138 N.W. 372 | S.D. | 1912
This is an original proceeding seeking the mandate of this court requiring the defendant, as judge of the circuit court in an for Beadle county, to proceed and try the issues of fact raised in a special proceeding brought in such court. The facts are undisputed. The present relator filed in the said circuit court on August 5, 1912, a petition under the provisions of chapter 28, Political Code.- In said petition it was alleged that one John Issenhuth had in 'his care, as his adopted daughter, one Celeste Issenhuth, a child of some eleven years of age, and that he had been guilty of certain wrongful conduct such as to render him wholly unfit to have the care and custody of isuch child. The petitioner asked that the custody of such child be taken from issenhuth, and given to a society incorporated under the laws of -this state for the purpose of securing homes for children. An order was issued requiring said Issenhuth to show cause why 'such petition should not be granted. Upon the return
The defendant herein contends : (x) That mandamus should not issue in this case, for the reason that it does not appear that the relator is clearly entitled to the relief sought, nor that a plain duty of the defendant has been violated to the substantial injury of the relator or the public, nor that injustice or irreparable wrong will result from the denial of the writ; (2) that, inasmuch as the defendant assumed jurisdiction of the matters presented before him in the trial court and considered the law and facts and rendered a decision thereon, mandamus will not lie to review such decision or to control the discretion vested in defendant; (3) that the duties of the -defendant in passing upon the questions submitted to him were judicial, and not subject to review by mandamus.
A reading of the chapter under-.which the -proceedings in .the circuit court were brought, taken into consideration with, the nature of the proceedings, shows cle.arly that.it was the - purpose of the law -that there be speedy determination of the. issues - raised. It is important, not only .to the petitioner, to- Issenhuth, and- to society that there be a-prompt disposition of a matter of -this nature, but it is especially important to the child, and certainly it is an inherent right vested in the child — a right no one should deprive it of — to have its status speedily determined. . It is not a case where a trial court-has abused a discretion - vested in it, but rather one where it has taken an action beyond its authorit}'-. As was said in the case of State v. Johnson, 103 Wis. 591, 79 N. W. 1081, 51 L. R. A. 33: “It is not entirely accurate to say that no act involving discretion cati be controlled or corrected by mandamus. Where it clearly appears that discretion has been not merely abused but not exercised at all, or that the action taken by the .inferior court is -without semblance of legal cause and no other adequate remedy exists, mandamus will lie to compel the specific action which should have, been taken. * * * Such cases are, however, more apparent than real exceptions to the rule, because, when only one course is open to the court upon the facts presented, the pursuance of that course becomes the plain and absolute duty of the court, and a refusal becomes, in effect, a failure to perform a duty within its jurisdiction.” The trial court did not, and we are certain it would not, have granted a continuance . for the period of either continuance, and based its order
Answering the several contentions of the defendant, we hold: While, the granting’of a jury trial and of the continuances based