Dispatch Pub. Co. v. Davidson

4 Alaska 727
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedDecember 13, 1913
DocketNo. 1054A
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Alaska 727 (Dispatch Pub. Co. v. Davidson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dispatch Pub. Co. v. Davidson, 4 Alaska 727 (D. Alaska 1913).

Opinion

JENNINGS, District Judge.

Will a mandamus lie in this case? I think not.

Speaking of the writ of mandamus, the law of Alaska provides as follows:

[729]*729“It may be issued to any inferior court, corporation, board, officer, or person, to compel the performance of an act which the law specially enjoins as a duty resulting from an office, trust, or station. But though the writ may require such court, corporation, board, officer, or person to exercise its or his judgment, or proceed to the discharge of any of its or his functions, it shall not control judicial discretion. The writ shall not be issued in any case where there is a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of the law.” Comp. Laws 1918, § 18S5; Carter’s Code, § 558, p. 261.

Our statute is taken bodily from that of Oregon, passed October 11, 1862. In the case of Ball v. Lappius, 3 Or. 56, it was said by the Oregon court, in 1868, speaking of the writ of mandamus:

“It may require the officer to proceed to the discharge of any of his functions, although such discharge involves an exercise of discretion and judgment,' and a choice between different modes of proceeding; yet it ‘shall not control judicial discretion.’ And it is safe to go further, and say it shall not control discretion, judicial or otherwise, which the law assigns to an officer. * * * In such case the office of the writ is to compel the officer to act. The mode of action is still to be determined by him in whom the law has lodged the discretionary power. In determining on the necessity and propriety of the writ, it must be observed: (1) Mandamus is proper only where a party has a legal right, and there is no other legal remedy; * * * (2) The right must be certain and clearly made out by the facts of the case.”

And in Durham v. Monumental S. & M. Co., 9 Or. 44, the same court said, in 1880;

The law “provides that the writ shall not be issued in any case where there is a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law. The existence or nonexistence of an adequate and specific remedy at law under the ordinary forms of legal procedure is therefore one of the first questions to be determined in all applications for the writ of mandamus; and wherever it is found that such remedy exists, and that it is open to the party aggrieved, the courts uniformly refused to interfere by the exercise of their extraordinary jurisdiction.”

It will be noted that in the Oregon case first cited the court say that “it is safe to go further and say it shall not control discretion, judicial or otherwise.”

In United States v. Black, 128 U. S. 40, 9 Sup. Ct. 12, 32 L. Ed. 354, which was an- application to the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia for a writ of mandamus commanding [730]*730the commissioner of pensions to grant an increase of pension, the petitioner averred that the fact was that he was so disabled that he was entitled to this increase under the acts of Congress, and that the commissioner had so found the fact to be, but had erroneously held that under the law he was not entitled to it, and for that reason he refused to allow it. , In deciding the case against allowance of the writ, Mr. Justice Bradley said:

“The principle of law deducible * * * is not difficult to announce. The court will not interfere by mandamus with the executive officers * * * in the exercise of their ordinary official duties, even where those duties require an interpretation of the law, the court having no appellate power for that purpose; but, when they refuse to act in a case at all, * * * a mandamus may be issued to compel them” to do so. “Judged by this rule, the present c.ase presents no difficulty. The commissioner of pensions did not refuse to act or decide. He did act and decide. He adopted an interpretation of the law adverse to the relator.”

And he adds:

“Whether, if the law were properly before us, * * * we should be of the same opinion, or a different opinion, is of no consequence in the decision of this case.”

In Kimberlin v. Commission to Five Civilized Tribes, 104 Fed. 655, 44 C. C. A. 110, Circuit Judge Sanborn said:

“The writ of mandamus issues to compel the performance of a plain duty imposed by law. Where that duty is the exercise of judgment or discretion by an officer in the decision of a question of law or fact, or both, it may issue to compel a decision, but it may not command him, in what particular way that decision shall be rendered. When a question has been decided by the officer or person to whose judgment the law has intrusted its determination, the writ of mandamus may not issue to review or reverse that decision, or to compel another.”

The case of Decatur v. Paulding, 14 Pet. 497, 10 L. Ed 559, was one in which it was argued that “the true construction” of certain legislation “constituted the law of the case,” and that, as the facts were not in dispute, the compliance by the officer with the law was a mere ministerial act, and he had no power tq exercise his judgment or discretion in the con[731]*731struction of the act; but Chief Justice Taney denied the writ, saying:

“The head of an executive department of the government, in the administration of the various and important concerns of his office, is continually required to exercise judgment and discretion. He must exercise his judgment in expounding the laws and resolutions of Congress, under' which he is required, from time to time, to act.”

Applying, then, these principles to the case at bar, what do we find?

Here we have a plaintiff who, on the 11th day of December, 1913, gave to the secretary of Alaska $15 for the purpose of paying the license fee for 1914. We find the secretary accepting the $15, but refusing to note on the records of his office that the license fee for 1914 is paid. Now, if plaintiff’s construction of the law is correct, it cannot alter his rights in one particle whether the secretary does or does not note on the record that the fee for 1914 has been paid; it is paid whether the secretary notes it as paid or not. If the secretary’s construction of the law that it applies to 1913 is right, then the plaintiff has paid his fee for 1913; if plaintiff’s construction of the law, that its first application is for 1914 is right, then he has paid his license for 1914. In either event, how has he been damaged ? What standing, then, has plaintiff in a court, asking the issuance of the extraordinary writ of mandamus, a writ rarer and more extraordinary than almost any other writ.

But says plaintiff: Although I have not yet been injured, yet I will be injured some time after the 1st of January, 1914, just when I don’t know, because the secretary will strike my name from the roll of corporations. How does plaintiff know the secretary will do that? Has the secretary said he would? Has he threatened to do it? Has he made any move in that direction? If so, it is not alleged in the complaint. But suppose it has been so alleged. Under the act he could not strike the name till July 1, 1914.

Suppose the secretary had said he was going fi> strike the name from the roll if the tax for 1914 should not be paid by [732]*732that time. Plaintiff can come into court and enjoin the secretary.

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Related

Decatur v. Paulding
39 U.S. 497 (Supreme Court, 1840)
Dunlap v. Black
128 U.S. 40 (Supreme Court, 1888)
Durham v. Monumental Silver Mining Co.
9 Or. 41 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1880)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Alaska 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dispatch-pub-co-v-davidson-akd-1913.