73 W. Va. 156 | W. Va. | 1913
The circuit court of Kanawha county having provisionally enjoined the City of Charleston, the members of its Board of Affairs and Council from consideration of a certain ordinance' and action thereon, granting a franchise to the West Virginia Water & Electric Company, securing to it privileges in the city streets and alleys for pipe lines for supplying the city and its inhabitants with water, obligating the city to take a certain number of hydrants at specified rentals and prescribing rates and regulations for supply of water to the inhabitants of the city, and from passing said ordinances, it being then pending in the council, the city and others of the defendants applied to this Court for a writ of prohibition, to restrain the judge of said court and the plaintiffs in the said bill from enforcing the injunction and from further procedure upon the bill.
Before this action was taken, certain members of the council and the West Virginia Water & Electric Company appeared and filed demurrers to the bill. Chilton, MacCorkle & Chilton tendered a demurrer on behalf of the City, the Board of Affairs and Council which was objected to on 'the ground of alleged lack of authority in the attorneys to appear for the city and the court took the objection under advisement. Thereupon and on the same day, four members of the council moved the court to dissolve the injunction, which motion the court overruled. The return sets up the alleged failure of the City, its Board of Affairs and Council, to appear and demurr to the bill or move to dissolve the injunction, as matter for abatement of the rule, and an affidavit was filed showing a search of the records of the meeting of the Board of Affairs had disclosed no order or entry appointing or employing J. E. Chilton, a member of said law firm, who actually appeared for the City, an attorney for the Board of Affairs nor
The effort to show such lack of authority apparently proceeds upon the assumption that the employment of the attorney must have been made a matter of record. He is not acting in the capacity of an officer, either elective or appointive. He is a mere employee or agent and a municipal corporation, in the absence of a statutory restriction upon its powers, may make verbal contracts for such employment, just as private corporations and individuals may. “The contract need not be in writing, except where so required by statute or ordinance. So the employment, in the absence of statutory or charter provisions, need not necessarily be by a formal ordinance, by-law, or resolution. * * * An implied request for services, as well as an implied promise to pay therefor, may 'be raised against a municipality, the same as against an individual, by circumstances.” 28 Cyc. 586. A statute requiring all officers not otherwise elected to be elected by the general council does not apply to mere clerks and employes, or laborers, whose appointment may be made in such manner as the council shall designate. Lowry v. Lexington, 113 Ky. L. E. 763. That such contracts to be valid need not be made matter of record is well established. Ross v. City of Madison, 1 Ind. 281; Langsdale v. Bouton, 12 Ind. 469; Indianapolis v. Skeen, 17 Ind. 628; McCabe v. Commissioners, 46 Ind. 383; Logansport v. Dykeman, 116 Ind. 15; Wilt v. Town of Redkey, 29 Ind. App. 199. A verbal employment of an attorney was made in Board v. Sackrider, 35 N. Y. 154, and the court found no fault with the employment on account of its form, or rather for lack of writing or matter entered of record, but declared the action of the attorney in bringing the suit void, because the commissioners had not first determined to institute, it, but had left it in his discretion to do so. As the Board of Affairs clearly had the power to make a verbal contract -of employment with the attorney to represent the city, the failure of its record to disclose an order, resolution or entry of such employment does not disprove its existence, and no other evidence is offered. "When an attorney appears for a client, there is a presumption in favor of his
If the circuit court had cognizance of the matter in which the attorney appeared, the judge thereof would likely have been entitled to time for consideration of the objection informally made; but, if the cause was not within its jurisdiction, he could not bring it within it by his claim of right to time for consideration of the objection. Courts always pass upon questions of their own jurisdiction at their peril, and an erroneous decision on that point avails nothing. However, as the court’s alleged lack of jurisdiction was brought to its attention by the demurrer of four members of council and the corporation seeking the franchise, and the motion of the four members of the council to dissolve the injunction, it is immaterial whether the city properly filed its demurrer or not. It is not the purpose of the rule, under which we sometimes require want of jurisdiction in the lower court to be brought to its attention as a condition precedent to the application for the writ of prohibition, to require the question of jurisdiction to be there litigated and decided for review here, but only to give that court an opportunity to correct its act in excess of its jurisdiction, due to misapprehension or oversight or some other adventitious circumstance. The rule is a mere exercise of the discretion of this Court and is not in any sense rigid or arbitrary. Its application is clearly unnecessary in any instance in which the intention of the inferior court to .act beyond its jurisdiction is made apparent in any way. The rule was first announced by this Court in Board v. Holt, 51 W. Va. 435, and it was there characterized as a rule of courtesy, or deference to the judge below. In Board v. Holt, 54 W. Va. 167, it was not applied because deliberate action on the part
