This is an original proceeding in mandamus instituted in this Court in May 1965, in which the petitioners, L. D. Archer and Olive H. Smith, Commissioners of Accounts of Wirt County, seek a writ to require the defendants, the County Court of Wirt County, E. W. Allman, Hubert Full and Donald Lockhart, Commissioners of the county court, to refer the estates of certain decedents to the petitioners instead of to Robert B. Black, a commissioner of accounts of Wirt County, and to refer all such estates in rotation to *261 the commissioners of accounts of Wirt County, as provided in Section 1, Article 2, Chapter 44, Code, 1931, as amended. The clerk of the comity court of Wirt County, Leila Ingram, and Robert B. Black, a commissioner of accounts, are also named as defendants.
Upon the petition this Court on May 31, 1965, issued a rule returnable September 1, 1965, at which time, by agreement of the parties and by leave of this Court, this proceeding was continued until October 5, 1965. At that time it was submitted for decision upon the petition and its exhibits, the demurrer and the answer of the defendants, the demurrer and the reply of the petitioners to the answer, the reply of the petitioners to the demurrer of the defendants, the depositions in behalf of the petitioners, and the written briefs of the attorneys in behalf of the respective parties.
On November 20, 1950, the petitioner L. D. Archer was appointed a commissioner of accounts of Wirt County by the county court of that county and on May 12, 1964, the petitioner Olive H. Smith was likewise appointed a commissioner of accounts of that county by the county court. Each of these commissioners of accounts occupied that position from the respective appointment dates until June 21, 1965 when, by order entered of record in the office of the clerk of the county court of Wirt County, they were removed and discharged as commissioners of accounts.
The defendant Robert B. Black was appointed a commissioner of accounts of Wirt County by the county court of that county on February 17, 1964. At that time Louis Reed, who had been appointed a commissioner of accounts on February 21, 1955, announced that he was retiring from the practice of law and requested the county court to refer no new estates to him and to transfer certain estates previously referred to him to Robert B. Black. Though Reed is inactive he has continued to hold the position of commissioner of accounts. At the time of the institution of this proceeding in May 1965, there were, including the petitioners, four commissioners of accounts of Wirt County, one of which, Louis Reed, was inactive.
*262 The petitioners complain and allege that contrary to the provisions of the statute, Section 1, Article 2, Chapter 44, Code, 1931, as amended, the defendants, the County Court of Wirt County and its clerk, Leila Ingram, referred all of twenty six current estates, except one estate to the petitioner Olive H. Smith, to the defendant Robert B. Black, instead of referring them in rotation to him and the petitioners.
The statute, Section 1, Article 2, Chapter 44, Code, 1931, as amended, to the extent here pertinent, provides that upon the qualification of any personal representative, the estate of his decedent shall, by order of the county court, be referred to a commissioner of accounts, and that in counties where there are two or more such commissioners such estates shall be referred to such commissioners in rotation, in order that, so far as possible, there may be an equal division of the work. Section 1, Article 3 of the same chapter of the Code, provides, with certain exceptions not here pertinent, that the county court, or the separate police and fiscal tribunal of each county, shall appoint not more than four commissioners of accounts. It does not prescribe any definite term of office or any qualification for a person appointed as a commissioner of accounts. Section 2 of the same article contains the provision that commissioners of accounts shall also be conservators of the peace. Section 3 of the same article provides that when from any cause none of the commissioners of accounts can act as to any matter which may be passed on under the provisions of the statute, the county court or other tribunal may appoint some other person to act as to such matter who shall have the power and compensation and perform the duties of a commissioner of accounts and that when any commissioner of accounts resigns, or is removed, the court or tribunal may provide for the completion of the matters previously referred to such commissioner. Section 4 of the same article specifies certain matters which will disqualify commissioners of accounts from acting with respect to subjects which may be referred to a commissioner of accounts.
