60 S.E. 418 | N.C. | 1908
A mandamus will not lie to compel the county commissioners (536) to repair or build a courthouse. The duty of providing a sufficient and proper courthouse is to be discharged by the county commissioners, subject to indictment, if there is a willful failure, and to supervision by the people of the county in the election of another board of commissioners, should the voters see fit. It is not a duty resting for enforcement with the judge of the Superior Court, nor subject to supervision by this Court. The plaintiff has no specific legal right for the enforcement of which he can invoke an order of the judicial branch of the Government to supervise and control the administrative branch. The building a new courthouse or repairing an old one is not a mere ministerial matter, admitting of no debate, but is one of discretion, committed to the county commissioners, in regard to which their judgment and discretion must prevail, and not the opinion of a judge. *392 Only when a grand jury and jury have found a criminal abuse of duty can the court intervene, and then only to punish the individuals, not to compel them as officials, to do any specific act not required by statute to be done in a specific way or to a prescribed extent.
In Brodnax v. Groom,
"In short," the Court continued, "this Court is not capable of controlling the exercise of power on the part of the General Assembly or of the county authorities, and it cannot assume to do so without putting itself in antagonism as well to the General Assembly as to the (537) county authorities and erecting a despotism of five men, which is opposed to the fundamental principles of our Government and the usages of all times past. For the exercise of power conferred by the Constitution the people must rely upon the honesty of the members of the General Assembly and of the persons elected to fill places of trust in the several counties. This Court has no power, and is not capable if it had the power, of controlling the exercise of power conferred by the Constitution upon the legislative department of the Government or upon the county authorities."
We can add nothing to the discussion and the decision in that case, which has been repeatedly followed. See cases cited in the annotated reprint of
It is certain, upon the facts admitted and found, that some improvement is much needed in the courthouse of Beaufort County. But the power to order such improvement, under the statute, rests with the county commissioners and not with the courts.
Indeed, it may well be that a large, commodious, up-to-date courthouse, even one costing possibly $100,000, would not be too good for the prosperous, progressive county of Beaufort, with its intelligent population. It may be that such a building, aside from its usefulness, would be such a proof of public spirit as would attract a large influx of population and wealth. In Texas and other progressive States there are counties no larger than Beaufort which have county courthouses *393 larger and more commodious, and more costly, some of them, than the Capital of this State, which was built seventy-five years ago. It may also be that it is good judgment and just to issue bonds for erecting suitable, even costly, public buildings, since posterity, which will use such buildings, will be far more numerous and wealthy, and hence far better able to pay off the bonds, payment of the interest on (538) which may be a sufficient return to be made by the present generation for the use by it of the buildings. It may also be wisdom to issue bonds to put up permanent iron bridges instead of wooden ones, and to build better public roads, and to install other improvements of a public nature; but all these matters rest with the people of each county, acting through their authorities chosen by themselves to administer their county affairs, subject to such authorization as they may obtain from the Legislature, when required by the Constitution.
The courts possess no function to command or control the exercise of such power, when any discretion in regard thereto is reposed by the statute in the county authorities. A mandamus lies only to compel the performance of a specific act pointed out by the statute, as in Tate v. Comrs.,
It is much to the credit of the plaintiff that he possessed the public spirit to wish to procure courthouse facilities more suitable and more creditable to his county. But the remedy (other than by indictment of county commissioners for neglect of duty) must be sought in an appeal to the better judgment of the county authorities or by arousing the sound public opinion of a self-governing people, and not by application to the courts.
No cause of action being stated in the complaint, we must order
Action dismissed.
Cited: S. v. Leeper, post, 661; Dorsey v. Henderson,
(539)