Court Opinion

ID: 9939741
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-02-12 17:02:47.625554+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:41:52.935654
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

    IN THE MATTER OF THE §                       No. 459, 2023
    PETITION OF AISHIA SIMMS §
    FOR    A  WRIT OF    QUO §
    WARRANTO

Before TRAYNOR, LEGROW, and GRIFFITHS, Justices.

                                         ORDER

       This 9th day of February 2024, after consideration of the complaint for a writ

of quo warranto, it appears to the Court that:

       (1)    The petitioner, Aishia Simms, filed a complaint seeking to invoke the

original jurisdiction of this Court to issue an extraordinary writ of quo warranto.

Simms is a defendant in a residential summary-possession action in the Justice of

the Peace Court.1 The complaint in this writ action alleges that the magistrate who

presided over some of the proceedings in the summary-possession action lacked the

authority to do so because his term as a justice of the peace was expired. The

complaint also alleges that the magistrate violated Simms’s constitutional and other

rights and asserts various errors in the summary-possession action.

       (2)    After careful review, we conclude that the complaint must be

dismissed. As an initial matter, a complainant may not ask this Court to issue an

extraordinary writ to the Justice of the Peace Court “unless a petition for such writ

1
  The Court has taken judicial notice of the record in Windsor Castle, LLC v. Simms, Case No.
JP13-23-019125.
shall have been first presented to and denied by the Superior Court.2 Because Simms

has not alleged, and the Superior Court docket does not reflect, that she sought a writ

of quo warranto from the Superior Court in the first instance, the complaint must be

dismissed.3

       (3)    It also appears from the allegations of the complaint and publicly

available records that the complaint is without merit. As this Court explained in

Capriglione v. State, “[t]he writ of quo warranto ‘is a remedy that is essentially

adversarial in nature that seeks to remove the challenged officer from a position.

The writ or order is like a summons commanding the respondent to show by what

authority he or she claims to hold an office and is, in effect, an order to show

cause.’”4 In support of her allegations that the magistrate’s term was expired, Simms

attached records from a New Castle County public records database and the General

Assembly website indicating that the magistrate’s term expired in 2011. But the

General Assembly’s website confirms that the magistrate was reappointed as

recently as June 2023.5 Finally, to the extent that the complaint seeks to correct legal

2
  DEL. SUPR. CT. R. 43(b)(vi).
3
  See In re Paskins, 2005 WL 2333896, at *1 (Del. Sept. 21, 2005) (dismissing petition for a writ
of mandamus to the Court of Common Pleas because the petitioner had not sought a writ of
mandamus from the Superior Court in the first instance, as required by Supreme Court Rule 43).
4
  279 A.3d 803, 805 n.13 (Del. 2021) (quoting 65 AM. JUR. 2d Quo Warranto § 2 (Feb. 2021));
see also Hampson v. State, 233 A.2d 155, 156 (Del. 1967) (describing a petition for a writ of quo
warranto as “the common law remedy available in Delaware for determining the right to hold and
occupy a public office”).
5
    DEL. GEN. ASSEM., Hon. James R. Hanby Sr. Nominee Information, at
https://legis.delaware.gov/Nomination?nominationId=2128 (reflecting Senate confirmation of
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errors in the summary-possession action or other relief beyond removal of the

magistrate from office, a proceeding for a writ of quo warranto cannot provide the

desired relief.6

       NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS ORDERED that the complaint seeking issuance

of a writ of quo warranto is DISMISSED.

                                              BY THE COURT:

                                              /s/ Abigail M. LeGrow
                                              Justice

reappointment on June 7, 2023, for an eight-year term); see also DEL. GEN. ASSEM., Hon. James
R.      Hanby         Sr.    Nominee          Information,       at      https://legis.delaware.gov/
Nomination?nominationId=1628 (reflecting Senate confirmation of reappointment on May 17,
2017, for a six-year term).
6
  See Hampson, 233 A.2d at 157 (stating that a proceeding for a writ of quo warranto is “brought
by the Attorney General in the public interest against an alleged usurper of the office” and that the
“remedy afforded by the writ is that of ouster”); see also 65 AM. JUR. 2d Quo Warranto § 2 (Jan.
2024) (“Quo warranto is a preventative remedy addressed to preventing a continuing exercise of
an authority unlawfully asserted rather than to correcting what has already been done under that
authority.”).
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