53 W. Va. 372 | W. Va. | 1903
The county court of Wetzel County submitted to the voters at the general election in November, 1900, the question of the relocation of the county seat. Certain citizens and tax payers obtained an injunction against the ballot commissioners restraining them from putting on the ballots to be used at the election the question of the relocation of the county seat at Pine Grove, and they did not put the question on the ballots used at the general election. However*, voters voted upon that question in hundreds of the ballots. At some of the precincts the commissioners of election made and returned along with the poll books and other papers of the general election separate certifi
The first question is, does mandamus lie in the case, or is cerliomm the proper remedy? It is useless to go over what has so often been discussed where mandamus does and does not lie, except in short space. Likely I could not state it better now than to repeat point 1 of the syllabus in Roberts v. Paul, 50 W. Va. 528: “The writ of mandamus properly lies where the inferior court refuses to' take jurisdiction where by law it ought to do so, or where, having obtained jurisdiction in a cause, it refuses to proceed in the due exercise thereof; but it will not lie to- correct alleged error occurring in the exercise of its jurisdictional discretion while acting within its jurisdiction.” The inferior tribunal may be compelled to act, if it refuses to do so. State v. County Court, 33 W. Va. 589. We may not just say that the county court refused jurisdiction, but virtually so; it reached that result by refusing to go on to judgment. It declined to take up the evidence, to consider the certificates' and other matters calling for decision in one way or the other; it refused to begin to consider a ease plainly within its jurisdiction. This is virtually a renunciation or refusal of jurisdiction, because it refused it in an instance to those entitled to call for it in a matter of which it had jurisdiction. If it be not exact to say that the county court refused jurisdiction, we can say that “having obtained jurisdiction in a cause, it refused to proceed in the due exercise thereof.” The motion was to- declare the result of the election upon the relocation of the county seat, of course upon all' returns, questioned and unquestioned. This the county court had never done. The action of the board of canvassers, which ascertained the result of the election certificates then before it did not operate in law, was a nullity, because the result of a vote
But before we can award the mandamus we must see what is the effect of that injunction against the ballot commissioners. That was an injunction against holding any'election upon the county seat question. Does injunction lie to stop an election for public officers? “Acts of public officers pertaining to- the calling, conducting and certifying the results of elections, being the exercise of political functions of great importance, axe rarely and reluctantly interfered with by court of equity, owing to the imperative necessity of protecting 'expressions of ( the popular will in the selection of officers and in other matters, and of having the result of such expressions accurately ascertained, numerous safeguards against fraud and abuse, and remedies for the correction of error and violations of duties, are usually provided by statute, so that the existence of means of redress by statutory proceeding usually afford ample ground for refusing equitable remedies. Accordingly, where an election is called in pursuance of a law authorizing it, a court of equity has no power to restrain the officers from holding, or the people from voting at such election; and they cannot be punished for disobeying an injunction issued in such a case, as the court has no jurisdiction to issue the writ. * * * And a' court of equity is without power to restrain county commissioners from ordering an election for the removal of a county seat, where the statute providing a mode of contesting elections furnishes a remedy.” 1 Spell. Inj. & Extra. Rem. section 630. Also section 721. “It has been held that the power of holding an election being a political power, equity has no jurisdiction to restrain officers intrusted by. law with the duty of holding elections from the exercise of such power.” 2 High Inj. sec. 1316. “If the court has no jurisdiction over the matter involved, or has exceeded its powers by granting an injunction in a matter beyond its jurisdiction, its injunction will be treat-
Therefore, we reverse the judgment of the circuit court and award a peremptory mandamus to the county court to convene and ascertain and declare the result of said election upon the question of the felocation of the county seat of Wetzel County at 'Pine Grove.
Reversed.