43 Neb. 575 | Neb. | 1895
From the record before us it appears that the material facts in this case are: On the 2d day of October, 1888, Burt county entered into a written contract with A. E. Wyckoff, in and by the terms of which Wyckoff agreed to dig and construct a ditch, previously located by the county, known as the Peterson ditch. The work was to be performed in accordance with certain plans and specifications prepared by an engineer in the employ of the county and to the satisfaction of such engineer. For this work Wyckoff was to be paid fifteen cents per cubic yard as follows: When one-fourth the work was completed the county clerk was to draw his warrant on the county treasurer in favor of Wyckoff for seventy-five per cent of the amount of the ■cost of the part of the work completed; and when one-half the work was done the clerk was to draw another warrant in favor of Wyckoff for seventy-five per cent of the cost of the second one-fourth of the ditch, and so on until the completion of the ditch and its acceptance by the engineer, when the clerk was to draw his warrant in favor of
Wyckoff has filed in this court an application for a peremptory writ of mandamus to compel the clerk to draw his warrant on the treasurer in his, Wyckoff’s, favor for $893.55, the cost of removing the 5,957 cubic yards of dirt at fifteen cents a cubic yard; and to compel the county ■commissioners to meet and levy a special tax or assessment against the property benefited by the construction of said ditch. This ditch was constructed by authority of chapter 89, Compiled Statutes, 1893, entitled “Swamp Lands.” We do not wish to prejudge this case in any particular, but we are at a loss to understand on what theory the county authorities of Burt county refuse to pay the relator’s claim. Wyckoff by his contract with the county did not agree to construct this ditch for a gross sum, but at fifteen cents per cubic yard. Nor is there anything in the contract which limited the compensation of Wyckoff for constructing the ■ditch to fifteen cents per cubic yard on 32,464 cubic yards •of earth only. The county board did not guaranty that
This court has no authority under the constitution and the laws of this state to compel by mandamus the county board of Burt county to allow the relator’s claim, although we may be of opinion that the claim is a valid obligation against the county and that it has no defense thereto. Section 645 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that the writ of mandamus may be issued to a board to compel the performance by it of an act which the law specially enjoins as a duty resulting from an office, trust, or station. But this court cannot by mandamus control the judicial discre
We know of no proceeding that has been so much abused as the remedy by mandamus. It is everywhere said that this remedy is the last resort of a litigant; that the courts-will not employ it where the litigant has a plain and adequate remedy at law; nor in the absence of such remedy, unless the relator has a clear right to have the officer to whom he wishes the writ directed perform the identical ministerial act prayed for. The writ must therefore be, and is, denied and the application
Dismissed.