State Ex Rel. Fooshe v. Burley

61 S.E. 255, 80 S.C. 127, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 156
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 21, 1908
Docket6887
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 61 S.E. 255 (State Ex Rel. Fooshe v. Burley) 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. Fooshe v. Burley, 61 S.E. 255, 80 S.C. 127, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 156 (S.C. 1908).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Jones.

This is an appeal from an order of his Honor, Judge John Wilson, granting a peremptory writ of mandamus, commanding the respondent, as county supervisor of Fairfield County, to publish -the statement of claims audited by the board of county coanmiissioners of said county, as required by Section 769, Yol. 1, Code of Laws. This section requires the supervisor of Fairfield County, amlong others, to publish in some newspaper published in the county, at least in one issue thereof, and within fifteen days after each' meeting of the county board of commiissioners at Which claims are audited, a full statement of the claims audited by the said board at its meeting imamediately preceding the publication, the statement to show, the file number of the claim, the amlount claimed, the amount allowed, the nature of the claim and the name of the claimant. The statute further provides that the publication shall be paid for at the rate now allowed by law for public printing, provided the sum does not exceed sixty dollars per annum. Certain counties named therein were exempted from its operation.

The petitioner is a resident freeholder and taxpayer of Fairfield County, and is pecuniarily interested because he is *129 the editor and proprietor of the News and Herald, the only-newspaper published in Fairfield County.

The petition alleges that a large number of such claims have been audited by said board at sundry meetings during the year 1907, but that respondents have refused to mfake publication notwithstanding petitioner’s demand therefor. The petition further alleges that.respondent refused to make such publication because of the provisions contained in the act of the Legislature amending Section 40b relating to the duties of county treasurers-, approved February SI, 1906, S5 Start., 45, in these words: “Nor shall the county supervisor of Fairfield County be required or allowed at public expense to publish annually or otherwise the itemized statement of disbursements for said county,” but further alleges that this provision is null! and void and affords no protection to respondent because it violates Seciton 17, Art. Ill, of the Constitution, which provides that every act or resolution having the force of law shall relate to- but one subject and that shall be expressed in the title.

Tihe respondent made return to the petition -alleging that it does not state facts sufficient to authorize mandamus, t-hai it doe9 not appear that any appropriation has been made nor that there was any funds in the hands of the respondent or the 'county treasurer for -the payment of such publication, that petitioner’s interest in the question as a taxpayer is in oomimion with ah other taxpayers and his claim of interest as publisher of the newspaper is contingent and speculative and exists neither in contract nor as a trust, that the -statute of 1906 forbidding respondent from publishing the statements of disbursements is not invalid as alleged, but if so, it is not the plain ministerial duty of respondent to ignore it and treat it as void.

Judge Wilson granted the mandamus holding:

“The act in question only purports to 'amend Section 40b of the -Code of Laws, 1908, wh-i-ch relates entirely to the d-utes of county treasurers, and in no way attempts to describe any of the duties appertaining to county super *130 visors. The 'duties oí county supervisors in regard to publishing the statements in question are set forth and prescribed by Section 769 of said Code, and the provisions in question are mandatory, or, at least, they set forth a plain ministerial duty on the part of county supervisors, except those in' counties exempted from the provisions of said section.
“In so far as the act of 1906, hereinbefore referred to, attempts to repeal or nullify the provisions of Section 769 of the Code of Laws, 1908, it is plainly in violation of the requirements of Section 17, Article III, of the Constitution of 1895, and therefore to that extent null and void. This being so, the requirements of Section 7&9 are left in full force and effect; and it is the plain duty of the county supervisor of Faii-field County to publish the statments of claims audited by the board of county commissioners, 'as is required by said section.”

1 The appellant contends that Judge Wilson erred in holding the act of 1906 to be unconstitutional. We think there Was no error in so holding. Section 76-9 relates to the publication' by the supervisor of claims audited by the county board of commissioners after each meeting. Section 405 relates to the annual county treasurer of claims paid by him. Fairfield County was exempt from the operation of Section 405, but not of Section 769. The title of the act of 1906 was, “An act to amend Section 405, Vol. 1, Code of Laws, 1908, so as exempt Marion County from) the provisions thereof.” The body of this amending act inserted Marion County among the counties excepted from its operation in accord with the title, but went further and inserted the provisions to Fairfield County, a matter not included within nor germain to the subject mentioned in the title. Charleston v. Oliver, 16 S. C., 47; State v. Crosby, 51 S. C., 249, 28 S. E., 529; Blair v. Morgan, 59 S. C., 67, 37 S. E., 45; State v. Fields, 68 S. C., 148, 46 S. E., 771.

Other cases illustrating the subject are, State v. O’Day, 74 S. C., 448, 53 S. E., 746: Park v. Cotton Mills, 75 S. C., *131 568, 56 S. E., 234; Aycock, Little Co. v. Ry., 76 S. C., 332; State v. Hunter, 79 S. C., 96.

When mlandamus is sought to compel an officer to> perform a duty enjoined 'by statute the Court will! not generally permit the officer to assert that the statute is unconstitutional. E x parte Lynch, 16 S. C., 39; Port Royal Mining Co. v. Hagood, 30 S. C., 524, 9 S. E., 686; ex parte Florence School, 43 S. C., 11, 20 S. E., 794; Moore v. Napier, 64 S. C., 564, 42 S. E., 997; State v. Morris, 67 S. C., 168, 45 S. E., 176; State v. Cain, 78 S. C., 352; State v. Heard, 47 L. R. A., 512.

2 To this last-named- case there is a very full note showing that such is the general rule, with the limitation “that if the nature of the office is such as to require the officer to raise the question, or if his personal interest is such' as to entitle him to do so, he may contest the validity of the statute in a mandamus proceeding brought to enforce it.”

3 The appellant contends under this general rule that if the officer could not assert the unconstitutionality of the statute, reciprocally, he should not be compelled to ignore it as unconstitutional.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 S.E. 255, 80 S.C. 127, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-fooshe-v-burley-sc-1908.