Doolittle v. County Court of Cabell County

28 W. Va. 158, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 71
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 28 W. Va. 158 (Doolittle v. County Court of Cabell County) 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
Doolittle v. County Court of Cabell County, 28 W. Va. 158, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 71 (W. Va. 1886).

Opinion

Opinion

by Green, Judge :

Under the third section of Article VIII. of our present Constitution this Court has original jurisdiction in cases of mandamus (Warth’s Code, p. 23). By virtue of this provision of our Constitution there was presented to this Court a peti[166]*166tion of 807 legal voters of Cabell county for a writ 'of mandamus to the county court of Cabell county and to the three commissioners composing said court commanding it and them to allow a petition signed by said 807 legal voters of said county asking the re-location of the county-seat of Cabell county at a place named therein to be filed m said court and to make an order, that a vote be taken at the next general election to be held in said county on the Tuesday next after the first Monday in November, 1886, upon the question of the re-location of the county-seat of said county at the city ot Huntington in said county; which petition to the county court of Cabell county, as alleged in said petition to this Court for said mandamus, was such a petition, as is provided tor iii sec. 15 of ch. 89 of the Code as amended by ch. 5 of the Acts of 1881, and was sworn to as required by said section and asked that the county court of Cabell would make an order that a vote be taken upon the question of the relocation at said city of Huntington at said next general election, and that this petition'had been presented by said petitioners to the county court of Cabell county on April 28,1886, during a regular term of said court, but the court refused to allow the said petition to be filed.

The question now before us is whether a peremptory writ of mandamus, such as is asked of this Court, should be awarded.

I will consider first so much of the law in mandamus cases, as is necessary to determine this question, and then apply the same to this case as set out at length in the preceding statement. The proceedings in such eases have been so fully settled in this State, that in order to determine, whether the proceedings in this ease are such, as the law in this State requires, it will only be necessary to quote some of the points of the syllabus in Fisher v. The City of Charleston, (17 W. Va. 595). These points are as follows :

“1. The usual and proper mode of proceeding in this State in cases of mandamus is for the plaintiff to file a petition in the coui’t having jurisdiction of the case setting forth the facts of his case, on which he bases his claim to a mandamus, and praying for the writ, specifying in his petition the specific act or acts, which he asks to have the defendant com[167]*167manded to perform. The facts set out in this petition must be such as prima facie entitle the plaintiff to the relief he seeks, and the petition should be supported by affidavit, if filed by a private person. On filing of this petition which is ex, parte, the court, it a prima facie case is thereby made out, on the plaintiff’s motion makes an order, which reciting that the petition is filed orders, that the defendant after being previously served With a copy of the order to appear on a certain day fixed by the court and show cause if any he can, wherefore a writ of mandamus should not be awarded the plaintiff to command the defendant to do the specified acts, which command should correspond with that asked for in the petition. If on the return-day of this rule it has been served and the defendant files no answer, the court either orders a peremptory mandamus to issue against him or compels him to file an answer, as one or the other may be proper in the particular case. If he files an answer, and it be insufficient at law, the court proceeds as if no answer had been filed ; if it be sufficient in law, no peremptory writ of mandamus is then issued, but it the court sees, that there is a disputed question of fact between the parties, it should order an alternative writ of mandamus to be issued, and it does not permit a demurrer or replication to be filed to the answer to the rule; or the court may and usually does dispense with the issuing a rule to show cause why a mandamus should not issue, and immediately on the filing of the petition, if a prima facie case is thereby made out, orders an alternative writ of mandamus to be issued. The alternative writ sets'forth by distinct recital, and not by reference to the petition, all the facts necessary to show the plaintiff’s right to the writ of mandamus which he asks; and by it the defendant is commanded to perform the particular act specified in it (which should properly be the same as that stated in the rule or petition, but which may be different) or that cause be shown to the contrary in a given time. It is regarded as the plaintiff’s declaration. If the defendant does not make a return to this alternative writ, the ’court may either order a peremptory writ of mandamus or enforce the filing of a return, as may be proper in the particular case. The defendant may move to quash the alternative writ, which is equivalent to a demurrer to it, or he may [168]*168make a return. This return is regarded as his plea; and it may be replied to, and the pleading proceed, as in ordinary common law suits, till an issue of law or fact is reached and tried.
“ 2. To the pleadings in cases .of mandamus the ordinary rules of pleading are applied, neither greater nor less certainty being required in them than in the pleadings in ordinary common law suits. But the facts set forth by the plaintiff in the alternative writ of mandamus are set forth by way of recital and not in the positive manner that is required in an ordinary declaration in a common law suit.”
The sixth point of the syllabus in Fisher v. Ihe Mayor, Recorder, &c., of the City of Charleston (17 W. Va., 628) is: “The peremptory writ of mandamus must strictly follow the command of the alternative writ of mandamus.”

In the case before us it is obvious, that the petition to this Court, the substance of which has been set out in the statement of this case, and which was supported by a proper affidavit, set out facts, which -prima facie entitled the plaintiffs to the relief they sought; and this Court dispensed with the issuing of a rule to show cause why a mandamus should not issue, and after carefully considering the petition ordered an alternative writ of mandamus, or mandamus nisi, as it is usually called, to be issued. In this case it is obvious that, as in most cases, this alternative writ of mandamus answered ever}7 possible purpose, which a rule to show cause, why a mandamus should not issue, could have done. To have issued such a rule before the ■ alternative writ of m.andam,us was ordered would in this case have simply caused delay and trouble without effecting any useful end. On the return-day of this alternative writ of mandamus the defendants moved to quash it. This mandamus nisi was, as we have seen, the plaintiffs’ declaration and should have set forth by distinct recital, and not by reference to the petition, all the facts necessary to show the plaintiffs’ right to the writ of mandamus, -which they asked. The defendant’s motion to quash this alternative writ was equivalent to a demurrer to the declaration contained in the recital, with which the.writ of mandamus nisi, or alternative writ of mandamus commences.

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Bluebook (online)
28 W. Va. 158, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doolittle-v-county-court-of-cabell-county-wva-1886.