This proceeding in the name of the state at the relation of V. T. Churchman, S. L. Jepson, H. E. Gaynor, H. E. Sloane, J. L. Pyle, W. T. Henshaw and E. H. Thompson, members of the state public health council, has for its objects the compulsory retirement of Dr. R. A. Ireland from the office or position of health commissioner of the City of Charleston under an appointment by Grant P. Hall, mayor of Charleston and corespondent, pursuant to the provisions of the charter of the city as amended by the - January, 1919, session of the legislature; and enforcement of a renomination by Hall as such mayor of a person other than Ireland for appointment by them as such health commissioner of the. city; and such other and further relief as the nature of the case may require.
The allegations of the petition and its prayer proceed upon-the theory of a power or right vested in relators to appoint and control the appointment of, and remove, county and municipal health officers, and when so removed to require the county or municipal authorities to recommend another and different person
Acting upon the assumption of a right to exercise the authority thus impliedly, if not expressly, given with reference to municipal corporations generally, although stated in the alternative, relators informally summoned respondent Ireland before them without the formulation or specification of charges of misconduct on his part in the administration of the office or position to which he was appointed by the mayor of Charleston, or of dereliction in the discharge of the duties required of him by law, or lack of personal or professional qualification on his part for the discharge of such duties, and caused his amotion from the position of city health commissioner and declared the office or position vacant, and demanded of the mayor a renomination of another person having the requisite qualification to act as his successor as such health commissioner. This they did admittedly for no cause whatsoever other than his confessed failure and refusal to devote his entire time to the performance of the duties assigned to him. They did not charge in their petition for this writ or in argument pretend to insist upon any lack of professional or personal qualification or ability, or any neglect or negligence or want of diligence on his part in the administration or discharge of the duties pertaining to the office or position of health commissioner of the city, or that his failure to abandon his general professional practice and devote all of his time and attention to the performance of such duties resulted in injury, annoyance or inconvenience or other harmful consequences to- any one or more of the residents or inhabitants of the city, or that there was during Iris tenure of office any real or vital cause re
Having so summarily dismissed him as such commissioner, and the mayor having refused their demand for the nomination of him or some other person as such officer, and having likewise refused to recognize the validity of the acts of the relators in this respect, they applied for and obtained the nisi writ now before us.
Section 35 of the Charleston charter (chapter 9, Acts 1919, Municipal Charters) clothed the mayor of the city with ample power and authority to appoint and remove, with one exception, all the officers of the city named in that section, including a health commissioner, apparently without the usual requirements for the confirmation or approval of the city council, and without the interposition or interference of or by any other power or authority. It provides: “These appointments shall not require any confirmation by the council, but shall be made at the discretion of the mayor, who shall, with like discretion, have the full and complete power of the removal thereof.” In other words, he can, it seems, appoint and remove such officers at will, according to this section, without let or hindrance by or from any source whatsoever. This right of appointment and removal by him and the right claimed by relators the legislature conferred at the same session, within six days of each other, the first in order of time being the right conferred upon the mayor of the city.
