Town of Danville v. Blackwell

80 Va. 38, 1885 Va. LEXIS 38
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 8, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 80 Va. 38 (Town of Danville v. Blackwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Danville v. Blackwell, 80 Va. 38, 1885 Va. LEXIS 38 (Va. 1885).

Opinion

FauNTLEROY, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The town of Danville, a municipal corporation chartered by the General Assembly of Virginia, filed its petition in this court, representing that in April, 1884, one Green Banister sued the said petitioner in the corporation court of Danville, in an action of trespass on the ease, seeking therein to recover damages to the amount of $1,000; that on July 28th, 1884, the petitioner, under the act of assembly of March 7th, 1884, in such cases made and provided, gave notice to the plaintiff below of a motion, to be made on the first day of the next September term of the said corporation court, to remove the said cause from the said corporation court to the circuit court of Danville; that after due legal notice to the plaintiff below the petitioner made its said motion on the day designated therefor, and the same was docketed, and continued from time to time, upon arguments of counsel; and the said corporation court, after taking time to consider thereof, did, upon Tuesday, the 9th day of September, 1884, make and enter an order overruling the said motion, and refusing to remove the said cause from the said corporation court to the said circuit court. 'Whereupon the petitioner prayed for a unit of mandamus to be awarded by this court to compel and require the Hon. John D. Blackwell, judge of the said corporation court of Danville, as said judge, to perform the duty made incumbent on him by the statute in this regard, and to remove the said cause from the said corporation court to the said circuit court.

[40]*40Upon consideration of said petition, a rule nisi was ordered by this court, dated at Staunton, on September 26th, 1884, requiring the said JohnD. Blackwell, judge of the corporation court of Danville, to show cause, on November 5th, 1884, before this court, why such peremptory writ of mandamus should not be issued, as prayed for in the said petition of the town of Danville.

In response to this aforesaid rule, the said John D. Blackwell demurred to the petition as being wholly insufficient in law, and made return thereto as follows — to-wit: “ That Green Banister brought his action of trespass on the case to April rules, 1884, against the town of Danville, and the said action came up for trial at the July term, 1884, of his said court, when said town appeared, pleaded, and went to trial; but the jury failed to agree, and the cause was continued to the next quarterly term of the court, which was the October term, 1884, in due course. That the said petition and order recite, so far as they go, the subsequent. motion and proceedings thereon for a removal of the case into the circuit court of the town of Danville, under the Act 1883-84, chapter 320, page 424; but fails to show that the opposition to the motion by the plaintiff, Green Banister, was based upon these grounds — viz: First, The waiver of the defendant town of any right to avail itself of the benefit of the statute, by its appearance at the July term, 1884, and submission to trial; and second, the unconstitutionality of the statute as against public policy, and against the spirit if not in violation of the letter of the constitution; and it appearing that the sole reason for the motion of the defendant town was to hinder, delay, and obstruct the plaintiff in the pursuit of his hvwful remedy, guaranteed to him by the express provision of the constitution; and no cause of removal of any kind being shown or pretended by the defendant town or its counsel, except its bare right under said statute, upon argument, the court denied defendant’s motion, and refused to remove said cause into the circuit court.”

[41]*41The facts set out in the petition and admitted by the demurrer, as well as in the answer or return of respondent to the rule, show that all the circumstances recpiired by the act of March 7th, 1884 (Acts 1883-’84, page 424), exist to bring the petitioner, the defendant town of Danville in the court below, within the terms and intendment of the law, whose express language is: “Section 1. Any motion, suit, or other proceeding, pending in a corporation court, shall he removed, as of right, to the circuit court having jurisdiction of such corporation, on the motion of any party; hut twenty days’ notice of the motion for removal shall be given to the other party or parties, or his or their solicitors or attorneys. And on motion of any party to a suit, motion, or other proceeding, in a county or cor]¡oration court, who desires to remove the same to any other county, circuit, or corporation court than that having jurisdiction over said county or corporation, the court may, after twenty days’ notice to the adverse party or his attorney, order such removal.” The motion for removal of the cause in this case was made under the first clause of the above-recited section of the act of assembly. Tt is express, explicit, unambiguous, mandatory, and imperative — imposing upon the judge of a corporation court the mere ministerial, perfunctory duty to remove the cause, upon the mere motion, as of absolute right, without cause, of any party to the proceeding pending; in the corporation court, upon the one single and sole condition of twenty days’ notice of the motion to the other party or parties, or his or their solicitors or attorneys.

The right of the town, defendant, to have the cause removed was absolute under the statute when the applicant or mover was within the terms or conditions imposed by the statute; and the duty of the corporation court, when so applied to, to remove is equally absolute. It is not optional or discretionary with the court, in such case, whether it will remove the cause or not. Such absolute rights and duties of removal arise and are provided for in certain cases of removal from State to Federal [42]*42courts; in cases of removal from justices to county and corporation courts (Code 1873, chapter 147, section 1); in cases of appeals provided for by Code 1873, chapter 178, section 1, and in Criminal Code, chapter 25, section 2, and others.

To compel the corporation court of Danville to perform this absolute duty, and to obtain for itself the benefit of this absolute right, the town of Danville has no open and adequate remedy but by mandamus. Appeal from the refusal of the court to order the removal would not lie at that stage of the cause; and appeal from the final determination of the cause in the corporation court, if it remain and be tried there, might be, in the language of this court in Brown v. Crippen Wise, 4 H. & M. 173, “too late;” and even then such an appeal wovdd not bring up or secure the revieAV of the order the effects of which the -mandamus is invoked as a remedy for. In Brown v. Qrippen ¿f Wise, supra, Judge Tucker, speaking for the court, said: “The removal of the cause in such a case is a matter of right which ought not to bo refused to any defendant who makes out his case and complies with the terms of the law.” “Being of opinion that the county court refused to perform a duty which was enjoined by law, a mandamus at that stage of the cause was the only remedy. The defendant could neither appeal nor obtain a writ of error or of supersedeas until the final decision of the suit, when it might be too late.”

In the case of Cowan v. Fulton, Judge, 23 Gratt. 579, the circuit judge of Pulaski county made his return to a writ of mandamus nisi,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 Va. 38, 1885 Va. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-danville-v-blackwell-va-1885.