State Ex Rel. Canterbury v. County Court of Wayne County

158 S.E.2d 151, 151 W. Va. 1013, 1967 W. Va. LEXIS 144
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1967
Docket12698
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 158 S.E.2d 151 (State Ex Rel. Canterbury v. County Court of Wayne 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
State Ex Rel. Canterbury v. County Court of Wayne County, 158 S.E.2d 151, 151 W. Va. 1013, 1967 W. Va. LEXIS 144 (W. Va. 1967).

Opinion

*1014 Beowning, Judge:

Petitioner, Prank Canterbury, as a resident and taxpayer of Wayne County and as Clerk of the County Court of Wayne County, West Virginia, instituted a proceeding in mandamus in the Circuit Court of Wayne County to compel the respondents, the County Court of Wayne County and Pearl E. Booth and Barney Asbury, commissioners thereof, to reconvene and reconsider the estimate and levy for the fiscal year 1967-68 and to allocate a sufficient sum of money for the efficient conduct of the office of the petitioner for that fiscal year. Bespondents demurred to the petition on the ground that mandamus does not lie inasmuch as respondents have performed the duties imposed upon them by law and answered, asserting that sufficient funds have been allocated. The Circuit Court of Wayne County overruled the demurrer and after a hearing granted the writ as prayed for, holding in his opinion that while the respondents had not acted in a wilful or arbitrary manner, insufficient money had been allocated for the efficient conduct of petitioner’s office, to which order this Court granted an appeal and supersedeas on October 2, 1967. Due to the exigencies of the situation, petitioner was granted leave to move to affirm as provided by Code, 58-5-25, and the case was heard and argued upon the original record.

Code, 7-7-7, as amended, provides in the parts here pertinent that: ‘ ‘ The sheriff, clerk of the county court, clerk of the circuit court, clerk of the criminal, common pleas or intermediate courts, on or before March first of each year, shall file with the county court . . . a detailed statement of the probable amount necessary to be expended for deputies, assistants, and other employees of their respective offices in the following fiscal year .... The county court . . . shall not later than March twenty-eighth, take up and consider the same and shall determine and fix an aggregate sum to be expended for the period cover *1015 ed by such statement for the compensation of all such deputies, assistants, and other employees of the respective officers, which shall he reasonable and proper, regard being had to the amount of labor necessary to be performed by those who receive the compensation, and shall enter upon its court record a finding of its action.”

Pursuant to this statute the petitioner on or before the first day of March, 1967, filed a detailed statement setting forth the names of ten deputies and assistants and the compensation to be paid to them totalling the sum of $46,800.00, the amount allocated by the respondents for the conduct of his office in the preceding fiscal year. The county court reduced the aggregate sum to the amount of $29,400.00 to which petitioner objected, his objections were overruled, and petitioner instituted the present action in the Circuit Court of Wayne County.

At the hearing before the circuit court the petitioner testified that he was first elected to the office of county clerk in 1956 at which time eight deputies were employed in the office; the work increased and two additional deputies were employed in 1962; since 1962 the work has continued to increase and, although modern equipment has been purchased and utilized, it is still necessary for some employees upon occasion to work overtime in order to conduct his office efficiently. He also testified that he could not obtain competent help at smaller salaries than those requested and could not operate his office in an efficient manner as required by law for the amount allocated by the respondents. He is corroborated in his testimony by his chief deputy clerk who testified to the same effect. Mr. Ira McCoy, a member of the County Court of Wayne County, testified that he dissented to the reduction in petitioner’s budget, did not believe petitioner could efficiently conduct his office on the amount allocated by the respondents and, in effecting the reduction, the respondents did not com *1016 pare the work load of petitioner with that of other county clerks ’ offices hut used only population figures for comparison.

For the respondents, respondent Booth testified that Wayne County had incurred a fiscal deficit of approximately $130,000.00 prior to 1966; after conferences with the state tax commissioner it was agreed that approximately $34,000.00 would be paid back in fiscal 1966-67 with no definite understanding as to when the balance of approximately $96,000.00 would have to be repaid; in an endeavor to repay this balance in fiscal 1967-68, and being of the opinion that the budgets of certain offices were too high in comparison to counties of like size, they effected the instant reduction by comparing the population, budget, and the amount appropriated for the office of County Clerk of Wayne County with the same statistics for Marshall, Mingo, Monongalia and Fayette Counties. Mr. Booth admitted that the work load of the aforementioned counties was not compared in any way. His testimony is corroborated by the respondent As-bury and to a limited extent by a Mr. Whited, Assistant Director, Division of Inspection and Supervision of Public Offices, State Tax Department, who admitted on cross-examination that he was supplied with the figures from which he testified by Mr. Booth.

As heretofore mentioned, after considering the evidence taken at the hearing, the Circuit Court of Wayne County found that although the action of the respondents was not arbitrary and capricious, the amount allocated would not permit the petitioner to conduct his office in an efficient manner as prescribed by law and ordered respondents to reconvene and to redetermine and reallot a sufficient sum of money for the continued operation of petitioner’s office, to which action this Court granted an appeal. It has been stipulated that the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Wayne County is affected by a reduction of her budget and has instituted a like proceeding in mandamus below, *1017 which will he governed by the decision in the instant case.

Article VIII, Section 3 of the constitution of this state gives this Court original jurisdiction in mandamus and Section 12 of that article confers upon circuit courts original and general jurisdiction of that extraordinary proceeding. In this case the original jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of Wayne County was invoked and the case comes to us upon appeal from that court’s decision, but in determining his power in that regard we must apply the same principles as would be applicable had this case arisen initially in this Court. The test by which it is determined whether a petitioner in the extraordinary proceeding of mandamus is entitled to relief is not the same as it is in the ordinary civil case. In the latter it is enough that he prove his right to relief by a preponderance of the evidence. In mandamus he must show a clear legal right to the relief sought and before such relief may be granted by a court it must be shown that the respondent has a mandatory duty to perform the act required of him and it is never enough merely to show that the action of the respondent was not in accord with the opinion of the court with regard to the matter under consideration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 S.E.2d 151, 151 W. Va. 1013, 1967 W. Va. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-canterbury-v-county-court-of-wayne-county-wva-1967.