Quo
warranto is a
remedy to try disputes with respect to the title to a public office. Generally, quo warranto proceedings are commenced by the
Government as the proper party-plaintiff. However, under Section 5, Rule 66 of
the Rules of Court, an individual may commence such action if he claims to
be entitled to the public office allegedly usurped by another. The Supreme
Court stressed that the person
instituting the quo warranto proceedings
in his own behalf must show that he is entitled to the office in dispute; otherwise,
the action may be dismissed at any stage. Emphatically, Section 6, Rule 66 requires the petitioner to
state in the petition his right to the public office and the
respondent's unlawful possession of the disputed position. As early as 1905, the
Court already held that for a petition for quo
warranto to be successful,
the suing private individual must show a clear right to the contested office.
His failure to establish this right warrants the dismissal of the suit
for lack of cause of action; it is not even necessary to pass upon the right of
the defendant who, by virtue of his appointment, continues in the undisturbed
possession of his office. Since the petitioner merely holds an
acting appointment (and an expired one at
that), he clearly does not have a cause of action to maintain the present
petition. (HON. LUIS MARIO M. GENERAL, COMMISSIONER,
NATIONAL POLICE COMMISSION,VS. HON.
ALEJANDRO S. URRO ET AL., G.R. NO. 191560, MARCH 29, 2011, BRION, J.).
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