The petitioners who assert that they are not disqualified in any way to act as commissioners of accounts in connec *263 tion with any of the above twenty six estates and who held the position of commissioners of accounts when this proceeding was instituted contend that the provisions of Section 1, Article 2, Chapter 44, Code, 1931, as amended, providing for reference by rotation of the estates of decedents, are mandatory and that they are entitled to a writ in this proceeding to require the defendant county court and its clerk to comply with that requirement of the statute.
On the contrary the defendants contend that the rotation provision of the statute is not mandatory but merely directory and that inasmuch as the petitioners have been removed and discharged from the position of commissioners of accounts they are not entitled to relief in tins proceeding. In that respect they assert that mandamus does not lie to compel the performance of an illegal or futile act or thing.
Though it appears from the record that the petitioners were removed and discharged as commissioners of accounts after the institution of this proceeding, that action by the defendant county court, though depriving the petitioners of their status as commissioners of accounts, does not operate to abate this proceeding. There is authority for the proposition that when a proceeding in mandamus is instituted for the public benefit and to enforce a public duty, as here, it does not abate by the termination of the official term of the relator. 55 C. J. S., Mandamus, Section 37. In
Kirstowsky
v.
Superior Court of Sonoma County,
Though the instant proceeding, which was instituted to enforce a public duty and for the benefit of the public, has *264 not abated by reason of the removal of the petitioners as commissioners of accounts by the county court, the surprising and apparently uncalled for action of the county court in making such removal has changed the status of the petitioners and has operated to prevent this Court from deciding the questions which the petitioners, as long as their status as commissioners of accounts continued, were entitled to present and to have decided in this proceeding.
A commissioner of accounts is a county officer.
Riley v. The Board of Commissioners of the County of
Ohio,
Even without the foregoing statute the defendant, the County Court of Wirt County, having the power to appoint commissioners of accounts of that county, for which no definite term or tenure is fixed by law, as an incident to its power of appointment, has the power to remove a person so appointed in the absence of any constitutional or statutory limitation or restriction of such power of removal. In 67 C. J. S., Officers, Section 59b (2), the text contains this language: “As a general rule, in the absence of any limiting provision of a constitution or statute, the power of appointment carries with it, as an incident, the power to remove, where no definite term of office is fixed by law.” In the opinion in
Town of Davis
v.
Filler,
As a result of their removal as commissioners of accounts the petitioners have been deprived of their legal right to the relief sought and in consequence the writ of mandamus for which they pray must be refused. In
Steele
v.
Locke Cotton Mills Company,
Though mandamus is the proper remedy to require a county court to perform a ministerial duty imposed by statute, the right of a petitioner to invoke the remedy of mandamus may be lost by reason of action taken by the party against whom the writ is sought when such action occurs before the writ is granted. Furthermore it is well
*266
settled by many decisions of this Court that a writ of mandamus will not be issued in any case when it is unnecessary or when, if used, it would prove unavailing, fruitless or nugatory. Point 6, syllabus,
Delardas
v.
Morgantown Water
Commission,
The action of the county court in removing the petitioners as commissioners of accounts has defeated their right, which existed when this proceeding was instituted, to have the questions involved determined by this Court. It is evident that the removal was designed and executed for that specific purpose. This Court frowns upon and emphatically disapproves such action by the county court. Though in that situation this Court will not decide the questions involved, it will, as did the California District Court of Appeal, in a somewhat similar instance, in
Kirstowsky
v.
Superior Court of Sonoma
County,
The statute in question provides that in counties where there are two or more commissioners of accounts the estates of decedents shall be referred to such commissioners in rotation, in order that, so far as possible, there may be an equal division of the work. This statute is clear and free from ambiguity. That being so it will not be construed but will be enforced by the court. The meaning of the statute is clear. By it the Legislature intended, by using the word “shall”, that estates of decedents should be referred to commissioners of accounts in rotation for the express purpose of accomplishing an equal division of the work. The statute which imposes the specific duty just stated is mandatory in character and that duty should be performed by the county court in any county where there are two or more commissioners of accounts.
In the opinion in
State ex rel. Thompson
v. Fry,
For the reasons stated the writ of mandamus prayed for by the petitioners must be and it is denied.
Writ denied.
