State ex rel. Allen v. England

103 S.E. 400, 86 W. Va. 508, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 145
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 103 S.E. 400 (State ex rel. Allen v. England) 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
State ex rel. Allen v. England, 103 S.E. 400, 86 W. Va. 508, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 145 (W. Va. 1920).

Opinions

MilleR, Judge :

Relators invoke the jurisdiction of this court, given or sought to be conferred by section 3 of chapter 57 of the Acts of the Legislature 1917, to review and control the action of the attorney [510]*510general in approving a proposed bond issue of the county court of Marshall County, for building and improving certain roads of Cameron District therein. This statute among other things provides, “that any person in interest, or any taxpayer within said 'political division, feeling aggrieved by the action of the attorney general in approving or disapproving the validity of such bonds, ‘may within ten days after the date of the last publication of the .notice to taxpayers provided for in section two (but not after ¡said ten days) present his petition to the supreme court of ¡appeals or to a judge thereof in vacation, praying that the action jof the attorney general in approving or disapproving as aforesaid, 'be reversed or modified; and if said court, or a judge, thereof in vacation, be of opinion to hear and determine the matters in said petition set out, the case shall be proceeded with as in cases of original jurisdiction.”

Though not made a point by counsel for the relators or by the attorney general, or by counsel appearing for'other citizens and for the county authorities, the power of the legislature in the first place to impose such jurisdiction, and in the second place tiro jurisdiction of this court by original process as by mandamus to control the action of the attorney general in the matter of his opinion in so approving or disapproving the validity of such bonds, was challenged in council, and it therefore becomes necessary, before proceeding further, to dispose of this question of jurisdiction.

It will be observed that the statute itself is a reference, not to our appellate jurisdiction given by the Constitution and statutes, but is an attempt at least to enlarge or confer original jurisdiction upon us to control the action of the attorney general in such cases. In construing statutes the rule is never to declare an act invalid on constitutional or other grounds unless there be no escape from doing so. We are committed to' the proposition that the legislature may in cases of this character enlarge the remedy by mandamus or other original process when no contractual or constitutional rights of persons or property will be thereby invaded. Boggess v. Buxton, 67 W. Va. 679; United Fuel Gas Co. V. Public Service Commission, 73 W. Va. 571.

[511]*511But may we under this act by mandamus or other original writ control the opinion and judgment of the attorney general respecting such bond issues ? Manifestly the act itself intended to confer that jurisdiction. In Boggess v. Buxton, involving the action of election officers, it was decided that mandamus might be given as a remedy, although the duties of such officers might be in some respects judicial in their nature.

Section 19 of chapter 66 of the. Acts of 1917, enacted at the same session as the other act, makes the attorney general legal adviser of the state road commission, created thereby, and imposes upon him the duty to prepare for it all contracts, forms and other documents when required by said commission. It is in evidence here that the form of the order submitting to the voters of said district the proposition to issue bonds was approved by the state road commission and the attorney' general before the same was entered or published. It is suggested that the duties imposed upon the attorney general call for the exercise of judgment upon the facts, and discretion in rendering his opinion, not controllable by mandamus; that while he may be compelled to perform his duties, we can not by original process control bis opinion and judgment. But do his duties involve purely judicial action or discretion ? Manifestly the legislature did not so determine. The purpose was to make his duties supervisory and ministerial, although calling for his opinion and judgment on the law. His duties in this respect are -not different from almost any other ministerial or executive officer: But when such officers are called upon to act, the law says they act at their peril. The facts being undisputed, they must act legally; they have no discretion to act unlawfully. Webb v. Ritter, 60 W. Va. 193, 213, and cases cited; Merrill on Mandamus, § 111. Our statute imposing the duty of approval or disapproval of bonds on the attorney general was likely patterned after a similar statute in Oklahoma. The statute in that state makes the attorney general ex-officio bond commissioner and imposes upon him substantially the same duties as.our statute does upon the attorney general of this state, and makes his judgment, not attacked by suit within a prescribed time, final. The supreme court of that state, in construing the statute, held the duties of [512]*512the attorney general were executive and administrative only. State ex rel. Board of Education of Oklahoma City v. West, Attorney General, 29 Okla. 503; In re Submission of Certain Bonds of the City of Tulsa, 31 Okla. 648. It can not be assumed that if all the preliminary proceedings relating to the issue of road bonds were regular or substantially so., the attorney general could ■withhold his approval; nor on the other hand would he be suffered to endorse his approval if the provisions of the statute had not been substantially complied with. The act contemplated no such arbitrary or erroneous action, and gave a speedy remedy by appeal to the jurisdiction of this court, in the event of such misuse or abuse of authority. Besides the cases already cited, we have numerous cases where the acts of ministerial and executive officers, though involving judgment on the law, have been controlled, the most recent case being that of State ex rel. Carter v. Board of Ballot Commissioners, decided at this term but not officially reported.

So the duty remains to us to dispose of the case on its merits. The first proposition urged by the relator is that the act of the county court authorizing bonds to run for twenty-five years instead of ten years violates section 26 of chapter 66 of the Acts of 1917. This is clearly a misconception of the provision of that section. Two methods of providing money for building- and improving roads are contemplated by the statute, one -by the issue of bonds, ’the other by a special road fund levy. The statute limits such special levy to ten years, but is silent as to the time such bonds may run, except that it does make all that is done under the act subject to sections seven and eight of article ten of the Constitution, which limits all indebtedness of counties and other municipalities to five per cent of the value -of the taxable property therein, and the running of bonds to thirty-four years.

The second point of attack is that the order of the county court submitting the proposition to the voters does not, as section 26 requires, set forth the’ kind and class -of work for which the proceeds of the bonds are to be expended. The statute requires, as preliminary to submitting the proposition, an investigation and report by the comity or a special engineer ap[513]*513pointed; of the probable cosí of the proposed improvement, to he submitted to and approved by the state road commission. An accurate survey and report is not required. When this preliminary estimate has been made, the statute requires the county court in its order of submission to set out a summary of -said report, the proximate

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 S.E. 400, 86 W. Va. 508, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-allen-v-england-wva-1920.