Citation Numbers: 26 S.E. 929, 120 N.C. 237
Judges: Faikcloth, Montgomery, Clark
Filed Date: 2/5/1897
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
The plaintiffs instituted this action alleging that they were duly and legally appointed Commissioners of Granville county by the Resident Judge of the 5th Judicial District, by virtue of the power vested in him by the Act of 1895, Oh. 135, praying for a mandamus compelling the defendants to restore them to their said office and to permit them to participate in all respects in the deliberations of the Board of Commissioners for the county. The defendants deny the plaintiffs right to be inducted into office on the ground that the judge had no authority to make the appointment, and that the same was void in law. Section 5, of the said Act is in these words:
“That whenever as many as five electors of the county make affidavit before the Clerk of the Superior Court, at any time after the election of the County Commissioners, that they verily believe that the business of the county, if left entirely in the hands of the three Com missioners elected by the people, will be improperly managed, that then upon the petition of two hundred electors of said county, one-half of whom shall be freeholders and so certified by the Clerk of the Superior Court, made to the judge of the district, or judge presiding therein, it shall be the duty of said judge to appoint two honest and discreet citizens of said county, who shall be of a political party different from that of a majority of the Board of Commissioners, who
Facts: From the confused proceedings, it appears that five electors appeared before the Clerk and offered to file a written affidavit, as required by the sa;d Act, vu.th a list of petitioners. The clerk declined to receive the papers, as not being in proper form. The .affiants made an affidavit before the Judge at Chambers, certifying to the clerk's refusal. Notice was issued by the judge to the clerk to show cause why he did not accept the oath and affidavit offered. The clerk certified that two hundred electors had not signed the petition, and that among those who had signed there were not one hundred freeholders. The judge allowed the petitioners to amena the petition with other names to supply those from two townships from which the books were not in the office. The judge then ordered the tax books and registration books to be brought into court, and, upon examination of the books and from oral testimony, “the court doth find as a fact that more than two hundred electors of said county, of whom more than one hundred are freeholders in said county, have signed said petition.” The judge then ordered the clerk to “forthwith” certify to said one hundred persons being freeholders and return said petition and all other papers in the case to said court “at once.” The clerk refused to so certify. The judge then appointed the plaintiffs Commissioners of G-ranville County “with all the powers and duties of a Commissioner of said cuunty.”
The plaintiffs and defendants met together, organized and transacted some business for an hour or two, when de> fendants, being of opinion that the appointment of the plaintiffs was invalid and void, declined to recognize them as members of the board, and to allow them to participate
The written statements, from which the above facts are extracted, were offered in evidence on the trial, but excluded by his Honor, and the defendants excepted and appealed.
The identical facts, more in detail, will be found in the case of Waller v. Sikes, decided at this term. These facts were offered for the purpose of showing that the District Judge had no jurisdiction ol' the matter, when he appointed the plaintiffs as above recited and that his action was void. No summons had issued and there was no action pending in which said appointment was made.
We will not indulge in many remarks on quo warranto and mandamus, as we think that an action for mandamus is the proper proceeding in this case. In England it was a prerogative Writ, when no other remedy could be had, and had many refinements, issuing only at the pleasure of the court. By Statute IX Anne, Oh, 20, the remedy was made one of right, and the general rules of pleading and practice were made applicable to mandamus as in other personal actions. At common law the return to a writ of mandamus could not be traversed, and if the matters set forth were sufficient in law, the defendant had judgment to go without day. If the return was false, the remedy of the person aggrieved thereby was an action on the case for making a false return; and if the plaintiff proved the matters of fact false he recovered damages and costs. By IX Anne, Oh. 20 in certain cases all or any of the material facts set forth in the return may be traversed. Our Statute, 1836, Ch. 97, Bee. 5, The Code, Sec. 623, extends this provision to all cases, and upon a traverse of any of the material facts “the summons, pleadings and practice shall be the same as is prescribed for civil actions,” and if .an
This prerogative writ has never obtained in our State. Scire facias and quo warranto are abolished, and civil action substituted {The Oode, Sec. 603), and mandamus is regulated as an action by The Oode, Sec. 622. Remedies are •now by action and special proceedings {The Oode, Sec. 125), and civil actions shall be commenced by issuing a summons. The Oode, Sec. 199.
"When a plaintiff sues for an office occupied by another, quo warranto is the proper remedy, as in Cloud v. Wilson, 72 N. C., 155, but when the office is vacant by reason of amotion, the remedy is mandamus as in Doyle v. City of Raleigh, 89 N. C., 133, and this distinction reconciles the decisions.
The plaintiffs’ complaint alleges that they were “duly and legally appointed commissioners” by the resident judge, and this is denied by the answer. The burden of proof was on the plaintiffs, which they, failed to make, and now rely upon their prima facie title by reason of their appointment by tñe judge of the district, and the fact that they had once been in the office and afterwards excluded. The defendants offered proof of the invalidity of the plaintiffs’ title, because the judge, who appointed, had no jurisdiction of the matter, L e., it was coram non judice. It is true, that the acts of defacto officers are conclusive on third parties, but we fail to see how such de facto acts tend in aDy degree to show jurisdiction in the appointing power or the legality of the plaintiffs’ title. When the clerk refused to certify, we think the remedy of any one of the petitioners or affiants was an action for a mandamus to show cause, &c., but the judge assumed jurisdiction, heard evidence, found facts, when there was no one to contest such
1. That the affidavit be filed with the clerk with two hundred petitioners, one-half freeholders.
2. That the clerk shall have certified these facts to the judge in the district.
The power of the judge then was to appoint, and nothing more. His Honor finds as a fact that the plaintiffs failed to take an oath to support the Constitution of the State and United States as required by law. We then have the question, Can the court order that the plaintiffs be inducted or restored to the office of commissioner without showing a legal right to it? Mandamus by the Statute of Anne, Oh. 20, is an effectual remedy; First, for refusal of admission where a person is entitled to an office, and Secondly, for a wrongful removal where a person is legally possessed. 3 BI. Com. 264. “The prosecutor (plaintiffs) must be clothed with a clear legal and equitable right to something which is proper by the subject of the writ, as a legal right by virtue of an Act of Parliament.” Tapping on Mandamus, pp. 10, 12, .28, 321. £ ‘Mamdamius is a proceeding to compel a defendant to perform a duty which is owing to the plaintiff, and can be maintained only on the ground that the relator has a present clear, legal right to the thing claimed, and that it is the duty of the defendant to render it to him.” Brown v. Turner, 70 N. C., 93. High, in his Extraordinary Legal Remedies, after discussing in detail quo warranto, amotion, induction, de facto, restoration and mandamus, concludes under the latter head, Section 70: “It is to be borne in mind that the rule as above stated is applied only in favor of those w ho are clearly entitled de jure to the office from which they have been removed. And when the writ is sought to compel
The principle of these authorities seems reasonable. It is in harmony with that which governs in all other pern sonal actions. It seems extraordinary that a court should feel warranted-in commanding the defendants to restore a person to office from which they have removed him for what appeared to them to be a sufficient cause, when the very next day they might exercise the same right on precisely the same grounds. Why restore and drive the parties to the cost and delay of another action to determine the identical issue raised by the pleadings in this action? Suppose the office was now occupied by an intruder, or otherwise, making quo warranto the proper action; in'that
Under our system, at this day, it appears to us that the better practice is to try the issue raised by the pleadings in the present action and save the delay, trouble and expense of another action.
Reversed.