33 W. Va. 589 | W. Va. | 1890
Writ of error to a judgment of the Circuit Court of Wood county, pronounced January 25, 1890, in proceedings instituted in the name of the State at the relation and upon the petition of P. C. Boggs and others, for mandamus to compel the County Court of said county to repair and rebuild the bridge across the Little Kanawha river, at the foot of Market street of the city of Parkersburg in the said county. The material facts averred in the petition, and the exhibits filed therewith, are substantially as follows :
The petitioners are citizens and tax-payers of Wood county. In 1848 the Little Kanawha Bridge Company, a domestic corporation, built a toll-bridge across the Little Kanawha River at the foot of Market street of the city of Parkersburg in Wood county. In 1850, another corporation under the name of the Parkersburg and Elizabethtown Turnpike Company, constructed a turnpike road on the lower side of said river from Parkersburg to Elizabethtown in Wirt county, and extending across'said bridge to the foot of Market street in said city of Parkersburg, which said road and bridge were used as a public highway. By an act of the legislature the said turnpike road in 1868, so far as'it lies in Wood county, was transferred to and became the property of said county, and has from that time to the present, under the supervision of the county authorities, been used and worked as a public highway. In 1881, the County Court of
On October 21, 1889, the said petition was filed in the Circuit Court, and said court on that day made an order awarding the alternative writ of mandamus, which writ was afterwards issued and duly served on the defendants. The writ both in its recitals and command follows, substantially, the said petition. The defendants appeared and moved the court to quash the said alternative writ, which motion the court overruled and the defendants declining to make return or answer to said writ, the court on the motion of the petitioners awarded the peremptory writ, and the defendants obtained this writ of error.
Some question was -made in the argument, whether there was a demurrer to, as well as a motion to quash,-the alternative writ. The final order states, that the court “is of opinion to overrule-said motion and said demurrer,” but the record fails to show that any demurrer was entered by the defendants. In Fisher v. Charleston, 17 W. Va., at page 611 this Court says: “If the petition does not' state the necessary facts to justify the issuing of an alternative writ or a rule neither ought to be issued, and if issued, on the return day this fatal defect should be taken advantage of not by demurrer, but by a motion to quash the. alternative writ
It is a well settled rule of pleading that a demurrer, or in a case like this, a motion to quash, admits as true only such allegations of the bill or writ as are well pleaded, and does not admit matters of law, legal conclusions and statutory construction.-Dillon v. Barnard, 21 Wall. 430; United States v. Ames, 99 U. S. 35.
It is unquestionable that mandamus will lie to compel the performance of duties purely ministerial in their nature, and so clear and specific that no element of discretion is permitted in their performance. But the authorities differ much as to what may be regarded ministerial and what discretionary or judicial duties. .
In Dawson v. Thurston, 2 H. & M. at page 135, Tucker, J. says: “The County Courts in Virginia act in a' variety of
In Henderson v. Smith, 26 W. Va. 829, this Court decided, that the official act of a notary public in taking and certifying the privy examination of a married woman to a deed, is in the nature of a judicial act. And in Wintz v. Board etc., 28 W. Va. 227, this Court held, that the Board of Education or its president, when acting under sec. 13, chap. 45 Code, has a discretion as to the approval or disapproval of the appointment of a' teacher, which can not be controlled by manda-mué.
In Prohibition, which is simply the converse of mandamus and governed by the same principles, this Court held in Fleming v. Commissioners, 31 W. Va. 608, that mere errors and irregularities of the County Court Commissioners, sit
-It is a well established rule both in mandamus and prohibition, that neither will lie where another specific and adequate remedy exists, nor to correct the errors of inferior courts in matters properly within their jurisdiction. It isa fundamental principle, that neither of these writs can be allowed to usurp thefunctions of a writ of error or certiorari, and can never be employed as a process for the correction of errors of inferior tribunals. High on Ex. L. Rem. §§ 156, 243; State v McAuliffe, 48 Mo. 112; McConiha v Guthrie, 21 W. Va. 134.
This Court has repeatedly decided, that mandamus will not lie to control the exercise of the discretion of any court, board or officer, when the act complained of is either judicial or quasi judicial in its nature. The inferior tribunal may be compelled to act in such cases, if it unreasonably neglects or refuses to do so, but the propriety of its action or the judgment it shall render can not be questioned or controlled by mandamus. It is sufficient that its discretion has been exercised, and whether rightly or wrongly, is wholly immaterial in this proceeding. Satterlee v. Strider, 31 W. Va. 789; Doolittle v. County Court, 28 W. Va. 158; Wintz v. Board, 28, W. Va. 227; Supervisors v. Minium, 4 W. Va. 300.
Applying these principles to the case before us, the question presented is, do the facts alleged in the alternative writ show ground for relief by mandamus ? And the answer to this question depends materially upon the fact, whether or not the particular act, which it is sought to compel the County Court to perform, is, according to the principles and authorities before referred to, a judicial or discretionary act such as will not be enforced by mandamus. This particular act, as stated in the alternative writ, is to compel the County Court to repair and rebuild the- bridge across the Little Kanawha river at the foot of Market Street of the City of Parkersburg.
