32 Kan. 469 | Kan. | 1884
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action of mandamus, commenced originally in this court by J. B. Evans, a justice of the peace of Soldier township, Shawnee county, Kansas, against Chester Thomas, jr., sheriff of said county, to compel the defendant to deliver the body and custody of one Isaiah McClary to the plaintiff at his office in said township. At the commencement of the action, an alternative writ of mandamus was issued by the court, to which writ the defendant has made return and answer, stating all the facts of the case, as he claims them to be, and stating them as a full and complete answer and defense to the alternative writ, and also stating that he has performed the acts required to be performed by the writ, and asking that judgment should be rendered in his favor, and against the plaintiff, for a dismissal of the writ, and for costs. Upon these pleadings — the writ and the return — the plaintiff moves the court for a judgment in his favor; and upon this motion the case is now submitted to this court.
The facts of the case appear to be substantially as follows: On the night of March 4, 1884, Isaiah McClary, with a revolver, shot two men, to wit, George Blackwell and Peter Bledsoe. Blackwell immediately died, but Bledsoe lived until the next day about noon, when he died. Immediately after
On March 15, 1884, the county attorney, A. H. Vance, sent a note to Justice Evans, requesting him to dismiss the proceedings had before him against McClary, upon the grounds that the cases had been taken before Justice Hazen on the warrants of the coroner, as before stated; that no proper complaints had been filed before Justice Evans; and that Evans was a necessary witness in the cases. Evans, however, refused to dismiss the proceedings before him, but demanded that the sheriff should deliver to E. A. Cullum, a constable of his (Evans’s) court, the custody of the said McClary. The sheriff consulted the county attorney with respect to this matter, and the county attorney told the sheriff that he, the county attorney, had dismissed the proceedings commenced before Justice Evans, and that the sheriff should retain the custody of McClary under the warrants of commitment issued by Justice Hazen; and the sheriff took the advice of the county attorney and continued to'hold the custody of McClary under the warrants issued by Justice .Hazen. Afterward, and on March 24,1884, a preliminary examination was had in these cases before Justice Hazen, and McClary was held to.answer the charges made against him, and w;as again committed by proper orders and writs to the custody of the sheriff to await his final trial in the district court. On the same day, to wit, March 24, 1884, the plaintiff, Evans, commenced this action in this court. The defendant further states in his return to the alternative writ that, not wishing to be involved in any contest, and not having any interest in the case, he, on March 31, 1884, presented McClary to the plaintiff, Evans, at his (Evans’s) office, when the cases before Evans were continued to April 7, 1884, when the defendant again presented McClary to the plaintiff, Evans, when the plaintiff, as justice of the peace, again ordered that the proceedings should be continued, and ordered that they be continued until April 23, 1884; and no effort was then madp for a preliminary examination, and no effort for a preliminary examination wasjat any other time made, and no action of any
I. The defendant claims that the plaintiff has no authority or right to maintain this action. He claims that this is not a. public.action, but only the private action of J. B. Evans; that the county attorney, or the attorney general only, can maintain a public action; and, considering the»case as the private action of J. B. Evans only, he has not., stated or shown that he has any sufficient private, personal or pecuniary interest in the subject-matter of the action to maintain the action.
II. On the other hand, the plaintiff claims that the defendant, in his return to the alternative writ, cannot make answer to both branches of the alternative mandate of the alternative writ; that he cannot set forth facts which show that he had good cause or good reasons for failing to perform the acts required to be performed, by the alternative writ, and then state that nevertheless he did perform such acts; that-it is not true, so far as this case is concerned, that “the defendant may set forth in his answer as many grounds of defense, counter-claim, set-off, and for relief, as he may have, whether they be such as have been heretofore denominated legal, or equitable, or both,” (Civil Code, §94, subdiv. 3;) but that he can state iñ his answer only that he has obeyed the first branch of the alternative mandate of the alternative writ by performing the acts ■ required to be performed, or he must show cause why he has not done so; that he cannot state or show both that he has performed the acts, and also, for the purpose of saving costs,' that he was not bound to perform them. The plaintiff claims
III. The plaintiff further claims that the facts set forth by the defendant in his answer to the alternative writ constitute no defense to his, the plaintiff’s, action. We think they do. Or at least we think they show that the plaintiff is not entitled to a writ of mandamus, if the court may, under the facts of the case, exercise a sound judicial discretion in awarding the writ, or not, as the justice and right of the case would require.
The proceedings before Justice Evans were instituted by McClary and his wife, and of course, as alleged in the defendant’s answer, they intended that the proceedings should be carried on merely for the benefit of McClary. As before stated, the complaining witness was the wife of McClary, and neither Justice Evans nor any other court could compel her to testify against her husband. Also, when Justice Evans took jurisdiction of the case, he did not take the exclusive jurisdiction thereof; for, under the statutes, he had no right to require that the preliminary examination should take place only before hin^elf. Section 36 of the criminal code provides, among other things, that where a complaint is made before some court or justice that a criminal offense has been committed, then, “if it shall appear that any such offense has been committed, the court or justice shall issue a warrant, naming or describing the offense charged to have been committed, and the county in which it was committed, and requiring the officer 'to whom it' shall be directed, forthwith to take the person accused, and bring him before some court or magistrate of the
“Sec. 37. Such warrant may be substantially in the following form, varying the terms to suit the case: ‘The State of Kansas,-county. The State of Kansas, to any sheriff or constable of the State of Kansas: It appearing that there are reasonable grounds for believing that A B has committed the offense of-, in the county of-, you are therefore commanded, forthwith, to arrest A B, and bring him before some magistrate of the county of-, to be dealt with according to law.
“ ‘C D, Justice of the Peace for- Oownty.’ ”
Inhere are no statutes providing otherwise, and these statutes are fully complied with where the warrant is issued by one magistrate and the accused is taken before some other magistrate, and there given a preliminary examination. Proceedings were also instituted in the present case by the coroner of the county, and in pursuance thereof McClary was taken before Justice Hazen; and the courity attorney, for good reasons, preferred to carry on the proceedings before Justice Hazen, rather than to carry them on before Justice Evans. The sheriff also obtained custody of McClary, under the proceedings instituted by the coroner and carried on before Justice Hazen, and retained such custody under the advice of the county attorney; and the county attorney desired and attempted to dismiss the proceedings instituted before Justice Evans; and the proceedings instituted and carried on before Justice Hazen were certainly instituted and carried on in good faith, whether the proceedings instituted before Justice Evans were, or not. Certainly, we think the proceedings before Justice Evans ought to have been dismissed.. The interests of public justice were more likely to be subserved by carrying on the proceedings before Justice Hazen than before Justice Evans, whatever may have been the wishes or desires of Justice Evans; and presuming, as we shall, that Justice Evans was acting in the best of faith.
Now, passing to the action in this court, we think that Justice Evans has no right to maintain the action as a public
Under the facts of this case, we think a court exercising a sound judicial discretion would not be justified in granting a peremptory writ of mandamus; and for this reason we think that the plaintiff should not have instituted this action; but as he has done so, we think he should pay the costs thereof.
The motion of the plaintiff for a judgment for costs will therefore be overruled.