delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal is from an order of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, granting a motion to dismiss a petition for mandamus filed May 29, 1953, against the members of the State Tax Commission of Maryland and entering a judgment of non pros as to them; and sustaining a demurrer to the petition as against the members of the Appeal Tax Court for Montgomery *248 County and dismissing the petition as to them. In the same order the demurrer of Wilton T. Allen, Supervisor of Assessments for Montgomery County, was overruled, with leave to answer. Believing that an appeal would be premature, no appeal was taken from that action and the matter is not now before us.
In the case of the State Tax Commission, the only question before us is one of venue. The members of the Commission, having been served with summons directed to the Sheriff of Baltimore City, appeared specially and filed a motion to dismiss on the grounds that “as the State Tax Commission of Maryland, they maintain their office and transact their business pertaining thereto in the City of Baltimore, and, therefore, for all the matters and things which may be inquired into in judicial proceedings relating to their duties aforesaid, they are amenable to suit only in the City of Baltimore.” The petition had alleged, as to the members of the State Tax Commission, their failure to perform certain duties required of them by Article 81, Sections 230 and 239 of the 1951 Code, resulting in a lack of statewide uniformity. The prayer of the petition was that they be required to perform their statutory duties, particularly those relating to assessment procedure and standardization in the use of reports of sales. The Attorney General concedes, for present purposes, that the appeal from the judgment of
non pros
is not premature. Cf.
Northwestern Nat. Ins. Co. v. Rosoff,
The appellants contend that the English Statute, 21 Jac. 1 chap. 12, is still in force in Maryland, by virtue of Article 5 of the Declaration of Rights, and is declaratory of the common law, although not applicable to acts of omission or neglect as distinguished from positive or affirmative acts. They contend that at common law a public officer could be sued in a transitory action wherever found, and the rule has not been changed by Section 158, Article 75 of the 1951 Code, which they say is inapplicable to public officers.
*249
The portion of the statute, 21 Jac. 1, Ch. 12 (1623), set out in 2
Alexander’s British Statutes
(2d ed.) 589, merely extended the expiration date of, and enlarged to include churchwardens, the earlier statute, 7 Jac. 1, Ch. 5 (1609). This statute allowed a general issue plea to be filed by certain public officers when sued in actions
ex delicto
and special justification to be given in evidence under that plea. 2
Alexander’s British Statutes
(2d ed.) 584. Other provisions of 21 Jac. 1, Ch. 12, including the provision that the action could only be brought where the tortious act was committed, were not printed by Alexander. It is stated in a note (p. 590) that “that part of the latter act, respecting the county in which suits are to be brought and double costs, did not extend to the province. * * *.” This statement paraphrased a statement to the same effect in Kilty’s Report (1811) p. 237. We regard these statements as conclusive. Cf.
Day v. Day,
Originally, as a term of English law, “venue” signified the neighborhood from which the jurors, as witnesses of the facts in issue, had to be drawn. 5
Holdsworth’s History of English Law
117. This early concept of fact-venue was altered to one of action-venue, by means of a legal fiction, which in turn gave rise to the well-established distinction between local and transitory actions.
Patterson v. Wilson,
6 G. & J. 499, 500 (1834) ;
Crook v. Pitcher,
The common law rule that a transitory action would lie wherever the defendant could be reached with process, applied to public officers as well as to private individuals. See
Foster v. Baldwin,
The crucial question is whether the common law rule has been modified by the general venue statute, now appearing as Section 158, Article 75 of the 1951 Code. This section provides that “no person shall be sued out of the county in which he resides * * * provided * * * that any person who resides in one county but carries on any regular business, or habitually engages in any avocation or employment in another county, may be sued in either county, whether before a justice of the peace or in a court of law or equity; this section not to apply to ejectment, dower, replevin, scire facias on judgment or decree, nor to heirs, devisees or terre
*251
tenants, against whom process may be issued to another county.” The restriction as to residence was contained in Chapter 74, Acts of 1801, Sections 11 and 12, which readopted similar provisions enacted by Chapter 4, Acts of 1714 and Chapter 24, Acts of 1728.
