12 Kan. 127 | Kan. | 1873
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This case is now before us on the motion to strike out that portion of the answer which sets up a judgment of the circuit court of the United States for the district of Kansas as a defense to this application. The application is for a mandamus on the commissioners and clerk of Jefferson county to compel them to- issue the bonds of the county to the plaintiff. The alternative writ alleges a vote of the people, a subscription, and a compliance by the plaintiff with the terms of the subscription. The portion of the answer objected to sets up a decree of the circuit court enjoining the commissioners and their successors in office from issuing these bonds. Is it a bar ? The suit as originally brought in the U. S. circuit court was between G. W. Norton and others as plaintiffs, and the board of county commissioners of Jefferson county, the three commissioners, and the county clerk, and this plaintiff, and another railroad company as defendants, and was to restrain the issue of these bonds. When the case was called for trial, a new board of county commissioners having in the mean time been elected, the demurrer of the board was withdrawn, the action dismissed as to the two railroad companies, and a decree pro oonfesso entered against the commissioners and the county. The dismissal was, as stated in the order, “without prejudice to the rights of said companies, or either of them,” and the decree itself recites that “this decree is not to prejudice the right of the said railroad companies, or either of them, in any respect, but is to be held, construed, and treated as if made in a suit to which said companies were not parties.” It needs no argument to show that this decree does not bar the plaintiff, or constitute any defense to this action, on the ground of res judicata. “ In order to make a matter res judicata there must be a concurrence of the four conditions following, namely: 1st, identity in the thing sued for; 2d,
But it is insisted that whatever rights the plaintiff may have, must be enforced in a different action; that no mandamus will ever issue to' command the doing of an act which is forbidden to be done by a valid injunction order of a competent court, because thus the party would be placed between two fires, and liable to punishment for contempt in either event. It is said that the writ of mandamus lies within the discretion of the court, and that the mere fact that a party has rights will not necessarily entitle him to the writ; that no court will exercise this discretion in such manner as to place the defendant in jeopardy of punishment. That this writ, originally a prerogative writ, and solely a matter of discretion, still partakes or}ginai nature so far that it yet remains largely within the discretion of the court, cannot be doubted: The State, ex rel., Wells, v. Marston, 6 Kas., 525. But in the exercise of that discretion regard must be had to the rights of ¿he plaintiff, as well as to the dangers of the defendant. If those rights can be secured only through this writ, it would be simply an abuse of discretion to refuse it. If the plaintiff has any rights, the law guarantees to it a time, and place, and tribunal to enforce them. Those rights cannot be destroyed by a decree to which it is neither party nor privy.
The motion to strike out must be sustained.