Thomas v. Town of Mason

26 L.R.A. 727, 20 S.E. 580, 39 W. Va. 526, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 83
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 26 L.R.A. 727 (Thomas v. Town of Mason) 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
Thomas v. Town of Mason, 26 L.R.A. 727, 20 S.E. 580, 39 W. Va. 526, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 83 (W. Va. 1894).

Opinion

Holt, Judge:

J. D. Thomas had a claim of four hundred dollars against the town of Mason, and, to compel the town to make a levy for its payment, he obtained an alternative writ of mandamus, which being served, the defendant on the 1st day of May, 1893, in the County Court of Mason county appeared and moved to quash and dismiss the same; and the motion having been argued was sustained, the peremptory writ refused, and the case dismissed, and this writ of error was allowed the plaintiff, Thomas.

The facts averred in plaintiffs petition and the alternative writ are as follows: The town of Mason provides for its own poor and therefore is not required to pay any poor levies assessed by the County Court for the support of the poor outside its corporate limits. See Code, s. 43, c. 47. It has the power, and it is its duty, to prevent injury or annoyance to the public or individuals from anything dangerous, offensive or unwholsome. See Code, s. 28, e. 47. A smallpox epidemic is such dangerous and offensive thing. On and before the 18th day of July, 1892, an epidemic of ■ smallpox prevailed in said town among its residents. Dr. D. A. Thomas, a practicing physician of skill and experience, was employed by the town to treat certain poor persons for smallpox, who were proper residents of the town. Under such contract and employment the doctor did carefully, faithfully and skillfully treat such persons in the town of Mason for smallpox during the month of July, 1892, [529]*529and made out and rendered liis account therefor to the common council, amounting to four hundred and thirty six dollars. _ By compromise and agreement the sum was fixed at four hundred dollars, and was at a meeting of the common council on the 18th day of July, 1892, audited and allowed, and the council caused ah order therefor in due form of law payable .to the order of I). A. Thomas to be delivered to him, dated July 18,1892, and signed by the recorder and addressed to the treasurer of the' town of Mason. This order was by written assignment on the back on the 19th day of July, 1892, for value assigned and delivered by I). A. Thomas to plaintiff, J. 1). Thomas, of which defendant then and there had notice. On the 3d day of April, 1893, the common council at a special meeting entered an order, that the said allowance and order be set aside and held for naught, and refused and still refuses to pay the same or to levy a tax for its payment. The plaintiff presents an order elated on the 18th day of July, 1892, addressed to the treasurer of the town of Mason, directing him to pay to the order of I). A. Thomas, plaintiff’s assign- or, four hundred dollars for services in smallpox epidemic, signed by the recorder. At a meeting of the common council of the town of Mason on that day, plaintiff’s account, to the extent of four hundred dollars, was audited, allowed and ordered to be paid, and the order in due form of law was issued, signed and delivered.

By Code, c. 99, s. 14, the assignee of this non-negotiable instrument may maintain an action in his own name. Such orders, signed by the proper officers, arq prima facie binding and legal, for the officers will be presumed to have done their duty. Such orders make a prima facie cause of action. Impeachment must come from the defendant. See Dill. Mun. Corp. (4th Ed.) 566, § 502, and note, p. 562. This the defendant undertakes to do, and says: (1) The town of Mason has no authority, express or implied, under its charter or by general law, to levy a tax to support its poor, and that it must bo clearly made to appear that the municipal corporation has such power, before it will be ordered to make the levy to pay the claim demanded. (2) Mandamus in the absence of a statute authorizing it will [530]*530not lie to compel a levy for its payment, before it lias been reduced to judgment, and that we have no snob statute.

Plaintiff, in his alternative writ and petition, says:

“(1) The town of Mason has such power to support its poor and in point of fact exercises it and by reason thereof has not paid or been required to pay any poor levies assessed by the County Court, for the support of the poor outside its corporate limits.
“(2) This debt was incurred in the exercise of the power conferred and the duty imposed by section 28, c. 47, of the Code (see Ed. 1891, p. 426). To prevent injury or annoyance to the public or individuals from anything dangerous, offensive, or unwholesome.
“(3) But if the making of this contract and incurring this debt by the corporate authorities was ultra vires — beyond their power — yet the contract was executed by the plaintiff; and his time devoted to the staying of the spread of this pestilence, and this dangerous and irksome labor gone through, can not be, the one restored, or the other recalled. The town has had his peculiar skill and services, and he can not now bo placed in statu quo. Therefore they are in consideration of this and of their said exemption estop-ped to plead the want of power to contract; and if they can contract they can be compelled to pay.
“(4) Under our statute and our cases mandamus may be used to compel the levy, before the claim is reduced to judgment, because our statute regulating the proceedings in mandamus conforms it in the methods of making up and determining issues of law and of fact to the pleading and practice in an ordinary action at-law ; and, as the town has nothing that can be taken on execution, the judgment is, so far as satisfaction and fruition are concerned, a vain and idle thing leaving him where he started with the burden and delay of resorting to mandamus as his only remedy to compel the payment of his debt. Something not disputed or denied would be established by the judgment — that is all.”

The writ of mandamus is as old as legal memory and has not fallen into desuetude anywhere. It is now largely regulated by statute, and it is the common-law mode of [531]*531compelling specific performance of duties of a public or quasi public nature and duties in other cases, where the law has established no specific remedy, and in justice there should be one. See High, Extr. Rem. (2d Ed.) §§ 1, 2. Where our two methods of procedure, at common-law and in equity, have been blended into one with the rights still distinct — but in case of conflict equity furnishing the rule — the writ of mandamus has quite a large and extended ancillary and supplementary use in the nature of a mandatory injunction in aid of legal proceedings in general. For its character and use, see Dew v. Judges (1808) 3 H. & M. 1; Runkel v. Winemiller (1799) 4 Har. & McH. 429; Dane v. Derby (1866) 54 Me. 95 (89 Am. Dec. 722, 728, monographic note); Coy v. City Council (1864) 17 Ia. 1 (85 Am. Dec. 539, 544, note); Ray v. Wilson (1892) 29 Fla. 342 (10 S. E. Rep. 613, and 14 Lawy. Rep. Ann. 773, and note).

Our statute (Code, c. 109) regulating proceedings in mandamus treats the writ as an ordinary action at law. The proceedings go on as an ordinary common-law suit, til! the parties are at issue in fact or in law; then these are tried as in an action at law between parties. Fisher v. City of Charleston, 17 W. Va. 595; Fisher v. Mayor, etc., Id. 628; Hutch. Treat, p. 899, § 1272 et seq.; 2 Bart. Law Pr. (2d Ed.) p. 1203, § 291 et seq.

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Bluebook (online)
26 L.R.A. 727, 20 S.E. 580, 39 W. Va. 526, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-town-of-mason-wva-1894.