121 Mich. 433 | Mich. | 1899
This is a proceeding in certiorari to review the action of the circuit court of Montcalm in granting a writ of mandamus directing the respondents to approve of the liquor bond of the relator. The relator is the keeper of an hotel at Lakeview, in which there is a bar where liquor is sold. In April, 1899, he presented to the respondents a liquor bond in the sum of $3,000, with Mr. Bale and Mr. Peterson as sureties. A motion was made to accept the bond. Three of the trustees voted affirmatively and three in the negative. The president of the village voted in the negative and the board refused to accept the bond. The relator then applied to the circuit court for a writ of mandamus to compel them to accept his bond. In his petition he claimed that the bond was in proper form, and was signed by a sufficient number of sureties, who were financially responsible, and that the majority of the trustees rejected the bond arbitrarily, and because they were elected upon the issue of no saloon, and because they were determined there should be no saloon in the village.
The respondents made a return to the order to show cause, in which they denied they had acted arbitrarily or capriciously, and asserted they had inquired into the sufficiency of the sureties to the bond, and rejected it because one of the sureties was not of sufficient financial ability to qualify as a surety. This return was authorized to be made, and was the return of the three trustees and the president of the board, who had voted to reject the bond. Upon the hearing before the court, the attorney for the relator was, against the protest of the respondents, allowed to file his affidavit as to what occurred before the board, and also the statement of the three trustees who voted to approve the bond, in which statement they admitted the truth of the statements contained in the petition of the
At the second hearing before the board there was a clerk and a stenographer, who took minutes of what occurred. The case was again taken up by the circuit judge. In addition to the return made by the respondents, consisting of a majority of the trustees, there were returned the minutes kept by the clerk and stenographer of what occurred at the second hearing, and the return of two of the trustees, constituting the minority, and other affidavits, which had never been presented to the board of trustees. In the second answer of the respondents they again denied that they had acted arbitrarily or capriciously, and asserted they had acted in the utmost good faith; and that, conceding that Peterson was the bona fide owner of all the property conveyed to him by Bale, they did not believe he was worth $3,000 over and above his exemptions and incumbrances. The court found that, taking into consideration all the facts as shown by the affidavits and record, Mr. Peterson was sufficiently responsible, and that the board had acted arbitrarily, and directed that they approve the bond.
It is urged by the relator here that this court ought not in this proceeding to discredit the finding of the circuit judge. It is urged by the respondents that, in the absence of a framed issue, the return of the respondent in a mandamus case is conclusive, and the circuit judge had no right to consider anything outside of the return. In our view of the case, it is not necessary to spend any time upon either of those propositions. The statute does not confer upon the court the right to review the accuracy of the conclusion reached as to the financial standing of the sureties offered upon liquor bonds. It may determine whether or not the board has acted in good faith, or
The writ of mandamus should have been refused, and the relator’s petition dismissed; and it is so ordered.