43 P. 565 | Idaho | 1895
In this case the writ of mandate is asked for in the first instance from this court. Writs of this character must be applied for in the first instance from the district court, unless reasons are given which render it indispensable that the writ should issue originally from this court (Rules Sup. Ct., rule 28, par. 5, 32 Pac. xii); and the sufficiency or insufficiency of said reasons will be determined by this court in awarding or refusing the writ. The petition gives as a reason for not applying for the writ in the first instance from the judge of the district court, that he is informed and believes such application would be unavailing, and further alleges that said judge has announced that he would consider said acts creating Blaine and Lincoln counties constitutional, until otherwise determined by the supreme court. We think this is no reason for neglecting to present this petition to the district court, in the first instance. It is the duty of each of the judges
Has this petitioner a cause of action as stated in his petition? He shows in his petition.that at the time this writ was prayed for, and for some time prior thereto, the said Fred W. Gooding and Sidney Kelly, two of the alleged commissioners of Logan county, had ceased to act as such; that they both had accepted the office of “commissioner of Blaine county,” so called, and qualified, and were acting as such. By the allegations of the petition, it appears that such office was utterly incompatible with the office of commissioners of Logan county, and this is true whether the county of Blaine was legally and constitutionally created and organized or not. These defendants were therefore de facto officers of Blaine county, and not in any sense de facto officers of Logan county. They had accepted the acts of the legislature creating and organizing the counties of Blaine and Lincoln as the law of the land, in accordance with the advice of this court in the ease of Hampton v. Dilley, 3 Idaho, 427, 31 Pac. 807, wherein this court says: “It is therefore deemed advisable for every good citizen to obey whatever may be promulgated by the law-making power as law, until the same shall have been passed upon by the courts of the country in a legitimate and proper manner.” The defendants must be de facto officers of Logan county at the time the writ is to be commanded to issue, otherwise, it would be nugatory and cannot issue. (High on Extraordinary Bemedies, secs. 37, 49.) The petitioner has also a complete and adequate remedy in the presentation of his claim to the commissioners of Blaine county, which is charged with all the indebtedness of Logan county. Where this is the ease, the writ will not lie. (High on Extraordinary Bemedies, sec. 50.)
Again, we are asked to declare two acts of the legislature unconstitutional and void, in a petition for a writ of mandate
Mandamus is not only an extraordinary, but in some respects a summary, remedy, and cannot be made an instrument for giving a court jurisdiction of litigation on collateral matters -in an irregular way. (Spelling’s Extraordinary Belief, sec. 1386.) Nor will this writ be granted in order to test collateral questions, nor can the question of the validity of an act of the legislature be raised by an application for mandamus. (Spelling’s Extraordinary Relief, sec. 1440.) In the case of State v. Douglas Co., 18 Neb. 506, 26 N. W. 315. The court says: "On an application for a mandamus against the county commissioners of Douglas county to compel them to call an election in the city of Omaha for twelve justices of the peace therein, there being six precincts, and alleging that the act reducing the number of justices in such city to three was unconstitutional
From the cases here cited, and a large number cited therein, and which it is not necessary here to quote, it is apparent that mandamus is not the proper proceeding in which to test the constitutionality of an act of the legislature. The validity of the act creating Blaine county cannot be brought in question when neither the county itself, the officers thereof nor the state, are made parties to the suit; nor could they be legally made parties to this suit, as is shown above. But it is desired on the part of the petitioner in this ease to show the invalidity of the acts creating and organizing Blaine county and Lincoln county by the legislature, by means of the journals of the two houses showing the manner in which these acts were passed. It is conceded by both parties that these journals can only be examined by this court in a proper proceeding, for the purpose of ascertaining whether the provisions prescribed by the constitution were complied with in the passage of the acts; and that the motives that actuated the two houses of the legislature in the passage of these acts, and of the governor in approving of them, cannot in any manner, by means of the journals or otherwise, be brought in question; and yet we are asked to consider the two acts as one, simply because they relate to the same subject matter, and were considered the same legislative day, and then to assume that the motive and intention of the legislature in the passage of the two acts was to violate the provisions of the constitution. It would be highly improper for this court in this manner, or in any manner, to question the motives actuating the legislature in the passage of any particular act or acts. The fact that these two acts passed through some of their stages or all of them, on the same legislative day, has no significance. By an examination of the journal, we will, undoubtedly, find many acts considered by the legislature on the same day, and relating to the same subject matter. It will scarcely be seriously contended
This suit being instituted by the public to enforce that which 'was deemed to be a public right, the unconstitutionality being alleged, that was the matter in issue, and properly so. The constitutionality of the act being presumed, it cannot be questioned in an application for writ of mandate by a private party to enioree a private right, particularly so where there is another and adequate remedy at law. The demurrer is sustained, and the 'writ denied.