State ex rel. C. C. & C. Railroad v. Whitesides

3 L.R.A. 777, 9 S.E. 661, 30 S.C. 579, 1889 S.C. LEXIS 134
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 3 L.R.A. 777 (State ex rel. C. C. & C. Railroad v. Whitesides) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. C. C. & C. Railroad v. Whitesides, 3 L.R.A. 777, 9 S.E. 661, 30 S.C. 579, 1889 S.C. LEXIS 134 (S.C. 1889).

Opinions

The opinion of the court ivas delivered by

Mr. Chiee Justice Simpson.

The inhabitants of Broad River Township in York County, under the provisions of the amended charter of the Georgetown & North Carolina Narrow-Gauge Railroad Company — 1883—which company afterwards became the Charleston, Cincinnati & Chicago Railroad Company, voted a subscription of $21,000 to said road, payable in 7 per cent, coupon bonds, upon the authority of which the county commissioners of said county executed the necessary bonds for the payment of said subscription.

These bonds, by an arrangement between the parties, were placed in the possession of the relator, the “Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company,” to be held until the road was completed, as follows, to wit: five miles from the township line, between Cherokee and Broad River, when, upon a certificate of that fact by the engineer of the Massachusetts and Southern Construction Company, endorsed by the chairman of the county commissioners, his signature attested by the clerk of the board, being presented to said trust company, $12,000 of said bonds were to be delivered to the Massachusetts and Southern Construction Company, and upon a similar certificate that the road had been com[581]*581pleted through said township, the remaining $>12,000 were to be delivered to said construction company.

This arrangement was reduced to writing and signed by a majority of the county commissioners, and in accordance therewith the $>24,000 of bonds were placed in the hands of the trust company. Upon the completion of the road through the township, the engineer executed the required certificate as above, but the respondent, Whitesides, county chairman aforesaid, declined to endorse it, for other reasons, hoivever, than that said road had not been completed. And the clerk of the board also declared that he would not in any event attest the signature of the chairman.

Under these circumstances the relators commenced the proceedings now before us in the original jurisdiction of this court, praying that a mandamus do issue commanding said chairman to endorse the certificates of the engineer, and said clerk to attest his signature to said endorsement, as stipulated, so that the said trust company might be authorized to deliver the bonds mentioned to the said construction company.

There is no serious dispute as to the main facts of the case, and these are sufficiently stated above. The difficulty, however, grows out of the legal questions raised, and these involve primarily a discussion of the law of mandamus, and its application to these conceded facts; and secondly, the constitutionality of the recent act of the legislature, known as “An act to provide for the payment of township bonds, issued in aid of railroads in this State. Approved December 22, 1888.” 20 Stat., 12. These questions will be considered in their order.

The principles which govern in mandamus cases, especially where the proceeding is against a public officer, are very plain and simple, and are within a very narrow compass ; so much so as to need no elaboration here nor the citation of authorities. They may be briefly stated thus: Where a party has a legal right, to the enjoyment of which the discharge of a ministerial duty on the part of a public officer is necessary, and he has no other adequate remedy, in case the officer refuses to discharge this duty, mandamus is the proper proceeding. High Ex. Leg. Rem., section 34 et seq. This writ was once a prerogative writ, [582]*582and in England was supposed to issue at the instance of the crown, to meet and remedy otherwise remediless cases at his discretion. But in this country it has lost its prerogative character, and though issued in the name of the State, yet it belongs to the courts, and has become a form of action, governed by established rules and applied for and issued under established forms. Upon application for this writ against a public officer, the questions to be considered are: 1st. Is the duty claimed a ministerial duty? 2nd. Has the petitioner a legal right, for the enjoyment, protection, or redress of which the discharge of said duty is necessary ? 3rd. Has he no other adequate and sufficient remedy ? High, section 10. And these are the questions before us.

The petitioners aslc that the chairman of the county commissioners of York County shall be required to endorse the certificate of the engineer, supra, and that the clerk of the board shall attest his signature. Can the performance of these acts be ordered as ministerial duties ? What is a ministerial duty on the part of a public officer ? We think it may be defined briefly, yet fully, to be some duty imposed expressly by law, not by contract {High, section 25); or arising necessarily as an incident to the office, involving no discretion in its exercise, but mandatory and imperative. High, section 42. Now, is the duty claimed here by the petitioners at the hands of the respondents a duty of that character ? There is certainly no act or law of force expressly imposing this duty upon them. Nor is it a duty necessarily arising as an incident to the offices which they hold. Nor was it contracted in furtherance of any legal duty attempted by them, and which cannot be now completed without the performance of this. Possibly it might be, if the act of assembly under which Broad River Township subscribed to the railroad had been constitutional and valid. In such case, the county commissioners having been .declared the corporate agents of the township, charged with the duty of issuing the subscription bonds, and of otherwise seeing to the proper protection of said township in the delivery of said bonds, a contract of the kind mentioned above, to be performed upon the completion of the road, could be urged as a ministerial duty.

But such is not the state of facts in the case. On the con[583]*583trary, under the recent case of Floyd v. Perrin, ante 1,1 Broad River Township had no power to vote the subscription in question. Nor had the county commissioners any power to issue the bonds mentioned, nor to make officially the contract relied upon. The whole transaction, from beginning to end, was ultra vires, a nullity, because not in pursuance of any duty imposed by law upon said' commissioners. If there be any duty at all, it is one arising out of individual contract. This being so, we do not see how any ministerial duty, in the sense as defined above, could attach.

It is said, however, that the recent act, supra, has validated these bonds, and has legalized all the. proceedings under which they were executed, and the conditions upon which they were to be delivered to the railroad, including the contract to have the certificate of the engineer endorsed by the chairman and attested by the clerk. We think this is a mistake. We do not understand that the act of 1888, supra, has had that effect; nor was such its intention, in so far as the proceedings of the different townships were concerned. That act, as we suppose, was intended to authorize the levying of a tax in aid of certain railroads which certain townships in the State, by the action of their inhabitants, had substantially expressed a desire should be aided ; and it was enacted not to validate previous illegal legislation and acts done under such legislation, but as an independent act for a public purpose, and within, as was supposed, the unquestioned power of the general assembly, to ivit, to authorize taxation for a public purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
3 L.R.A. 777, 9 S.E. 661, 30 S.C. 579, 1889 S.C. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-c-c-c-railroad-v-whitesides-sc-1889.