85 W. Va. 739 | W. Va. | 1920
This is an original application to this court by Isadore Gordon, the relator, for a writ of mandamus to compel the State Board of Control and Joseph Z. Terrell, Warden of the State Penitentiary, to apportion and deliver to him, a sufficient number of convicts to make his quota 275. the number contracted for, and to prevent them from withdrawing from him any of those who have already been delivered to him, and to compel the return to him of those who have been withdrawn after they had been assigned and allotted to him. Relator avers in his petition that, on the 27th of July, 1916, he entered into a contract with the State Board of Control whereby, in consideration of 70c per day for each convict to. be employed under said contract, it agreed to furnish him 275 convicts, male and female, for a period of five years, beginning on the 18th of September, 1916, to work in his factory located within the walls of the penitentiary, and that he has fully and faithfully performed all of the covenants set forth in said agreement upon his part. It is averred the contract provided that, if for any cause, there should be a deficiency in the number of convicts available, and the State Board of Control should be unable to furnish the full number of convicts provided for, the contractor should accept the same proportion of the whole number of convicts specified as may be furnished other contractors employing convict labor in the penitentiary; that the State Board of Control thereafter, on the 3rd day of January, 1920, and while the contract with relator was still in force, entered into a contract with the J. C. Bardall Co. whereby it let and hired to said company, for the term of four years and eight months, beginning the 1st day of January, 1920, 150 male convicts, with the privilege of as many more as may be mutually agreed upon, for which said company agreed to pay the sum of $1.00 per day for each convict so employed, and whereby it was further agreed that the number of convicts previously agreed to be furnished under a contract with said company of date May 31, 1919, should be reduced to 175, instead of 200, as named in the former contract, and that the payment for all additional labor in excess of 175 men should be made at the price of $1.00 per day for each convict; that since the first day of July, 1919, the State Board of Control has violated
Bespondents moved to quash the mandamus nisi and also made answer thereto. The motion to quash raises at once the question whether this proceeding can be maintained. The answer depends upon whether or not it is a proceeding against the State. If it is it cannot be maintained. Section 35, Article VI of the Constitution says: “The State of West Virginia shall never be made defendant in any court of law or equity.” Although the state is not made a defendant eo nomine, it is, nevertheless, a proceeding against the state. The contract is made by and between respondents, “The State Board of Control, a public corporation, acting for the State of West Virginia.” Thus by the very terms of the contract the state is shown to be vitally interested in it. The State Board of Control is but the state’s agent, and acted in making the contract for, and on behalf of the state. A state can contract only
In Comer v. Bankhead, 70 Ala. 493, a suit in equity was brought against the warden of the penitentiary to compel performance of a contract entered into between him and the plaintiff whereby the warden had agreed to hire to plaintiff a certain number of convicts. By the suit plaintiff sought to enjoin the warden from supplying convicts to other contractors in violation of his contract with him, and the court held the suit was in effect a suit against the state and not maintainable in view of the constitution of that state, prohibiting suits against the state in any of its courts, without its consent. It was once held by the Supreme Court of the United State in an opinion rendered by Chief Justice Marshall; Osborn v. Bank of U. S., 9 Wheaton 738, that to constitute a suit against the state it was necessary for the state itself to be a party to the record, but this holding has been virtually overruled in a number of subsequent decisions, and the rule now followed by that court is, that if the suit be one in which the state is vitally interested, and will have to satisfy the judgment or decree of the court, if satisfaction is made at all, then the suit is one against the state, within the meaning of the Eleventh Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, even though the suit nominally is one against the state’s officers or agents. In Re Ayers, 123 U. S. 443, and cases reviewed in the opinion.
The present case is distinguishable from those cases wherein a state officer may be compelled by mandamus to perform purely ministerial duties involving no discretion. Such use of the writ is illustrated by the case of State v. Shawkey, 80 W. Va. 638. There the State School Book Commission, which was the state’s agency authorized to contract with the publishers for the books to be used in the free schools of the state, had met and accepted the bid of W. H. Wheeler and Co., publishers of school hooks, and had signed the contract of acceptance and adjourned. The com
Writ refused.