Suing as residents, citizens, qualified voters, householders and freeholders, the plaintiffs charged in their bill intent and purpose on the part of the council of the city to create an unconstitutional debt by the passage of the ordinance. This charge was founded upon provisions in the proposed ordinance or franchise binding the city to rent from the company 170 fire hydrants at an annual rental of $38.00 each, payable at the rate of $9.50 quarterly for each hydrant, making a total of $1,615.00 per quarter, such rentals to be paid during the life of the contract or franchise, an absolute period of thirty years and an additional conditional one of twenty years. This contract, if consummated, would impose an annual charge for water hydrants of $6,460, and there is no suggestion of insufficiency of the revenue or income of the city to pay it. It does not impose an indebtedness of thirty or fifty times the amount, which, added to the existing indebtedness, might make a sum in excess of that permitted to the city by the constitution and statutes. Allison v. Chester, 69 W. Va. 533. As this provision does not create an indebtedness within the statutory or' constitutional limitations, nothing in the charter of the city requires the matter to be submitted to a vote of the people and the charge of invalidity or excess of authority, based upon failure so to submit the proposition is wholly unsustained and without foundation. That the contract is intended to run beyond the terms of office of the present council and board of affairs does not make the pass
In the argument, sufficiency of the allegations of the bill to show acts ultra vires or to make out a case of fraud, was not ■ vigorously insisted upon. Their insufficiency was rather tactitly admitted, but the right of the court below to let the injunction stand pending consideration of the sufficiency of the bill was insisted upon and constituted the shibboleth of the argument. This position is all together untenable. Though not often so expressed in terms by the courts, the rule is that, 'in passing upon the question of its own jurisdiction, a court always acts at its peril. Its decision upon that question affords it no protection from supervisory process from a higher court and confers no right upon the parties in whose favor the decision was rendered. Had not the injunction been awarded and the exercise of jurisdiction on the bill made ■effective, the judge of the circuit court could no doubt have taken time for consideration of the question. He could
That allegations of fact, when necessary to vest jurisdiction in a court, must be sufficient is an obvious corollary of the proposition just asserted. To say the court may act upon insufficient allegations, because they may be made sufficient by amendment, is clearly inconsistent with the rule or principle. The facts stated do not confer jurisdiction and ability to amend is mere matter of surmise and conjecture. Nothing in the view of the.court establishes it. Hence it is not a fact within the knowledge of the court. - If it is permitted to act under such circumstances, it clearly acts without jurisdiction. To permit action upon such a bill or pleading will enable the court at any time to exercise jurisdiction in cases in which it has none. If it has power to retain for amendment and act upon the pleading, pending the process of amendment, the time allowable for amendment would be within its discretion and not reviewable. It might take a week, a month, or a year, during which there would he action -without jurisdiction shown. The power to proceed at all depends upon certain facts and they are not shown and may never- be. If a court could act upon such a pleading, there would never be any lack of jurisdiction except in those eases in which it is denied by some statute or principle of law and is in no sense dependent upon facts.
Assuming for the purposes of this case, without deciding-it, that citizens and tax payers may enjoin the council of a city from passing an ordinance, because the proposed act, - when done, will be one ultra vires, and that this may be done without any conclusive showing that the pending ordinance will be passed, or an averment of facts, showing intent on the part of the council to pass it, as contradistinguished from a mere claim that it will be, and that citizens and tax payers, without showing any special interest or injury peculiar to them and distinct •from! that which.the general public will suffer by reason of the
Upon these principles and conclusions, the writ of prohibition prayed for was awarded.
Writ Awarded.