
    THE STATE, JESSE R. LEEDS, PROSECUTOR, v. THE MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF ATLANTIC CITY AND ALANTIC CITY, DEFENDANTS.
    1. When an office is full defacto of a person claiming it under color of right, the proper remedy to test the claimant’s title is quo warranto, and not mandamus.
    
    '2. An office is deemed to be full defacto whenever a person elected has been admitted to it, notwithstanding the election may, upon legal grounds, turn out to be invalid; provided, such election is consistent with an honest misapprehension of the law, and not evidence of a palpable disregard of its provisions.
    When a relator in office dc jure at da facto is interfered with, by one whose lack of title de jure is res judicata, mandamus, and not quo warranto, is the proper remedy.
    
      4. Where a mandamus is applied for to compel a corporation to restore relator to an office to which he is prima facie entitled, the incumbent is not a necessary party to the allowance of a peremptory mandamus.
    
    On rale for mandamus.
    
    Argued, at November Term, 1889, before Justices Van ■‘Syckel, Mague and Garrison.
    For the relator, J. W. Wescoti.
    
    For the defendants, A. B. Enddeott.
    
   The opinion of the court was delivered by

Garrison, J.

This cause is before us upon a rale for a mandamus. The facts are,'briefly, these: The relator was elected sergeant of police in Atlantic City at a meeting of city ■council held November 24th, 1885. He took the prescribed ■oath of office and entered upon his official duties. At a meeting of city council held November 23d, 1886, the office thus held by the relator was, upon motion, declared vacant, and au -election held to fill the same, which resulted in the selection •of one Samuel Loder, who was thereupon declared elected “Sergeant of police instead of Jesse R. Leeds, removed,” since which time the said Loder has performed the duties of the office, with the concurrence of the city authorities, who declined to recognize the relator, notwithstanding his refusal to surrender his equipments and his occasional performance-of official duty. These proceedings of city council, in so far as they resulted in the removal of the relator, were carried by him into this court by certiorari, and were here set aside as-being in contravention of the provisions of “An act respecting police departments of cities, and regulating the tenure of office of officers and men employed in said departments,” and the-supplement thereto. Ramph. L. 1886, p. 48. The action of city council by which relator was removed from his office-having thus been declared illegal, he now asks for a writ of mandamus to compel the city to restore him to the duties- and privileges of his said office. The rule, which is directed against the municipality alone, is by it opposed upon four grounds:

1. That mandamus is not the proper remedy.

2. That the present incumbent is a necessary party.

3. That relator served the full term for which he was elected..

4. Because he accepted his discharge.

In considering these objections in their inverse order, it is sufficient to say of the last one, that it is not sustained by the-proofs, and of the third, that it is res judicata. The first and second reasons have more substance, and may be dealt with together.

The contention raised is, that quo warranto and not mandamus is the proper remedy in the present case.

The appropriate use of these remedies in cases of amotion, from public office has been a fruitful source of discussion, and the result, so far as the American cases are concerned, is a contrariety of judicial opinion and practice.

At an early period it was established by the Court of King’s Bench, that quo warranto and not mandamus was the proper remedy when the office was full defacto. Rex v. The Mayor of Colchester, 2 T. R. 259; Rex v. The Mayor of York, 4 Id. 699 ; Rex v. The Mayor of Oxford, 6 Ad. & E. 349.

It is likewise to be gathered from the English cases, that an office is deemed full defaoto whenever a person elected has •been admitted to it, whether the election was or was not of such a character that it could be supported at law. Thus, in the case of Rex v. Lisle, which is reported at length by Andrews and briefly by Strange, it is said : “ In order to constitute a man an officer defaoto, there must be at least the form of an election, though that, upon legal objections, may after-wards fall to the ground.” Andr. 163; Str, 1090.

The language of WiglUmau, J., in Frost v. Mayor of Chester, 5 El. & B. 531, which was an ajjplication for a mandamus, presents the views of the same court at a later period. •“We may assume,” he says, “that the office is not full de Jure, but only de facto, and, for the purpose of the present argument, we may assume that the election has been holden in a way not warranted by law, and is therefore bad, and, as such, could not be supported on quo warranto. But the office is not the less full de facto, and the party elected has been •admitted.” To the same effect were the opinions of Coleridge, J., and .Chief Justice Campbell, in the same case, the court being unanimous that where an office was thus full, quo ■warranto and not mandamus was the remedy.

But, while it is true that the illegality of the election, by virtue of which an incumbent has gained entrance to an office, ■does not prevent the office from being full of him defaoto, it is also to be noted, that from the earliest periods it has been •held requisite that the illegality in question must be consistent with honesty of purpose. Elections based upon mistakes of fact or misconceptions of law may impart a color of right which will bar the allowance of a mandamus, but palpable ^disregard of law renders the action by which an office is seized merely colorable, and, in a clear case, will be brushed •aside as affording no obstruction to the exercise of a plain legal duty.

Thus, in Rex v. Bankes, 3 Burr. 1452, Lord Mansfield proposed, upon the argument, that affidavits be laid before .him, that he might determine whether it was a doubtful election, and fit to be tried upon an information in the nature of ■a quo warranto, or whether it was merely colorable and clearly void, saying, that in the former case the court might not grant .a mandamus, while in the latter case they ought. And, from a note by Burrows, it appears that Lord Hardwieke, in Rex v. Holmes, H. 9, G. H., B. R., cites the Case of Tintagel, H. 8, G. H, B. R., as the first case in which a mandamus had been granted under such circumstances, adding, as if in apology, that it had been done because it was a quite clear case.” See, •also, Rex v. Mayor of Cambridge, 4 Burr. 2008.

