3 How. Pr. 56 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1847
It is provided by the Revised Statutes, (2 R. S. 474, § 96,) that actions against certain officers, and among others, com/ missioners of highways, shall be brought against such officers individually, specifying their name of office; and in a subsequent section it is further provided, that in case of the expiration of the term of office of such officers, the court in which any such action shall be pending, shall substitute the name of the successors in such office, upon the application of such successors, or of the adverse party. The motion is founded upon this provision of the statute. The relator resists the motion, upon the ground that the proceeding by mandamus is not such an action as is contemplated in the statute referred to, and upon the farther ground that if this be such an action, the motion should be to substitute all the present commissioners in the place of those on whom the writ was served, and not one merely.
, Is the proceeding by mandamus to be regarded as an action ? If it is the statute is imperative that the names of the successors to the Defendants shall upon the application of such successors be substituted. The term “ action” means a legal demand of one’s right, or as it has been I defined, it is “ the right of prosecuting to judgment for what is due to one’s self.” The party complaining commences his action in his own ’ name, and as a matter of right; but the writ of mandamus is only issued in the name of the people. It may be granted or withheld in the discretion of the court. Before a party is entitled to have it granted, he must show not only that he has a specific legal right to have the thing asked for done, but also that he is without a specific legal remedy. The object of the writ is to prevent a failure of justice, and it is the want of any other legal remedy to enforce a duty that gives the court jurisdiction to grant the writ. If any effectual relief can be obtained by an
In case of a false return to the writ, the complaining party had no remedy at common law, but to bring an action on the case against the party mating such return. If in such an action he proved the return to be false, he was entitled to recover damages equivalent to the injury sustained, and upon showing a verdict in his favor in such an action ■was also entitled to a peremptory mandamus.
But now it is provided by statute, (2 B. S. 586, § 55,) that “whenever a return shall be made to any such writ, the person prosecuting such writ may demur or plead to all or any of the material facts contained in the said return, and the like proceedings shall be had therein for the determination thereof, as might have been had if the person prosecuting ■such writ had brought his action on the case for a false returnand if judgment be given for the person prosecuting such writ, he shall recover damages and costs in like manner, as he might have done in an action on the case. The effect of this provision is, it is true, at least from the time a plea is interposed, taking issue upon the return, to impart to the proceedings the nature of, and very closely to assimilate them to, an action at law. But at the same time that the proceeding takes the character of an action at law, it also, in effect, becomes a suit between individuals—between the prosecutor as Plaintiff, and the persons making the return as Defendants. The same proceedings are to be had after a plea to the return as would have been had if an action had been brought for a false return, and the successful party recovers the same judgment as he would have recovered in such an action. Suppose in this case that the relator instead of pleading to the return, had brought, as he might have done, an action on the case against the two Defendants who made the return, for a false return. It would hardly be pretended that the statute requiring, upon proper application made, that the successors in office of the Defendants should be substituted as parties in their place, would be applicable to such a case; and yet it has been seen that the statute gives the same effect to the proceedings upon the plea to the return, as if an action for a false return had been brought. I am clearly of opinion that this proceeding is not within the class of actions contemplated by the statute upon which the applicant relies to sustain this motion.
Having come to this conclusion, I have not thought it necessary to examine at length the other-position taken by the counsel for the relator, in opposition to this motion, but I think this obj ection would also be fatal to