37 Mo. App. 325 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a proceeding by mandamus against the judge of the twenty-third judicial district of Missouri, to compel him to fix the amount of the petitioner’s bond for the office of clerk of the circuit court of Dunklin county and ex officio recorder of said county, and to examine the sureties presented by the petitioner, and, if the sureties are found qualified, to approve said bond.
The alternative writ, which is a mere transcript of the petition, sets up the following facts: That William Gr. Bragg, Jr., was duly elected and commissioned, and qualified as clerk of the circuit court of Dunklin county for a period of four years from the first day of January, 1887, and that he entered into the duties of his office as
A proceeding of the same nature and between the same parties was before us at the present term, numbered 4400. In that proceeding the respondent made a return, a portion of which the relator moved to strike out, which motion to strike out was sustained by this court, all the judges being present and concurring. The portion of the return thus stricken out was as follows: £ ‘ Respondent denies that the said William G. Bragg, Jr., could, during the time of his suspension in office as clerk of the circuit court of Dunklin county, and while the charges aforesaid were pending against him in the circuit court of said county and undetermined, and before he had been restored to his said office, by resignation, create such a vacancy as would entitle the relator, the said Robert F. Sanders, to the right of becoming the clerk of said circuit court of Dunklin county, and of entering upon the duties of said office. Respondent denies that relator has any interest in the office of clerk of the circuit court of Dunklin county, except such interest as is contingent upon and can arise only after the charges now pending against the said William G. Bragg, Jr., in the circuit court of said Dunklin county, as herein-before set forth, are determined, and said? Bragg adjudged not guilty thereof, or that he be otherwise discharged therefrom.”
After we awarded the motion to strike out this portion of the return in the former case, the respondent set up that the bond had been tendered to him by the relator on Sunday, and, as a judge cannot be required to examine into the sufficiency of an official bond which is tendered to him on Sunday, the relator dismissed his proceeding’ and thereafter brought the present proceeding. The respondent, appearing by different counsel from those who represented him in the former proceeding,
It appears from the recitals of the alternative writ, and from the motion to quash the same, that the grounds of the motion may be reduced to three: First. That the petitioner is not entitled to the office of clerk of the circuit court of Dunklin county by virtue of his commission. Second. That if he is entitled to the office he has a full, and adequate remedy to recover possession of it by quo warranto. Third. That a peremptory writ of mandamus -would place him in no better pesition than that which he now occupies, and would subserve no useful purpose.
We understand both parties to concede that the title of the petitioner to the office cannot be tried in a
The recitals in the alternative writ show that the respondent has taken the position that the commission of the relator is void for the reason that Mr. Bragg, the regular incumbent ’of the office, could not resign while charges against him were pending, and that the commission issued by the governor to the relator was therefore void. We decided in the former proceeding between these parties (No. 4400of this court) on the motion, above recited, to strike out parts of the return, that this was not a good defense to this proceeding. The
The question is governed by the decision of the supreme court in Beck v. Jackson, 43 Mo. 117, a’decision which, so far as we have been able to find, has never been overruled or questioned in any subsequent case. In that case the relator had been duly commissioned and appointed by the governor of the state, under a provis-, ion of the constitution, to the office of circuit clerk and ex officio recorder of Cape Girardeau county, to fill a vacancy caused by the death of the previous incumbent; and the judge of the court refused to receive his bonds as clerk and recorder for the reason that he had appointed another person to hold the office and had approved his bonds and had put him in possession of the office, which reasons the judge endorsed on the bonds. The court held that the relator was entitled to a mandamus to compel the judge to approve the bonds. In giving the opinion of the court, Wagner, J., said: * ‘ It is now contended by the respondent that the relator has no standing, in the court; that, before he can invoke the writ of mandamus, he must establish his right to the office at law. But this is not a proceeding asking to be inducted into the office; it is merely a demand that the respondent shall proceed to p'erf orm a duty devolved upon him by law; and, for a refusal or neglect to perform, the relator is remediless, unless the court issues the writ. The commission issued by the governor was at
It is said by a modern writer of reputation, speaking of the writ of mandamus : “ Cases may, therefore, arise where the applicant for relief has an undoubted legal right for which mandamus is the appropriate remedy, but where the court may, in the exercise of a wise, judicial discretion, still refuse relief. Thus where, by granting the writ, the court would in effect decide questions of grave importance concerning the official status of parties not before the court, and who have had no opportunity of being heard, it may very properly refuse a mandamus, although the case presented is in other respects a proper one for the exercise of the jurisdiction.’ ’ High’s Extraordinary Legal Remedies, section 9. We understand counsel for the respondent to rest their objection to the granting of the relief sought for in this case partly upon the view of the law embodied in the above quotation. We do not question this view of the law at all. But here no such circumstances would attend our decision. We should not, by awarding a peremptory writ, decide the right of the relator to the office as against the present incumbent, but, under the authority of Beck v. Jackson, supra, we should merely do what he is entitled to have done in order to put him at the threshold of a contest for the right to hold the office.
Another position pressed upon us in the arguments which have been submitted in behalf .of the respondent proceeds upon another passage in the same work:
The same writer makes the following observation: “It is worthy of note that proceedings in mandamus do not always or necessarily determine the question of ultimate right involved, and the writ is frequently granted when it can only determine one step in the progress of inquiry, and when it cannot finally settle or determine the controversy.” High’s Extraordinary Legal Remedies, section 11. This is in conformity with the following view expressed in a case in the court of appeals of New Tork: “ When the act,, the doing of which is sought to be compelled by mandamus, is the final thing, and, if done, gives to the relator all that he seeks proximately or ultimately, then the question, whether he is entitled to have that act done, may be inquired into by the officer or person to whom the mandamus is sought, and is also to be considered by the
This consideration also disposes of the argument that the remedy of the relator, if he has any, is by a proceeding in the nature of a quo warranto. This, we must repeat, would be true, if he were seeking in this proceeding to be inducted into the office. And this is in accordance with a view laid down by Mr. High, of the soundness of which we have no doubt, that the existing legal remedy which bars interference by mandamus must be ‘1 appropriate to the particular circumstances of the case; that is, it must be such a remedy as affords relief upon the very subject-matter of the controversy, and, if it is not adequate to afford the party aggrieved the particular right which the law accords him, mandamus will lie, notwithstanding the existence of such other remedy.” High’s Extraordinary Legal Remedies, section 17. What other relief, we may ask, can the relator have to procure the approval of his bond and thus place him
So much of the motion to quash and of the arguments adduced in support of it, as proceed upon the ground that this mandamus, if granted, will be a useless proceeding, placing the relator in no better position than he now occupies, is shown to be untenable by Beck v. Jackson, already cited. This argument might be good if this were a case where the relator had not even a prima facie right to the office, as where he should present himself without any commission at all. But we have said that the commission of the governor, under the circumstances of the case, gives him a prima facie right to the office, and whether it is a sufficient, right we do not undertake to decide in this proceeding, for this is not the appropriate proceeding in which to.
The motion to quash the alternative writ is overruled, and a peremptory writ will issue.