Patterson v. Wilson, supra
(p. 502) ;
Cape Sable Company’s Case,
In
Graham v. Harford County,
In
Phillips v. Baltimore,
In
Sun Cab Co. v. Cloud,
*253
The general venue statute was not cited, but it was said:
“The rule confining suits'to official residences,
so far as it applies, is a rule of convenience * * *, and convenience does not require that, when officials of different residences are,
apart from any question of venue,
properly to be proceeded against jointly, they must nevertheless, in case of residence in different jurisdictions, be proceeded against in separate suits. Convenience requires the contrary; and insistence of the court upon separate suits under those circumstances would be inconvenient and without reason.” (Italics ours.) The propriety of proceeding jointly against the State Tax Commission and the Appeal Tax Court for Montgomery County, for failure to perform the separate duties imposed by statute and covering a different territorial range, is certainly open to question, and might well distinguish the cases. In any event, there is a clear distinction in the fact that the point as to joinder is covered in an equity proceeding by Section 105, Article 16 of the 1951 Code, which permits suit in any jurisdiction where one of the parties resides.
Hopper v. Brodie,
There is much to be said for the doctrine of convenience, and judicial discretion in determining it, both in the case of individuals and public officers, as well as in the case of municipal corporations. In England, it would seem that, although transitory actions could be brought anywhere, the practice was for the courts to freely grant a change of venue, to suit the convenience of the parties. Knight v. Farnaby, 2 Salk. 670 (1706). This practice is preserved under the Judicature Act of 1875. However, we think the matter is covered by our general venue statute, and that public officers are within its scope. The point was not waived in the instant case, but distinctly asserted. If a balance of convenience is to be the test, the change should be brought about by *254 legislative action, or perhaps, by rule of court. Since none of the members of the State Tax Commission reside in Montgomery County and its principal office is in Baltimore City under Section 225, Article 81 of the 1951 Code, we find no error in the entry of the judgment of non pros as to them.
The action of the court in dismissing the petition as against the Appeal Tax Court for Montgomery County was on the broader ground that there were no sufficient allegations of necessity. The petition alleged that the members of this body are residents of Montgomery County; that they “have not been furnished and therefore have not considered reports of current property sales in the county with conditions attending such sales, including the price thereof, for the reason that such sales reports since on or about April 30, 1952, were not prepared or submitted to said defendants by the Montgomery County Supervisor of Assessments although requested for use by the said court in connection with their current general reassessment of property in Montgomery County,” but these appellees “proceeded to make current assessments on the residential properties of the said county * * * all of which has resulted in arbitrary, capricious, discriminatory, fraudulent and illegal assessments and the current assessment rolls are therefore invalid.”
The writ of mandamus is sought to compel them to perform the duties imposed by Section 232, Article 81 of the 1951 Code, “under which the said defendants, in their official capacity as members of the Appeal Tax Court for Montgomery County, are required to have reports of property sales in the county with conditions attending such sales, including the sale price thereof, and on the basis of such reports and the evidence obtainable to determine whether the assessments against any property or any unit of assessment value in any district shall be changed.” Specifically the prayer was for a writ of mandamus commanding them “ (a) before making, changing or reviewing any assessments and *255 as a condition in respect to any action of such nature, to consider reports of property sales * * *” and “(b) to continue in effect during the current year all assessments previously made so as to continue in force, until changed pursuant to the directions and actions required by this writ, such assessments as were last made during the year 1948-1949.”
Mandamus
is a remedial writ of wide scope, and there are numerous instances of its issuance to compel performance of a statutory duty. Cf.
County Commrs. of A. A. Co. v. Buch,
As to future assessments, the problem is somewhat different. The authority to assess is not lost by the mere passage of the date of finality, at least in the case of escaped property. Section 202, Article 81 of the 1951 Code (Section 143, Chapter 226, Acts of 1929). The rule announced in
Comms. of Pub. Sch. v. Co. Comms., supra,
was more clearly stated by Judge Offutt in
Dorsey v. Ennis,
The rule that
mandamus
will not issue for an anticipated wrong has been strongly criticized.
Attorney General v. Boston,
The difficulty in the instant case is that even if we assume, without deciding, that the writ may issue, under some circumstances at least, for an anticipated wrong, there are no allegations of a refusal to consider sales data by the Appeal Tax Court, or of circumstances from which an intention to refuse could be inferred. Cf.
Kinlein v. M. & C. C. of Balt.,
Orders affirmed, with costs.
