involved in that proceeding. The majority of the court, as I understand them, not expressing an opinion on this question, refuse the writ of prohibition, on the ground that it is an extraordinary remedy, “ allowed of grace and not of right; ” that it is a “ discretionary writ, and will not be granted unless the applicant who claims the office has no other remedy to which he can resort for his protection. From the judgment of the chancery court, here sought to be prohibited and restrained, an appeal lies to this court. Then, the petitioner has a sufficient remedy by appeal, without invoking the aid of this extraordinary proceeding.” I pass over the declaration that a prohibition is “ allowed of grace, and not of right,” with no other comment than that, in my judgment, legal remedies are, in this country, matters of right, and not of grace, — are not more dependent on judicial will or favor than is legal right itself. Whenever a legal right exists, the law furnishes a legal remedy adequate to its enforcement, which courts cannot withhold. I fully concur in what is said by C. J. Chilton, in his dissenting opinion in Ex parte Smith, 23 Ala. 107: “The awarding a writ of prohibition is a matter discretionary; that is, from the circumstances of the case, the superior courts are at liberty to exercise a legal discretion herein, but not an arbitrary one, in refusing prohibitions, when in such like cases they have been granted, or when by the laws and statutes of the realm they ought to be granted.” The rule to be deduced from the authorities is, that an extraordinary remedy, such as a prohibition, will not be granted by the courts, when the party has an ordinary remedy adequate to his protection and the enforcement of his rights. He may show a case to which the extraordinary remedy named would be applicable ; but, if the ordinary remedy is adequate, the court has a discretion in granting or withholding it, and this is the extent of judicial discretion. Ex parte Brandlacht, 2 Hill, N. Y. 367, and authorities cited in note; State v. Hudnell, 2 Nott & McC. 419; State v. Judges, 11 Wis. 50. A majority of the court are of the opinion, that the relator hqs a sufficient remedy by appeal, if the chancellor proceeds to a final decree against him. If this vis a sufficient reason for refusing a writ of prohibition, then it should be announced as a rule, that the writ will never be awarded when the proceedings are pending before a tribunal whose judgments or decrees can be revised on appeal. A want or an excess of jurisdiction would be fatal to such judg*286ments, when presented on appeal by a party against whom the court proceeded in invitum. An appeal can be maintained only by a party who is injuriously affected by the decree or judgment. A writ of prohibition, as we have seen, may be awarded to either party, plaintiff or defendant to the unauthorized proceeding, without regard to the question of injury, except so far as it is an injury to have a judicial controversy drawn before a tribunal incapable of determining it. But is an appeal an adequate remedy for the wrong of which the relator complains? The speediest mode of prosecuting an appeal he could pursue, would be submitting a motion to dissolve the injunction, and, if that was refused; taking an appeal to the next term of this court. That appeal we are by law commanded to hear and determine in precedence of all other cases. It is heard, and the bill dismissed for want of jurisdiction in the chancery court. In the mean time, half of the term of the relator’s office has expired, during which, by the usurpation of the court of chancery, he has been deprived -of his office. A remedy subjecting him to such deprivation cannot be deemed adequate. No compensation can be made to' him for the deprivation. The injunction bond may be a security on which he can found an action for the recovery of the fees or salary incident to the office during the deprivation ; but the office is one of high public trust, and he cannot be compensated for the loss of the opportunity of discharging this trust according to the will of those who conferred it. The people conferring the trust have, by judicial usurpation, been deprived of representation by the person elected to exercise the trust. Their civil and political power has been shorn of its strength — has been defied and thwarted by a judicial proceeding in form, which was in fact usurpation. No remedy prolonging such injury, private and public, Gan be deemed adequate.
The same rule obtains as to the grant of a prohibition and a mandamus. As a general rule, a mandamus is not awarded if the party has another legal remedy. This rule is always understood to relate to a specific remedy, which will place the party in the same situation he was before the act of which complaint is made. Etheridge v. Hall, 7 Porter, 47; Ex parte King, 27 Ala. 387. It is unnecessary to repeat, that an appeal cannot restore the relator to the situation in which he was when the chancery court interfered; that it cannot recall the part of his official term which has expired, nor return the civil and political power which has been invaded. There is no point of view, in which I have been able to consider this case, not leading me to the conclusion, that a clearer case for a writ of prohibition could not be presented.
What is said in the opinion of the court about the want of *287power in this court to summon a jury if the facts should be disputed, if of any force, is equally relevant to any application that' could be made to this court for the writ of prohibition. But it is not of any force, for the matter complained of appears on the record, — the bill filed in the court of chancery, and the proceedings had thereon. Of consequence, there cannot be a disputed fact to try. No affidavit, or other evidence of the truth of such matter than is found in the record, is necessary, or can be received. State v. Hudnell, 2 Nott & McC. 419.