The priority in time does not, as we construe the enactments as they now are, have the significance, weight, effect or influence or lack of any of the attributes that counsel would have us accord to these statutes. We do not mean to ignore as unworthy of notice the argument predicated upon relator’s conception of this difference in the priority pf legislative enactments touching the same general subject of legislation. Frequently the order in which inconsistent statutes or inconsistent provisions of the same statute relating to like or similar subjects are enacted has
This brings us¡ to the inquiry.whether or not there is such irreconcilable conflict between the provisions of the state public health statute and the provisions of the city charter concerning the power of appointment and removal of the city health commissioner as warrants resort to the canon of construction relied on by relators. Stating the question in a different form, is not the difference between the statute and the charter, upon a close analysis of their provisions, less a matter of substance and materiality than a casual reading might indicate. The public health statute concedes the right of the mayor of Charleston to nominate and remove a city health officer. It does not purport to alter, amend, modify or repeal the provision of the city charter relating to such authority conferred upon the mayor. That power no statute expressly revokes. On the contrary, there is in the public health statute an express and unqualified, though general, recognition of the right of the municipal authorities to remove from office a city health commissioner. Its language in that regard is direct, positive, unambiguous, unequivocal. Though amended from time to time, that statute does not clearly manifest an intention to withdraw the appointing and removal power from the chief executive officer of the City of Charleston. Instead of negativing, it discloses a purpose rather to re-affirm and recognize anew the existence of his right to utilize such power. For, although, as we have seen, section 6, after referring to the duty of the county court to recommend to the public health Council for appointment as county health officer a physician qualified to perform the duties of the office, prescribes the tenure of office as one for a term of four years, “unless removed by said state board of health for good cause,” the provisions which follow and relate to' a city health officer, by whatever name he may be called, and his official tenure, define in the
Nor is there between the provisions of thé statute and charter such an apparent conflict as warrants the- conclusion .that if the public health council or the proper city authority may exercise the fight of removal, the former acting on its own initiative may do so. If that may be said to be the true construction, utter confusion may result from the inharmonious actions by either or both agencies. That such a situation may arise where intense feeling is aroused is readily conceivable. An opportunity to produce that result evidently was not within the contemplation of the legislature at the time these statutes were enacted. It is therefore our duty to construe and reconcile them so as to avoid, if possible, such confusion as might inevitably be occasioned by a different construction.
Every word, phrase, paragraph and provision of a statute must in construing it be given full force and effect, if that can be done consistently with its purpose, in order to make it effective as far as possible. Building & Loan Ass’n. v. Sohn, 54 W.Va. 101. This is a well recognized canon of construction, and it is always applicable where necessary to harmonize *the provisions of the same or different statutes relating to the same subject matter. This court applied the rule in the case last cited in the construction of a statute, and in Hope Natural Gas Co. v. Shriver, 75 W. Va. 401, 408, in the construction, of a will and the codicil thereto. In the Shriver case it is said that words general in their terms aTe to be construed or interpreted in connection with or in reference to their appropriate subject, as shown by other words or provisions of the same or
The statute establishing the health department and prescribing the duties and defining the powers of the state health council and the charter of the City of Charleston relating to the same general subject speak the legislative intent as to the different territorial jurisdictions of the two agencies, and purport to confer upon the general agency the power to act in the more restricted jurisdiction only where the lesser fails or refuses to perform some imperative duty belonging to it over which the greater has supreme control, as provided in section 3, ch. 150, Code 1918. And where there is no such emergent condition, each has the right and power to act in its own jurisdiction free from interference on the part of the other. This, we think, is a reasonable, indeed the only justifiable conclusion, and gives to the .statute and the charter the force and effect necessarily due to each, and avoids the possible ultimate confusion already alluded to.
Eelators in the exercise of the powers claimed by them, no doubt, honestly conceived their duty to be such as in their opinion necessitated the removal of the respondent Ireland as health commissioner of the city and the enforced vacation of the office held by him by mandamus, and also thereby to compel the nomination of another in his stead. But respondents equally honestly, no doubt, refused to submit to the employment of such powers for that purpose, relying'upon what they claim to be the law defining their rights and powers in the premises. These adverse contentions are avoidable and the necessity for such controversy eliminated by a fair and reasonable construction of the statutory authority of each group of contestants, and thereby force and effect is given to both statutes.
Section 3 of chapter 150 of the Code, as we have seen, discloses legislative purpose to empower the -public health council to act upon its own initiative in the circumstances detailed by that section. For as therein stated, “the commissioner iof health may enforce the rules and regulations of the state department of health within'the territorial jurisdiction of such local health authorities, and for that purpose shall have and may exercise,” not the powers conferred upon the state authori
As a general rule, mandamus is an available or appropriate process only where the petition and proof disclose a clear and indisputable right on the part of the relators to enforce performance of the act or thing demanded and a corresponding duty on the part of the officer to do or perform that particular act or thing. Hutton v. Holt, 52 W. Va. 672; Martin v. White, 74 W. Va. 628; State ex rel. Smith v. County Court, 78 W. Va. 168. The right to demand performance and the corresponding duty to perform the act demanded are elements whose existence is essential and determinative of the right to the employment of the process.
Writ denied.