166 Ky. 622 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1915
Opinion op the Court by
Denying writ of mandamus.
The plaintiff, Rosalee Speckert, seeks in this action a writ of mandamus to compel the defendant, Charles T. ¡Ray, judge of the Jefferson Circuit Court, 'Common Pleas Branch, Fourth Division, to try an action pending in his court, wherein she is plaintiff and the Old Dominion Steamship Company is defendant; the writ being asked in this court. The case has been submitted on a general demurrer filed to the petition by the defendant, which seems to present all questions raised by the parties.
It appears from the averments of the petition, and is admitted by the demurrer, that the action pending in the Jefferson Circuit Court, of which the defendant, Charles T. Ray, is the presiding judge, was brought to recover of the Old Dominion Steamship Company damages for alleged insult and maltreatment sustained by the plaintiff at the hands of its servants and employes while a passenger on one of its steamships sailing from Norfolk, Virginia, to New York, of which they were in charge. It further appears from the petition that the plaintiff, in August, 1914, purchased of the Louisville agent of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company a ticket from Louisville to New York, which entitled her to be carried as a passenger from Louisville to Norfolk,,, Virginia, over the line of the railway company, and from. Norfolk to New York on the steamship of the Old. Dominion Steamship Company.
Two summons were issued against the Old Dominion Steamship Company upon the filing of the petition,, one of which was served upon R. E. Parsons, who is the-district passenger agent of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company at Louisville. The other was served upon.
“Executed December 29, 1914, on Old Dominion Steamship Company by delivering a copy of the within summons to Eobert E. Parsons, agent of said company, he being chief officer found in this county at this time, he refusing to accept same.
“ C. J. Cronan, S. J. C.
“By E. D. Waters, D. S.”
The return upon the second summons was as follows:
“Executed January 2, 1915, on defendant Old Dominion Steamship Company by delivering a true copy of the within summons to C. A. Pennington, the chief agent of the Chesapeake & Ohio Eailway Company found in this county, and which said railway company, as the agent of said defendant, in charge of its business in this county.
“C. J. Cronan, S. J. C.,
“By C. Mueller, D. S.”
The Old Dominion Steamship Company entered its special appearance and made a motion to quash the return upon each of these summons, and in support of the motion filed the affidavits of Parsons and Pennington. Plaintiff, as against the motion, filed her own affidavit. The circuit court, after considering the motion to quash, sustained it, to which ruling plaintiff, excepted. Thereafter the plaintiff entered a motion to set aside the order quashing the return on each summons, and that the case be set on the docket for trial. This motion was also overruled by the circuit court, to which ruling the plaintiff excepted. No further orders were entered or steps taken in the case..
The affidavit of Parsons contains the statements that the Chesapeake & Ohio Eailway Company operates passenger trains from Louisville to Norfolk, Virginia; that the Old Dominion Steamship Company is a nonresident corporation, separate and distinct from the Chesapeake & Ohio Eailway Company, and that it operates a steamship line over which passengers and freight are transported from Norfolk, Virginia, to New York; that he (Parsons).is not, and was not at the time the summons' was served on him, the agent in Ken
The counter affidavit of the plaintiff was to the effect that in purchasing the ticket in question from R. E. Parsons, he held himself out as the agent in this State of the Old Dominion Steamship Company; that as the agent of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company he kept in the office of that company at Louisville pamphlets and advertising matter of the Old Dominion Steamship Company, and that the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company solicits freight and passenger business for the Old Dominion Steamship Company; moreover, that subsequent to the infliction upon her by the servants of the latter company of the injuries complained of in the petition, Parsons, acting for it, entered into negotiations with her looking to the settlement of her claim for ■damages.
After the filing of the affidavit of the plaintiff there was filed by the defendant a supplemental affidavit of Parsons, in which it was denied that he had any negotiations with plaintiff regarding her claim for damages, ■or that he was authorized by the Old Dominion Steamship Company to negotiate with her; and stated that all railroads kept pamphlets in their ticket offices showing
It does not seem to be claimed by the plaintiff that the service of process on Pennington is good, but it is insisted for her that the service on Parsons is valid and sufficient to give the circuit court jurisdiction in the action as to the Old Dominion Steamship Company. The two questions presented for decision by the record are: (1) Whether the writ of mandamus will lie to compel a judicial officer to decide that service of process, which he had already adjudged insufficient, is good; (2) whether, if mandamus is the proper remedy, the service of process had on the defendant, Old Dominion Steamship Company, is good, and, therefore, sufficient to give the circuit court jurisdiction to entertain and try the action.
