On the 3lst day of October, 1905, this Court, upon the petition of Edwin Mann and 1939 other citizens and legal
Said petitioners, on the 30th day of September, 1905, presented to the county court their said petition for the calling of said election, properly verified by affidavit, and accompanied by a bond of five thousand dollars as required by the statute, and the court permitted the petition and bond to be filed, and made and entered an order directing' said election to be held on the 12th day of December, 1905, and then adjourned to the following Tuesday, the third day of October, 1905. Upon re-convening on that day, it set aside said order, upon the motion of James Scott and others, and thereupon the petitioners again presented the petition and bond to the court and asked that they be filed and an order made, providing for the holding of such election, but the court refused so to do.
The action of the court, in setting aside said order and refusing to re-enter the same, was based upon the theory that, at the time of its entry, as well as at the time of the application for a re-entry thereof, the court was not legally in session. It had convened in regular session on Wednesday following the second Tuesday in September, 1905, and adjourned from day to day and from time to time until said 30tii day of September. Some of these adjournments were for longer periods than three days. One of them was from the 21st day of September. until the 26th. On said last named day an adjournment was taken until the 30th day of September.
■ The principal defenses, set up in the return to the writ, were the following: First. The petition presented to the county court did not contain the signatures of a sufficient number of legal voters. Second. An injunction had been awarded by the circuit court of said county inhibiting and re
The proceeding for obtaining the calling of an election for the re-location of a county seat is special and statutory, and the duty of the county court as to it, purely ministerial. Doolittle v. County Court,
The function performed by a county court in ordering an election under the statute hereinbefore referred to, is legislative or governmental in its nature. It neither concerns nor affects any private right in the legal sense of the terms. Injunction is not a remedy which may be invoked by the citizen for the purpose of controlling public officers or tribunals in the exercise of their functions and powers. In order to sustain it, the plaintiff must show that he has a special interest in respect to which he will suffer a special injury of a private nature. It is not enough that the community in which he resided will be injuriously affected by some governmental or legislative action. Injunction is not within his reach until in some way his private personal or property rights are invaded. “Courts of equity have no jurisdiction,
The contention, that the court was not in session at the-times at which the petition was presented, is founded upon sections 2 and 10 of chapter 114 of the Code of 1899. Said section 2 reads as follows: “The supreme court of appeals, and circuit and county courts may at any time adjourn from day to day until the business is dispatched, or until the end of its term.” Said section 10 provides that “Although a, court be not held on the first day of a term, it may nevertheless be opened on any subsequent day: Provided, In the case of a circuit or county court, the same shall be done before four o’clock in the afternoon of the third day. If5 after a court is opened, it fail to sit on any day, it may nevertheless sit on any subsequent day„ of the term: Provided, In the case of a circuit or county court there be not-more than three consecutive days of such failure. ”
That the two sections have different purposes is perfectly apparent. The object of section 10 is to prevent the loss of
It only remains, therefore, to determine the effect of section 2. By the common law, a court has the inherent power to adjourn its session, not only from one day until the next, but to a distant day, or, as it is sometimes expressed, from time to time. Mechanic’s Bank v. Withers,
The reported decisions of this Court disclose no instance of hardship, surprise or other cause of injury or complaint, arising out of the operation of the statute, so construed. How could it occur? Every cause must he matured and placed on the docket of a circuit court before the first day of a term thereof, else it cannot be heard at that term, unless it be some special proceeding. If it is on the docket, and the parties want to be heard, they must attend on the day set for the hearing, and remain until some disposition of the case is made. If an adjournment over one or more days occurs, the record shows it and affords notice. The business of county courts, affecting private interests, is now, for the most part, ex parte in character, and the requirement of notice does not enter extensively into its transactions. If the legislature did intend to prevent an adjournment to a distant day, in the interest of economy in the public expenditures, or for any other reason of public policy, the statute would probably have to be regarded as directory, for the length of the adjournment would not be of the essence of the holding of a term of court, and the statute contains no inhibitory language.
To hold that a county court or other tribunal, charged with the performance of a ministerial duty, at a given term, cannot be re-convened and compelled to perform -that duty, as of that term, when it has adjourned without having performed it, would place it in the power of every such body to ref use performance of its duty, and, at the same time, deny to those who are entitled to have it performed any remedy whatever. In order to evade performance of duty, it would be necessary only to adjourn. In Daniel v. Simms, 49 W. Va. 554, the power to re-convene a board of canvassers after a final adjournment on its part, without having legally performed its duties, was expressly declared and exercised, and that case has been followed by several others. Although a distinction
Writ Awarded.
