The following opinion was filed February 23, 1906:
It appears from the record that the. ground of petitioner’s action is that he contracted with appellant Mil-tvandcee Medical College for a course in the dental department of its college and completed the prescribed course, paid the required fees, and performed all the conditions of the contract on his part to be performed, and under the terms of his contract with the appellant and the performance thereof he became entitled to a diploma, and that the appellant refused to ■deliver the same to petitioner. The ease made is clearly one of breach of contract, and the question arises whether mandamus will lie to compel a private corporation to perform its contract. This question was not discussed by counsel in their briefs or upon oral argument, so we are without the valuable aid which investigation and discussion by counsel would afford. Mandamus is a remedy only to be applied in extraordinary cases where there is no other adequate remedy. Where the applicant has an adequate remedy by action the writ will not be awarded. State ex rel. Buchanan v. Kellogg,
It seems, however, to be well settled that duties imposed upon corporations, not by virtue of express law or by the conditions of their charters, but arising out of contract relations, will not be enforced by mandamus. The authorities in England and this. country appear to be quite uniform to this effect. King and Wheeler, Oases temp. Hardw. 9 9; Ex parte Robins, 7 Dowl. Prac. Cas. 566; King v. Mayor, 2 Term R. 259; King v. Bank of England, 2 B. & Ald. 620; Queen v. Orton, 14 Q. B. 139; Benson v. Paull, 6 El. & Bl. 273; High, Extr. Leg. Rem. (3d ed.) §§ 25, 321; People ex rel. Union Ins. Co. v. Nash, supra; State v. Rep. R. B. Co.
“It is not, therefore, an appropriate remedy for the enforcement of contract rights of a private or personal nature; and obligations which rest wholly upon contract, and which involve no question of trust or of official duty, cannot be enforced by mandamus. A contrary doctrine would necessarily have the effect of substituting the writ of mandamus in place of a decree for specific performance, and the courts have, therefore, steadily refused to extend the jurisdiction into the domain of contract rights.”
Erom the foregoing cases and many others which might be cited it seems clear that mandamus will not lie to compel a private corporation to perform its contract with an individual. In State ex rel. Poyser v. Trustees,
“Duties imposed on a corporation, not by virtue of express law, nor by the conditions of its charter, but arising wholly out of contract relations, will not be enforced by mandamus, ¡since the use of such writ is limited to the enforcement of obligations imposed by law. Where the duties of a corporation, or of its trustees, grow^out of or result from matters of contract, writs of mandate will not lie against the corporation or its trustees, either in their corporate capacity or as individuals, to compel the performance of the contract, but the party aggrieved will be left to the ordinary remedies, either at law or in equity.”
In the case before us the liability of the appellant college rested solely on contract between it and the petitioner. If the petitioner was entitled to his diploma and an action for damages was not adequate he could compel specific performance. This was an adequate remedy. Clarke v. Hill,
By the Court. — The judgment below is reversed and the writ quashed.
Upon a motion for a rehearing counsel for respondent contended, inter alia, that the decision in this case is inconsistent with the decisions in Oconto City W. S. Co. v. Oconto,
The motion was denied April 17, 1906.
