35 S.E.2d 850 | W. Va. | 1945
This writ of error was granted on the petition of the State as the relation of Walden F. Roush to an order of the Circuit Court of Mason County sustaining a demurrer to and dismissing the petition of the relator, plaintiff in error, in a mandamus proceeding against the Board of Education of that county. The question to be decided is whether the Circuit Court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the relator's petition.
The material allegations of the petition are that on the 5th day of July, 1943, the Board of Education of Mason County, Russell Starkey casting the deciding vote, elected Walden F. Roush County Superintendent of Schools for a term of two years; that he properly performed the functions of County Superintendent from the time of his election until January 3, 1944, when he was wrongfully removed from office by the Board of Education as then constituted and a successor chosen who, over the protest of the petitioner, immediately took possession of the office in question; and that the pretended reason of the Board of Education for so doing was that this Court in a mandamus proceeding instituted in September, 1943, had held that Russell Starkey, who cast the deciding vote in making Roush County Superintendent, had not been lawfully elected as a member of the Board of Education and that therefore a vacancy existed on said Board which, under Code,
The relator, plaintiff in error, argues that the prayer of his petition should be sustained by virtue of the provision of Code,
We recognize that the principles being dealt with here, as in the Scanes, case, are of importance and that the decided cases dealing with them are not in accord. In Von Nieda v. Bennett,
This record shows by stipulation that Roush, after the final order of the Circuit Court and before this writ of error was granted, was employed by the Board of Education of Mason County as County Superintendent and that he resigned in December, 1943. The respondents now submit that the question for decision has thus become moot and insist upon final submission that the case should be dismissed. We think the matter should be considered here on its merits because, while Roush has *154 again occupied the office in question he has not done so by virtue of the action of the Board on July 5, 1943, and we are of the opinion that he has the right to have that question decided, it having been properly raised at the institution of this proceeding and his right to the salary for the period that followed being dependent upon that determination. That, we believe, prevents the question for decision from becoming purely abstract, although a petition in mandamus for a simple money demand alone could not be entertained.
The order of the Circuit Court of Mason County is affirmed.
Affirmed.