The distinction thus early indicated has become incorporated in the modern English rule upon this subject, which is stated by Mr. Shortt (Shortt Mand. 122) as follows: “ Whenever the office is full de facto, the proper method of proceeding is by quo warranto to oust the occupant, if he is .not in possession de jure. And the office is full de facto though the election to it was illegal, provided it was a real, .and not merely a colorable, election. If, on the other hand, the election was merely colorable, so as to be really no election at all, it does not confer even a de facto possession, and the remedy of the person ousted by it is not quo warranto, but .mandamus.”

In this country, the courts of Hew York have adopted the English rule without substantial change. In the leading •case, however, an additional reason is given, viz., that the corporation, being a third party, may admit, or not, at pleasure, .and the rights of the party in office may be injured. Drake v. New York, 3 Johns. Cas. 79.

This is obviously rather a matter of practice than an error in principle.

So, in the later cases, we find the writ refused upon grounds adopted from the English cases. Dolan v. Lane, 55 N. Y. 217; Matter of Gardner, 68 Id. 467; People v. Ferris, 76 Id. 326. A similar course obtains in Connecticut. Duane v. McDonald, 41 Conn. 517.

On the contrary, other state courts, notably those of Massachusetts, have relaxed the rigidity of the rule, and, to a certain extent, permit the right to an office actually filled to be-raised upon an alternative mandamus. Strong, Petitioner, 20 Pick. 484; Ellis v. Bristol, 2 Gray 370; Conlin v. Aldrich, 98 Mass. 557; Putnam, v. Langley, 133 Id. 204; Dew v.. The Judges, 3 Hen. & Mun. 1.

The rule, as it obtains at present in the various states, will be found, with citations of numerous cases, in Ang. & A. Corp.,. § 702 et seq.

In this state, so far as any expression of judicial sentiment is to be found, it is favorable to retaining the distinction upon which the English rule is founded—i. e., that quo warranto> and not mandamus is the remedy in all cases in which an office is full defacto, excepting only those cases in which the office has been filled by proceedings palpably without legal: warrant. Hoboken v. Gear, 3 Dutcher 265; McDermott v. Miller, 16 Vroom 251; Bradshaw v. Camden, 10 Id. 416 ; Henry v. Camden, 13 Id. 335.

There are, in particular, two cases in which this court has-evidently proceeded upon this view of the rule of law. In Mason v. Mayor of Paterson, 6 Vroom 190, the office of city treasurer could, under the city charter, be filled only by a. majority meeting of the board of aldermen. The defendant, Avho had been admitted to the office by an election in which-less than a legal number of aldermen were present, claimed, against the relator’s application for a mandamus, that, as he-was in office defacto and under color of an election, quo warranto and not mandamus was the proper remedy. The court held, however, that the election by the aldermen, in violation of their own organic law, was merely colorable, and, all the-facts being before the court, a peremptory mandamus went in the first instance.

’ In Lewis v. Jersey City, 22 Vroom 240, the discharge of a. person under a debatable construction of a recent legislative-enactment, and the filling of his position, did not prevent the allowance of a peremptory mandamus for his restoration' to office. All of the facts necessary for the determination of the legality of his discharge appear to have been before the court on the rule to show cause, and the propriety of the proposed remedy does not seem to have been questioned,, nor does the reported case show that the imcumbent was a party to the proceedings.

The present case possesses elements of strength for the relator not to be found in the reported cases, in that it is res judicata, that his removal from office was illegal.

The authority of these two cases would appear to be conclusive upon the relator’s right to a peremptory mandamus restoring him to his office.

There is, however, an aspect of this case which, while it leads to the same result, appears to me more surely consonant with the rule of law which we seem to have adopted.

That rule, in its rigidity, is applicable to cases only in which a relator clearly out of office de facto is seeking to oust an incumbent who is clearly in. In such cases, the reason for the rule makes the fullness of the office de facto the test as to whether quo warranto is or is not the only remedy.

There is, however, a class of cases in which this reason for the rule is wanting. I refer to those cases in which the facts before the court, or within its judicial knowledge, show that the relator was in office de jure et de facto, and that the defendant, while claiming to be in de facto, can make no claim to be in de jure. Here the relator is not called upon to test the title to the office, for that is not in dispute. The' office is not defacto full against him, unless by his conduct he elect to consider himself out. In contemplation of law, his title to the office dejure draws to it the possession defacto, as in cases where simultaneous acts of occupancy are exercised by contestants over a legal title. In such cases there is nothing to be tried by quo warranto. The law being settled, and the facts undisputed, the duty of the court is clear. The People v. Scrugham, 20 Barb. 302, presents such a state of facts, and is directly in point. This case was subsequently reversed, but • not upon the grounds for which it is here cited.

In the case in hand, this court has, upon certiorari, annulled the only thing which challenged the relator’s right to this office. The testimony taken under this rule shows that the relator was in office at the time of the unlawful attempt at his amotion, and that he has not elected to consider himself out. Under these circumstances, the municipality can interpose no objection to the proposed mandamus.

The only remaining question, is the right of the defendant municipality to object to this application because the incumbent is not a party to it.

The incumbent of an office is undoubtedly a necessary party to proceedings brought for the purpose of testing his title thereto.

By the certiorari suit it was decided that, at the time of the appointment of the incumbent, there existed no legal vacancy in the office he still purports to fill.

Without discussing the questions which might have arisen if the incumbent himself had made application to be made a party to the certiorari, it is sufficient for present purpose, to say, that the defendant cannot now avail itself of the nonjoinder of the incumbent in the proceeding now before us.

As to the city of Atlantic City, the prima facie right of this relator to be admitted to this office is res judicata.

A peremptory mandamus will be allowed.  