It is not claimed in the instant case that the defendant judge refused to act at all. On the contrary, it is conceded that he entertained the case for the purpose of considering the single question presented to him; that is, whether the service of process was good or bad, and that he did decide it; and the decision being that the service was not good, an order was entered quashing the return. The only meaning of the plaintiff’s complaint is, that the decision was adverse to her interest and, therefore, incorrect, for which reason she asks the writ of mandamus, to compel a different decision of the question and one that will be favorable to her. In other words, what the plaintiff now seeks is, not that the judge of the circuit court be required to take action, but that he act in a manner that will deprive him of the discretion with which he is clothed as a judicial officer by the law.
Section 110 of the Constitution provides that the Court of Appeals shall have power to issue such writs as may be necessary to give it general control of inferior jurisdictions. We have never held that the above pro
“The general principle which applies to the issue of a writ of mandamus is familiar. It may be issued to compel the performance of a ministerial act, but not to control discretion. It may also issue against a tribunal, or one who acts in a judicial capacity, to require it or him to proceed, but the manner of proceeding must be left to his or its discretion. If the case here presented were one in which the fiscal court of Campbell County had refused to act at all, the writ would lie to compel it to do so, but it would have to be left to its discretion to consent or refuse its consent to the appointment to the office of county road engineer of the person named by the county judge therefor. But, such is not the case; the fiscal court did act and a majority of its members by voting refused to consent to the appellant, Traver’s, appointment to the office of county road engineer; this being true, they cannot again be required to vote upon the question whether they will consent to the appointment of Traver.”
There cannot be found a clearer and more concise statement of the doctrine in question than is contained in the following excerpt from the opinion in City of Louisville v. Kean, 18 B. Mon., 9:
“But the doctrine seems to be well settled that when the inferior tribunal, or the subordinate public agents, have a discretion over the subject matter, that discretion cannot be controlled by mandamus, although it may have been improperly exercised. If there be a refusal to act upon the subject, or to pass upon the question on
One of the later cases on this question is that of Commonwealth on Relation, etc. v. Weissinger, Judge, 143 Ky., 368, in the opinion of which it is said:
“The only question presented by the record is — * did the Jefferson County Court have power to vacate and set aside the judgment by default? If it did not have jurisdiction to vacate and set aside the default judgment, the writ of prohibition should have been granted; on the other hand, if it did have jurisdiction, the writ should be denied. If the county court had power to vacate the judgment, it is wholly immaterial whether the reasons for so doing were sufficient or not; and so we will not inquire into the sufficiency of the reason, as a writ of prohibition will not lie to restrain an inferior tribunal from acting within its jurisdiction, however erroneous its action may be.” Goldsmith v. Owen, Judge, 95 Ky., 420; L. S. L. & B. A. v. Harbeson, Judge, 20 R., 278; Weaver v. Toney, 107 Ky., 426; Galbraith v. Williams, 106 Ky., 431; Schobarg, etc. v. Manson, 110 Ky., 483; Carter County v. Mobley, 150 Ky., 482.
We do not overlook the fact that in some jurisdictions it has been held that where a court declines jurisdiction by mistake of law, erroneously deciding as a matter of law and not as a decision upon the facts, that it has no jurisdiction, and either declines to proceed or disposes of the case, the general rule has been announced that a mandamus to proceed will lie from any higher court having supervisory jurisdiction, unless there is a specific and adequate remedy by appeal or writ of error. But insofar as we have been enabled to discover, it has never been held that mandamus will issue to review the decision of a lower court which has refused jurisdiction after determination of the question of fact. In some of the cases a distinction is made between a refusal to take jurisdiction ab initio and a determination that there is no jurisdiction, it being held that where the court has acted and judicially determined that it has no jurisdiction, its determination cannot be reviewed, except on appeal or writ of error. Cahill v. San Francisco Superior Court, 145 Cal., 42;
In most of the states, however, the doctrine is as held in this jurisdiction, that if an inferior tribunal has a discretion and proceeds to exercise it, its discretion cannot be controlled by mandamus; but if it has a discretion and refuses to exercise it, it can be compelled to do so, though not in any particular direction.
