Ryan v. County Court of Monongalia County

102 S.E. 731, 86 W. Va. 40, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 76
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 102 S.E. 731 (Ryan v. County Court of Monongalia 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
Ryan v. County Court of Monongalia County, 102 S.E. 731, 86 W. Va. 40, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 76 (W. Va. 1920).

Opinion

Lynch, Judge:

James Ryan, owner of 225 acres of land in Union district, Monongalia County, and his brother, Charles 1ST. Ryan, owner of 200 acres in Preston County, the two tracts being contiguous, by petition applied to the judge of the circuit,court of Mon-ongalia County, in the vacation of the court, for a writ of mandamus directed to the county court of that county and its several members to command them "to open or cause to be opened for the use of your petitioners and the public generally as a public county road the said new and relocated Sand Spring road heretofore relocated and opened under the order and direction of said the county court of Monongalia County on the 2d day of January, 1919, and thereafter used as and for a public road, instead of the old Sand Spring road, by the traveling public generally and by the carrier of the United States mail, until the same was closed by the order, direction or permission of one of the members of said county court in February, 1919, or show cause, if any it, the said the county court of Monongalia County, can, why it should not do so.” After the defendant. county court had filed its answer and return the parties took testimony • in vacation before the court in lieu of a jury, and upon the pleadings and proof adduced the latter entered a final order in term time awarding the writ. To review that action this writ of error was granted.

There axe upon or within the lands of the Ryans, according to the allegations of their petition for writ, valuable limestone deposits, and, in order to obtain a better grade than the old road [42]*42afforded for hauling from the lands stone quarried or crushed thereon, they petitioned the defendant county court during the summer of 1918 to relocate part of the old road, a distance of about 300 yards along and parallel with it, and thereby materially improve the road grade along such portion. The relocation necessitated a change of the road to land owned by others. ISTo formal order authorizing the removal was entered by the court, but one of its members, being assured that the consent .of such property owners had been obtained, directed the road supervisor, or patrolman, as he is called by the Good Roads Law hereafter referred to, to make, and not to exceed $60 in making, the necessary change. This was done at an expense of $20 and the relocated road opened to travel on or about January 2, 1919, but was closed a few weeks later by order of another member of the court upon receipt of the protest of the owners whose land was affected by the relocation. To compel the county court to reopen the road is the purpose of this proceeding.

Mo record evidence of any action taken by the county court upon the original petition of the plaintiffs shows an intention or design on its part to relocate the road as prayed for therein. There is no order authorizing the relief sought, or anything in that regard except the direction given by one of its members to the road patrolman, to which we already have referred. The absence of such record evidence generally is of itself conclusive in such matters where the establishment of a road is brought in question. Williams v. Main Island Creek Coal Co., 83 W. Va. 464, 98 S. E. 511. What the court did and all it did in response to the prayer of the petition, speaking from the. record, was to enter an order June 16, 1919, constituting its members a committee “to go upon the ground and view the same and report in writing the advantages and disadvantages which, in their opinion, will result as well to individuals as to the public from the proposed work, and the grades and bearings of the proposed road, and the facts and circumstances that may be useful to enable the county court to determine whether such work ought to be undertaken by the county;” and later to enter a second order July 9, 1919, which contains these recitals: “And the commissioners of the county court, as a committee of their own body,. having been appointed and authorized to view the ground, now [43]*43here report on the record that they did view the proposed location of the alterations in the public road known as the Sand Spring road in Union district, together with the county road engineer, and that no advantage will result to any individual from the proposed alteration, and the commissioners recommend that the alterations so proposed to the said road be not undertaken by the county court. It is thereupon ordered by the county court that the county court refuse to.undertake the proposed work, and that this proceeding be and the same is hereby dismissed.” These orders declare in no uncertain terms the entire absence of an intention on the part of the court to commit itself to the establishment of changes or alterations in the Sand Spring road.

Nor is the coercive remedy sought by plaintiffs against the county court proper or available in such a case. By often repeated decisions this court has refused to interfere by mandamus with the exercise by county courts or other inferior tribunals of the discretionary power conferred upon them, such as that bestowed by sections 74, 75, 76 and 78, chapter 43, Barnes’ Code 1918, being sections of the Good Roads Law passed by the Legislature at its January, 1917, session, respecting the right of such courts to control the location, establishment, alteration and changes of the public roads and bridges in their counties. The exercise of such power to control is in its nature judicial and not subject to regulation or direction by mandamus, especially as to the performance in any particular manner of the duties assigned to them by these provisions. The most that a superior court may cause or direct by the writ to be done is to require such courts to act upon the facts presented by petitions as therein prescribed, but not to do or leave undone any act within the scope of their legitimate and discretionary powers. Here the respondent has exercised the right sought to be enforced, and has by its order expressly declined to grant the relief prayed by relators in their petition, and refused its consent to the proposed alteration of the road.

As authority for these propositions, see State v. County Court, 33 W. Va. 589; Miller v. County Court, 34 W, Va. 285; Marcum v. Ballot Commissioners, 42 W. Va. 263; Poling v. Board of Education, 50 W. Va. 374; Rose v. O’Brien, 80 W. Va. 280.

For the first time in the history of judicial proceedings in . [44]*44this state, so far as we are able to discover, respondents assign as erroneous the failure to submit to trial by jury the questions raised upon the application for the peremptory writ. Whether entitled to it or not,'they did not demand such a trial but appeared and participated in the examination of witnesses without protest or objection on their1 part. And, further, the decision as to the advisability of relocating the road in question was solely within the sound discretion of the county court and involved no question of fact which could be submitted properly to a jury. Where there is ho issue of fact to be decided a jury is unnecessary. State v. Anding, 133 Minn. 36; Lyman v. Martin, 3 Utah 136, 149; People v. Town Board, 33 Mich. 335; 19 Standard Enc. of Procedure, p. 378.. Nothing said in this opinion, however, is to be understood as intended, directly or. indirectly, to recognize under any circumstances the existence in this state of a right to trial by jury in mandamus proceedings, whatever may be the rule in other jurisdictions.

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Bluebook (online)
102 S.E. 731, 86 W. Va. 40, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-v-county-court-of-monongalia-county-wva-1920.