146 P. 743 | Mont. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the court.
Original application on the relation of Lucy A, Marshall and four other persons, constituting the Montana State Board of Examiners for Nurses, for a writ absolute to prohibit the district court of Yellowstone county and the Hon. George W. Pierson, one of the judges thereof, from taking any further steps in a certain mandamus proceeding now pending before said court. The material facts are as follows: On January 2, 1914, one Ellen M. Woolsey filed with the relators her application for examination and registration under the provisions of Chapter 50, Session Laws of 1913. She was then over the age of twenty-one years and of good moral character, she had graduated from a correspondence school of nursing, and she presented with her application the requisite certificates of competency. Her application was granted. She was examined, and upon such ex-
The respondents contest the right of relators to maintain this proceeding because an appeal may be taken to this court from
The controlling question, then, is one of jurisdiction: Whether the district court has power to issue any writ in the mandamus proceeding, and, if so, whether the proposed writ can be lawfully issued. The power of the district court to entertain the proceedings at all, or to enter any judgment or issue any writ, is denied upon the ground that in the case stated by the petition the relators cannot be compelled to do what the petition asks to have done, for two reasons: (a) The thing sought to be done cannot be compelled in any case; and (b) the relators cannot be compelled to do anything because the matter has passed beyond their jurisdiction by reason of the petitioner’s appeal to the State Association of Nurses for whose action the relators are not responsible.
We take it to be the rule in all legal proceedings, however, that substance rather than form is the essential thing; and the
(b) Section 11 of the Act in question provides: “Any person who makes application to the board for examination * * * who shall not pass said examination * * # may appeal to the Montana State Association of Graduated Nurses * * * and shall abide by the majority vote of said association after a full hearing thereon.” That pursuant to this section the petitioner did appeal to the Montana State Association of Graduated Nurses, and that the appellate body affirmed the decision appealed from, are shown in the petition itself. It is true that she also alleges that the appellate body did not grant “a full hearing thereon,” but that it likewise acted capriciously and arbitrarily. This, however, is not a matter for which the relators can be called to account, and it does not alter the fact that the appeal was taken. Indeed, the respondents seem to assume that, if the appellate body acquired any jurisdiction by virtue of such appeal, the relators’ control over the matter was
The contention that the provision for appeal is inoperative because the appellate body is a voluntary association is also
For the reasons above stated, we are of the opinion that the district court has no jurisdiction to enter the proposed or any judgment in the mandamus proceeding in question. A peremptory writ of prohibition is therefore directed to issue forthwith.
Writ issued.