The duties of the County Court in respect to county roads and bridges are found in chapters 39 and 43 of the Code of 1887. The relators in this case specially rely on section.23 chapter 39, which provides: “So far as any road, bridge or
Sections 35, 36, 37 and 38 of chap. 43, empowers the County Court to establish or alter any public road, bridge or landing, and prescribes the mode of proceeding for that purpose. After providing for the appointment of viewers to report the facts in.respect to the necessity and propriety of the establishment or alteration of the road, bridge or landing, it provides : “ Upon the report, if the court be against the proposed establishment or alteration, the petitioner shall pay the costs etc. * * * But unless the court upon such report decide against undertaking the proposed work, they shall appoint a day for hearing the parties-interested, and cause notice to be given” etc. And then sec. 37 says: “At anytime, if the court have enough before them to. enable them, to ascertain what would -be a just compensation ele. * * * . the said court may determine to undertake the work.” And see. 38 says: “When hearing the parties interested in an application for a public road, the County Court shall decide for. or against undertaking the proposed work on behalf of the county. If it decide in favor of same” etc..
Section 30, chap. -43, authorizes the County Court, in the manner therein prescribed, to discontinue any county road or landing. Sec. 31 declares, that every county road, bridge and landing heretofore established and which has not been lawfully discontinued or vacated, shall continue as such until properly discontinued. “The roads, bridges and public landings transferred by the state to the several counties in which they are situated, shall hereafter be regarded as county roads, bridges and landings.” And' sec. 32, declares: “When any road is altered, the former road shall be discontinued to the extent of such alteration and no further, and the new One established.”.
And sec. 25, chap.- 43, provides that when a bridge is nec-cessary within a county, and it is not practicable for the road surveyor to have it built or repaired with the means at his disposal, “the County Court of the county may contract for the same, or any part thereof, on such terms as may be agreed upon-, * * * and pay for the work in wdiole or in part out of the county treasury” etc,
But it is claimed, that the statute does not authorize the discontinuance of a county bridge. It does not do so in express terms, but by implication it does «o clearly. ’ Sec. 31, chap. 43, provides, that every county road, bridge etc. shall continue until properly discontinued. And sec. 35 of same chapter provides for the alteration of a public road, bridge or landings. The context here clearly shows that the word “alteration” means the alteration of the location of the road, bridge or landing. If, then, as these sections provide, a bridge may be properly discontinued or its location altered, it must necessarily follow, that a bridge may be discontinued, and’that the bridge, the location of which is so altered, may be abandoned.
It is further claimed, that even if it is true, that a bridge
It is still further insisted, that the County Court has not established the bridge at Juliana Street in the manner prescribed by the statute. The averment in the alternative writ in respect to this matter, is in effect simply that the County Court'has erroneously exercised its discretion. Its jurisdiction and power to change the location of the bridge is not questioned and it is unquestionable, as we have above shown. And this being true, mandamus does not lie to review the action of the-court or to correct its errors or control the erroneous exercise of its discretion. That can be done only by appeal, writ of error or some other direct proceeding for the review and correction of such error. In this manner the action of the Court was reviewed in Conrad v. Lewis County, 10 W. Va. 784. The relators, as shown by the decision in that case had another adequate and complete remedy ; and for this reason also mandamus will not lie.
It is still further insisted that the County Court has already attempted to establish two bridges across said river, the one at Juliana Street and' the other at George Street, and that it is thereby putting the relators and the other tax-payers of the county to great and unnecessary expense. This might be alleged as a ground for preventing the Court from incurring such useless expense, but it is certainly no sufficient ground for an application to compel it to build another and a third bridge across the same river.
It may be that the County Court has acted erroneously and even in disregard of the best interests of the people of the county, but having a discretionary power it can not, while legitimately exercising that power, however erroneously or contrary to the best interests of the county, be controlled by mandamus.
In State v. Board of Commissioners, 119 Ind. 444; (21 N. E. Rep. 1097) the court, in a case very similar to the one before us says: “Doubtless cases might arise in which it would be the imperative legal duty of the commissioners to afford the means or take the necessary steps to make repairs.” State v. Demaree, 80 Ind. 519; State v. Board, Id. 478. “The facts found,” says the court in that case, “fall far short of making the present such a case. Eor all that appears the stream may be crossed by means of a ford, or ferry, or another bridge, as the evidence shows the fact to be, may have been built within a reasonably convenient distance from the one destroyed. * * * It appears from the facts found that the board of commissioners, in the exercise of its discretion, refused to order the bridge to be repaired. The present is, therefore, not a case where the commissioners refused to act, but is one ■ in which they did not act in a manner to suit the relators, who now ask the court to com
For the reasons aforesaid, the judgment of the Circuit Court must be reversed, the motion to' quash the alternative writ sustained and the proceeding dismissed.
REVERSED.