38 S.E.2d 401 | Ga. | 1946
Mandamus lies against an officer to require the performance of a clear legal right. A petition for the writ of mandamus against county commissioners, as the governing body of a county, to require them to accept and pass on an application for a permit to engage in the sale of domestic wines, foreign wines, and malt beverages, or any of them, but which fails to allege that the petitioner or any other person has presented, or desires to present, such an application, fails to state a cause of action and is properly dismissed on general demurrer for that reason.
After a mandamus nisi issued, but before final hearing, seven other persons alleging themselves also to be citizens and taxpayers of Taylor County presented their petition for intervention and alleged: that they were interested in the subject-matter of the *743 suit and in the enforcement of law, and prayed that they be allowed to intervene and be made parties to the cause. Over the objection that these petitioners were not proper parties to a mandamus proceeding, the court granted an order allowing the intervention and made the intervenors parties. The intervenors then demurred generally to the petition on the ground that it stated no cause of action and on three grounds of special demurrer. The commissioners also demurred generally to the petition by adopting the ground of general demurrer made by the intervenors. All of the demurrers appeared on the same sheet of paper. The commissioners also filed a joint answer, to which the plaintiff demurred.
After a hearing on the demurrers, the court overruled the demurrer to the answer, sustained the demurrers to the petition, and dismissed the suit. The petitioner excepted to the order allowing the intervention, to the order overruling his demurrer to the answer, and to the order sustaining the demurrers to his petition.
1. Nowhere in the petition is it alleged that the petitioner or any other person has filed, or desires to file, any application for a permit to engage in the retail sale of any of the beverages mentioned in the petition. So far as the record here discloses, such application may never be filed. "Mandamus will not be granted when it is manifest that the writ would, for any cause, be nugatory or fruitless; nor will it be granted on mere suspicion or fear, before a refusal to act or a wrongful act done." Code, § 64-106. In Smith v. Hodgson,
This case differs on its facts from Thomas v. Ragsdale,
2. Since we hold that the petition did not state a cause of action for the writ of mandamus, it becomes unnecessary to pass on the other assignments of error.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.