It is insisted for the plaintiff that she is entitled to the mandamus sought on the ground that there is no other adequate means of relief open to her. This ground of relief has so frequently been recognized in this jurisdiction in applications for the writ of prohibition, that it may be said to be a well-established rule that the writ of prohibition may be issued by the circuit court against an inferior court, or by the appellate court against a circuit court, where the inferior or circuit court is attempting to act out of its jurisdiction, or where the writ of prohibition is the only adequate remedy to which the party applying therefor can resort. Cullins, et al v. Williams, et al, 156 Ky., 57; Arnold v. Shields, 5 Dana, 18; Pennington v. Wolfolk, 79 Ky., 13; N. N. & M. V. Co. v. McBrayer, 15 R., 399; Clark County Court v. Warner, 116 Ky., 801; McCann v. City of Louisville, 23 R., 558; Rush, etc. v. Denhardt, 138 Ky., 238.
In the cases relied on by the plaintiff, no such state of facts as here presented will be found. That of Equitable Life Insurance Co. v. Hardin, 166 Ky., 53, deals wholly with the writ of prohibition, and the writ was granted because the wrong complained of would have resulted in irreparable injury to the plaintiff and there was no other adequate remedy to which it could have resorted.
In Carey v. Sampson, Judge, 150 Ky., 460, Carey sought from this court a writ of prohibition to prevent Sampson, judge of the circuit court, from trying him under an indictment for practicing medicine without a license, the punishment for which offense is a fine not exceeding fifty dollars. The grounds chiefly urged by Carey for the writ were that as Sampson had said in advance of a trial that he intended to find him guilty and
“In determining whether there is an adequate remedy, each case must be adjudged upon its merits. In Rush v. Denhardt, 138 Ky., 245, this court said: ‘If we should once lay down the rule that application by original proceeding might be made to us to stay the hand of the inferior jurisdictions, whenever in the opinion of counsel the ruling was prejudicial although it might not leave the complainant without adequate remedy, we would have much of our time occupied in the settlement of questions that could be brought before us in the regular way by appeal. Inferior courts would be obstructed in the hearing and disposal of cases, and much confusion and uncertainty would follow.’
‘ ‘ In the case before us the only element entering into the charge that plaintiff has no adequate remedy is the fact that no appeal will lie from the judgment which the circuit judge will render against him because the fine will be for an amount not within the jurisdiction of this court. The case, therefore, is on all fours with that of the Standard Oil Co. v. Linn, Judge, 17 R., 833, where the oil company, having been proceeded against under sixty-five separate indictments for buying and receiving-empty coal oil barrels without having first erased therefrom the inspector’s brand, which had been placed on them as required by law, applied to this court for a writ of prohibition to arrest the proceedings. In overruling the application, this court, speaking through Chief Justice Pryor, said:
“ ‘The basis of the motion rests upon the ground that his decision may be adverse to the defendant, and as the fine is for an amount, not within the jurisdiction of this court, no appeal can be prosecuted from his judgment.
Here the question whether the plaintiff, in case of a refusal of the mandamus, has any other adequate means of relief cannot be considered, for there was a hearing, of proof by the circuit court and decision that the service of process was not sufficient to bring the Old Dominion Steamship Company before the court. If correct in this decision, the court could not proceed to try the case, owing to its not having obtained jurisdiction
If, as claimed by the plaintiff, the circuit judge-erred in the decision rendered, that fact will not' authorize the granting of the mandamus; or, if, as further claimed by her, she were without right of .appeal from the decision, the granting of the mandamus would be equally unauthorized; as in either event we would'be confronted with the fact that the circuit judge had a discretion over the subject matter involved in the question decided, and that, in making the decision, he exercised such discretion, for which reasons no power exists in this court to compel, by mandamus, a different decision.
We are unconvinced of the soundness of the plaintiff’s contention that she has no other adequate remedy than the one here applied for. If, after the quashing of the return on the summons, she had advised, the judge of the circuit court that' she proposed taking no further step in the case, he doubtless would have entered judgment dismissing the action for want of jurisdiction of the person of the defendant; from which judgment, upon reserving the necessary exception, she could have taken an appeal to this court, and thereby obtained a review of the rulings of the circuit judge complained of.
Our conclusion that the plaintiff has not shown herself entitled to the writ of mandamus asked, renders unnecessary and, indeed, improper the decision of the second question urged by' her, viz.: whether the service of summons was legally had upon the Old Dominion Steamship Company; so that question is not passed on.
For the reasons indicated, the demurrer to the petition is sustained, the writ of mandamus refused, and the action dismissed.