Pennington v. Gilbert

129 A. 905, 148 Md. 649, 1925 Md. LEXIS 76
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 30, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 129 A. 905 (Pennington v. Gilbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennington v. Gilbert, 129 A. 905, 148 Md. 649, 1925 Md. LEXIS 76 (Md. 1925).

Opinion

Walsi-i, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On October 5th, 1924, the City Council of Havre de Grace, a municipal corporation, duly passed a resolution directing the Mayor, Oity Treasurer, and City Clerk to put thirty-two hundred dollars of the city’s funds into the sinking fund of said city to draw interest at four per cent., and to await the demand and requirement -of the payment of the Havre de Grace Water Company’s water bill for'the years 1923 and 1924.

This order was not carried out, and on February 17, 1925, the four appellees, who constitute a majority of said Oity Council, filed a petition, verified by affidavit, in the Circuit Court for Harford 'County, asking that a mandamus be issued to compel the three above named city officials, who are the proper disbursing officers of said city, to' comply with said resolution. On this petition the court passed an order directing the respondents to show cause on February 28th, 1925 why the mandamus should not be issued as prayed, and on that date the respondents filed their answer. On March 7th, 1925, the petitioners demurred to' this answer, the demurrer was sustained, and on March 20th, 1925, the respondents filed an amended answer. On the following day the. petitioners filed a motion that this amended answer be *651 not received, but upon the respondents agreeing that they would not rely on the fifth paragraph of said answer, which paragraph alleged that the resolution of October 5th, 1924, had not been passed, the petitioners withdrew their motion of ne recipiatur and demurred to the amended answer. The learned court below also sustained this demurrer and directed the writ of mandamus to issue as prayed, and from this action the respondents appealed.

It is admitted by all the parties that the resolution of October 5th, 1924, was duly passed by a majority of the City Council, that the thirty-two hundred dollars which it sought to have placed in the sinking fund had been collected from the taxpayers for the specific purpose of paying the 1923 and 1924 bills of the water company, and that the actual payment of these bills was awaiting the outcome of eertain litigation which is pending between the water company and. the city. It is further admitted that at the time the resolution was passed the City Treasurer had $10,000 in the city treasury, that at the time the first answer was filed this amount had been reduced to- $4,673.40, and that it would eventually he reduced greatly below $3,200, unless that sum was placed in the sinking fund where it would not be subject to the payment of current expenses. And it was- alleged in the amended answer that all 1924 ta&es had been collected, except a very few delinquent accounts whose ultimate collection was -considered uncertain and doubtful. It was also alleged in this answer, which was not filed until March 20th, 1925, that because of the passage -of certain orders- by the City Council for the payment of bills on March 3rd and March 17th, 1925, the amount of money in the hands of the City Treasurer had been reduced to $3,037.61, and that as no additional taxes, except the delinquent accounts above mentioned, would be due until July, 1925, it would be impossible for the respondents to- comply with the mandamus if it was issued.

No question is raised by the appellants as to the correctness of the lower court’s ruling on the demurrer to the first *652 answer. Their sole contention is that the amended answer properly alleges that the City Treasurer lacks sufficient funds to enable the respondents to place thirty-two hundred dollars in the sinking fund, and that under such circumstances a mandamus will not issue because its issuance would be nugatory. It is undoubtedly the law of Maryland that a writ of mandamus must be issued as prayed, if it is issued at all (Wells v. Hyattsville, 77 Md. 125, 142; Upshur v. Baltimore, 94 Md. 743; Graham v. Gaither, 140 Md. 330, 344), and that it will not be issued at all where it will be nugatory. Booze v. Humbird, 27 Md. 1-5; Graham v. Gaither, supra. And, though we do not know of any decision on the question in this State, the weight of authority elsewhere seems to' hold that where a compliance with the mandamus will require the expenditure of funds, and there is a lack of funds and of the means of obtaining them, the writ will be denied on the ground that its issuance would be unavailing. 18 R. C. L. 139, 227, pars. 55 and 151; 26 Cyc. 315, 316; and note in L. R. A. 1916D 334. However, in. our opinion, it will be unnecessary in the present case to determine any of the questions which might be suggested by the application of the foregoing rules and principles to the facts before us, because we do- not think that the amended answer of the respondents is sufficiently definite and certain.

At common law the pleading and practice in mandamus cases was decidedly technical. Upon the filing of the petition, the court, in a proper case; directed the mandamus to issue commanding the respondent to do the thing ordered, or to show cause by a certain date why he should not do it. This was called the alternative writ, and if the respondent wished to contest the matter, he either moved to quash the writ or filed a reply to it, which reply was known as a return. In this return the respondent was required to set out with the highest degree of certainty the facts upon which he relied to defeat the petition, and on the case thus, made the court decided the matter. The petitioner was not permitted to traverse the return, and if the respondent alleged *653 matters in the return which were not true the only remedy of the petitioner was an action on the case for a false return. To remedy the difficulties attendant upon this method of procedure the Statute of 9 Anne, ch. 20, which referred only to municipal matters, was passed, and this was suppleirnented in Maryland by chapter 78 of the Acts of 1828, but, despite these statutory changes, our predecessors decided in the case of Harwood v. Marshall, 10 Md. 451-463-464, that in many mandámus oases the technicalities of the common law still applied. The ease just cited was decided in 1857, and presumably as a result of it the next General Assembly passed chapter 285 of the Acts of 1858 (now article 60 of the Code), by which the practice in all mandamus proceedings was simplied and made uniform. Under this act, the suit is no longer brought in the name of the State, the old alternative writs and returns are abolished, the respondent answers the petition, the petitioner is permitted to traverse such answer, and the case proceeds in much the same fashion as do other actions at law. 1 Poe, Pl. &, Pr., ch. 27.

In Legg et al. v. Mayor etc. of Annapolis, 42 Md. 203, 222, it was decided that, “according to present practice, as prescribed by the Code, art. 59 (now art. 60); the answer to-the applicant’s petition, filed under rule, .stands in the place of the return to the alternative writ under former practice,, and it is not required to be more specific or certain in the statement of the defenses upon which the defendant relies, than was required in the return to the alternative writ.” And in Harwood v. Marshall, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
129 A. 905, 148 Md. 649, 1925 Md. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennington-v-gilbert-md-1925.