100 Va. 585 | Va. | 1902
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant in error insists that if the surety company had, as it claims, the arbitrary right to be relieved as surety on the bond, then its remedy for the refusal of the County Court to grant that relief was by mandamus, and not by writ of error, and that this writ should be dismissed as improvidently awarded.
By section 2887 of the Code, it is provided, among other things, that “when the surety .... of any officer ... required to give bond shall petition the court in which the bond is taken .... to be -relieved from the suretyship, such court shall, on proof of reasonable notice of his intended motion, require such officer . , . to give a new 'bond in the same manner as if none had been given by him.....” ■
It is clear from this section of the Code that a surety upon the official -bond of a treasurer has the absolute right to be relieved from his suretyship, upon petition to the proper court to be so relieved, after reasonable notice to his principal, and that when he has complied with the terms of that section the -court
At the time that section was enacted, courts and other tribunals upon whom the duty of taking or approving official bonds was imposed were not authorized to accept surety companies as sureties on such bonds. The authority to do' this was first conferred by an act approved March 5, 1894. Acts of 1893-4, p. 764. That act was amended and re-enacted by an act approved February 6, 1896 (Acts 1895-6, page 284), and confers authority upon the courts, judges and other officers authorized to approve certain bonds (embracing bonds of county treasurers) to accept as surety thereon, upon certain conditions, any company with a paid up cash capital of not less than two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, incorporated and organized under the laws of any State of the United States or foreign county, for the purpose of transacting business as surety on obligations of persons and corporations, and which has complied with all the requirements of law regulating the admission of such companies to transact business in this State.
It further provides that “such surety shall be relieved from its liability on the same terms and conditions as are by law prescribed for the release of individuals1, and have all the rights, remedies 'and reliefs of an individual guarantor, indemnitor, or surety, it being the true intent and meaning of this act to enable corporations created for that purpose to become the surety on bonds required as aforesaid, subject to all the rights and liabilities of private parties.”
Section 2887 of the Code, as -we have before seen, gives to individual sureties the arbitrary right to be relieved from their suretyship upon filing their petition in the proper court and giving reasonable notice of the motion to be relieved.
It follows that the plaintiff company has the same arbitrary right as an individual or private party to be relieved from it? suretyship by filing its petition for that purpose 'and giving the required notice.
If the act to be performed by the court was a ministerial and not a judicial one, the means of testing the action of the County Court in refusing to relieve the plaintiff company of its surety-ship, is not by writ of error or supersedeas, but by mandamus.
It often happens that duties are devolved upon courts or judges,- either by operation of law or by express statute, which partake more of a ministerial than a judicial nature, and where the duty is so plain 'and imperative that no element of discretion can enter into its performance. While the courts uniformly refuse to interfere with the discretion of inferior tribunals in the performance of their duties, yet as to acts to be performed by a court or judge in a merely ministerial capacity, or'as to
In the cases of Dawson v. Thurston, 2 H. & M. 132, and of Manns v. Givens, 7 Leigh, 689, the question involved in each was the refusal of the court to admit a deed to record. The statute provided that, upon proof that the deed was properly executed, the County Court should admit it to record. It was held that if the proof was sufficient to authorize it to be recorded, it was the imperative duty of the court to admit it to record, and for a refusal to do so, mandamus was the proper-remedy.
In the case of Delaney v. Goddin, 12 Gratt. 266, one of the-questions involved was whether the duty imposed by section 15 of chapter 31 of the Code of 1819 (page 203) was judicial or ministerial. The authority of the courts under that section was-limited to the enquiry whether the report of the surveyor was in conformity with the provisions of the section under which the report was made. It was held that the duty imposed upon the-court by that section was ministerial and not judicial, and that a writ of error would not he to the action of the court refusing-to admit the surveyor’s report to record, and that the remedy of the party aggrieved was by mandamus.
The same question arose in the case of Randolph County Justices v. Stalnaker, 13 Gratt. 523, 525, and was decided in the same way. Judge Allen, who delivered the opinion of the court, said: “The principal questions presented by the record have been settled by the decision of this court in the case of Delaney v. Goddin, 12 Gratt. 266. That case was elaborately argued and maturely considered; and all the judges were of opinion that the -authority of the County Court was limited to the enquiry, whether the report of the surveyor is in conformity with the provisions of the section under which it was made; and
In the cases cited the court had to determine whether or not the deeds were properly proved or admowledged, or the report of the surveyor in proper form. In this case, it had to determine whether or not the notice required had been given. In this, as in those cases, if the fact existed which made it the court’s duty to act, it had no discretion in the matter. It was its imperative duty to require the plaintiff to give a new bond.
We are of opinion, therefore, that the remedy of the plaintiff company for testing the correctness of the action of the County Court in refusing to require the defendant to give a new bond, and thereby release the plaintiff company as surety, is not by writ of error, hut by mandamus, and that this writ of error must be dismissed as improvidently awarded.
Dismissed.