County Court of Mingo County v. Bailey

125 S.E. 253, 97 W. Va. 351, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 206
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 125 S.E. 253 (County Court of Mingo County v. Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County Court of Mingo County v. Bailey, 125 S.E. 253, 97 W. Va. 351, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 206 (W. Va. 1924).

Opinion

Lively, Judge:

By this writ the County Court of Mingo County and L. G. Bray and R. L. Harris, members of the county court, seek to prohibit the Judge of the Circuit Court of that County, M. Collier, E. P. Steep, F. S. Meade and C. C. Messer from further proceeding in a chancery cause in that court pending, wherein the defendants Collier, Steep, Meade and Mes-ser, were plaintiffs, and the petitioners here were defendants, and from taking any action to enforce a permanent injunction awarded therein; asserting that the Circuit Court did not have jurisdiction to pronounce that decree. Defendants have appeared, demurred to the petition, m'oved to quash the rule in prohibition, and made a return. Petitioners have demurred to the return, moved to quash it for insufficiency, and have replied generally.

The injunction suit and this proceeding in prohibition are the result of an order of the County Court entered of record on August 15, 1924, by the County Court, consolidating Warfield District and Harvey District, two of the magisterial districts of that County, into one district under the name of Harvey District. A short time thereafter plaintiffs in the injunction suit filed their bill praying a restraining order against the consolidation on several grounds hereinafter set out, and obtained a temporary injunction. The County Court appeared, demurred to the bill, which deiriurrer was overruled and answered. The parties went to proof, and on the hearing the Court perpetuated the injunction, ordered the County Court to expunge from its record the order of consolidation of the two districts, and to treat the same as non-existent, void and of no effect.

The amended and supplemental bill in the injunction suit is filed by plaintiffs, two of whom, Collier and Steep, as citizens and taxpayers of Warfield District; and the other two as citizens and taxpayers of Harvey District, on behalf of' themselves and all other citizens and taxpayers who are similarly situated. It charges that an attempt had been *353 made by tbe County Court to inaugurate a consolidation of the two districts as early as June 7, 1923, and on the 10th day of July following an order of consolidation had been actually entered or marked by the two defendant commissioners to be entered, but not to be spread on the record until' the 19th day of that month; that F. S. Meade and others immediately obtained an injunction against the consolidation, which injunction was afterwards dissolved and the bill dismissed as to the County Court, but perpetuated as to Var-ney, the Clerk, who had not then spread' the order on the record; that afterwards on August 15th, to the surprise of these plaintiffs and many other citizens, the court met and entered the order directing the Clerk to record the order, although he was then prohibited, and the order was actually spread on the records in violation! of the injunction; that the order so entered was not considered by the Court while in session and was not the Court’s order, but the unauthorized order of the two defendant commissioners, who after the Court had regularly adjourned on that day, had directed and procured the Clerk to record the order as a part of the Court’s proceedings; that no notice had been posted or published for the statutory period prior thereto giving the people notice that consolidation would be considered or made; that the order was null and void and of no effect. The order of consolidation is exhibited which fixes the boundary of the district as consolidated, leaving the voting places therein unchanged, abolishing- the offices of justice of the peace-, constable and members of the board of education in Warfield District, and providing that such officers in Harvey District shall serve in the new district until their successors are elected or appointed as prescribed by law; providing that the new district shall pay off and discharge all of the indebtedness bonded or otherwise in the two districts, succeed to all of the funds to the credit of each, and that uniform taxes shall be laid on the taxable property in the new district. The bill says that unless restrained the County Court will carry out the order and that the taxpayers of each district as now constituted will be required to pay the bonded and unfunded indebtedness of both districts by a uniform rate; that the district officers of Warfield District will become abol *354 ished, all to the irreparable injury of complainants and otner-taxpayers; that the result will bring about inextricable confusion in the affairs of the two districts; result in unfair, illegal and inequitable taxes; will result in confusion and uncertainty, and may result in a clash between the district officers as to their respective jurisdictions; all to the irreparable wrong and injury to the citizens and taxpayers of both districts, including plaintiffs. And that unless restrained the County Court will proceed to levy taxes at a uniform rate on all the taxable property in the District of-Harvey, as consolidated; that the district officers of Harvey District .will assume jurisdiction O'? er the entire district as consolidated; all to the great and irreparable injury of plaintiffs and the citizens of the two districts. ,

Does a court of equity have jurisdiction to entertain such bill for injunction? That is the crucial question presented. If it has, prohibition will not lie even .though the court may have erroneously decided. . The decree would not then be void, but voidable only; and the only way to correct it would be by appeal, and not by prohibition. On the other hand, if the court has erroneously assumed jurisdiction, then its decree is void, pronounced without jurisdiction, and its enforcement can be prevented by prohibition.

By Section 19, Chapter 39 of the Code, the Legislature has empowered, the county court to consolidate two or more existing magisterial districts into one, whenever it shall deem advisable. It is clear that the power thus conferred is legislative and governmental. In Section 4, of Chapter 3, of the Code, the chapter on elections, it is provided that the county court shall give notice of its intention to increase or diminish the boundary .lines of the districts, to be posted on the front door of the court house and at some public place in each district affected, and at least thirty days prior to the term of court at which the action is proposed to be taken. This requirement was evidently for the purpose of affording an opportunity to the inhabitants of the districts to appear before the county court in an advisory and helpful way, to make suggestions or voice protests; but it does not take from the county court its discretion to increase or diminish *355 tbe districts whenever it deems advisable. This court bas many times decided that tbe circuit courts do not have jurisdiction to prevent by injunction or like process tbe county court from performing legislative or governmental functions; unless tbe action of tbe county court in tbe performance thereof has or will injure tbe complainant specially and not simply as a resident, injured alike with all others. Tbe complainants in order to invoke injunctive process against tbe performance of such functions must suffer in some way private or personal injury. Mann v. County Court, 58 W. Va. 651; Charleston v. Littlepage, 73 W. Va. 156.

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.E. 253, 97 W. Va. 351, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-court-of-mingo-county-v-bailey-wva-1924.