Weil v. Black

86 S.E. 666, 76 W. Va. 685, 1915 W. Va. LEXIS 171
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 86 S.E. 666 (Weil v. Black) 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
Weil v. Black, 86 S.E. 666, 76 W. Va. 685, 1915 W. Va. LEXIS 171 (W. Va. 1915).

Opinion

Williams, Judge:

Four indictments were found by a grand jury at the January term, 1915, of the intermediate court of Kanawha county, against defendant in error, two of which purport to charge him, as accessory before the fact, with two several felonious attempts to bribe two designated public officers, members, respectively, of the public service commission of West Virginia, and two, with an unlawful attempt to bribe the same officers.

Following the indictments, defendant in error appeared and gave bond for his appearance in court on the 10th of March, 1915, to answer same. Thereafter, on the 24th of February, and without having answered, or challenged the sufficiency of the indictments, or the jurisdiction of said court, he presented his petition to the circuit court of Kanawha county, praying for a writ of prohibition against the Hon. Henry K. Black, judge of said intermediate court. A rule was awarded thereon returnable on the 5th of March, 1915, summoning said judge to appear and show cause, if any he could, why he should not be prohibited from entertaining jurisdiction of the indictments. The judge appeared by counsel, demurred to the petition and moved to quash the rule, and, after hearing arguments of counsel thereon, the circuit court overruled the motion and demurrer and awarded the writ as prayed for. The reversal of that final order is sought by this writ of error.

Counsel for plaintiff in error deny that prohibition is an available remedy in the premises. They insist that the question of jurisdiction should first have been raised in the intermediate court, and there decided adversely to defendant [688]*688in error, before he had any right to apply for prohibition. Such is not the law of this state. Sec. 1, Ch. 110, Ser. Sec. 4518, Code 1913, reads in part as follows: ‘1 The writ of prohibition shall lie as a matter of right, in all cases of usurpation and abuse of power, when the inferior court has not jurisdiction of the subject matter in controversy, or having such jurisdiction,-exceeds its legitimate powers.”

Before the statute was amended in 1882, by the addition thereto of the language above quoted, Judge G-REEn, a learned and able lawyer and jurist, expressed his view concerning the remedy by prohibition as follows: “The true position, I understand, is that where on the face of the proceedings the inferior court not only has not jurisdiction and the parties cannot by consent or waiver give the court jurisdiction, it may be prohibited from proceeding, though the record does not show that the party praying for the petition, either by motion or suggestion in any manner asked the inferior court to dismiss the proceedings.” Swinburn v. Smith, 15 W. Va. 483, 499. That rule was applied in the following cases: Judy v. Lashley, 50 W. Va. 628; Morley v. Godfrey, Mayor, 54 W. Va. 54; N. & W. R. Co. v. Pinnacle Coal Co., 44 W. Va. 575; City of Charleston v. Littlepage, J., 73 W. Va. 156. True, some of our decisions do hold that a challenge of jurisdiction in some manner, in the lower court, is a condition precedent to the right to apply to this court for the writ. See, Board of Education v. Holt, 51 W. Va. 435, and Jennings v. Judge, 56 W. Va. 146. But it is not an inflexible and arbitrary rule of procedure, and, when this court has applied it, it has only done so as a matter of judicial courtesy to the court sought to be prohibited. City of Charleston v. Littlepage, J., supra, and cases cited in opinion, at pages 159 and 160. Indeed, in view of the statute, giving the writ, “as matter of right, ” we do not see how such a rule can be justified in any ease where it is proper to be issued at all. Prohibition is a remedy given as matter of right, and may be resorted to regardless of the existence of some other remedy. A defendant has the right to elect to pursue it rather than some other remedy he may have.

That the intermediate court is entertaining jurisdiction of the indictments appears from its order requiring bond for the [689]*689appearance of defendant in error to answer, them on a day-fixed. If it is without jurisdiction it bad no right to require him tó appear. In determining the question of jurisdiction it is only necessary to ascertain whether the transactions averred in the indictments, or in any one of them, constitute an offense against the laws of West Virginia. If they do, then the intermediate court had jurisdiction to hear and determine all matters of law arising thereon, and to try the causes in the manner provided by law for the trial of criminal cases. With the technical defects, if any, in the indictments we are not concerned upon this appeal. Those are questions which the intermediate court should pass on in the first instance, if it has jurisdiction in the premises. We are not reviewing the indictments as if upon writ of error to a judgment of conviction. The question we have to decide is, do the indictments allege such matters as show that an offense has been committed, regarding the allegations as true? The indictments are very lengthy, each one occupying about sixty eight printed pages, and it is needless to encumber the reports with a full quotation of any one of them. Two of them purport to charge felonies, and two misdemeanors; and each one of them contains two counts. The matters averred in each are the same, except the name of the officer to whom the offer of money is alleged to have been made. Hence, the substance of one will serve to determine the question of jurisdiction.

Stripped of technical verbiage and reduced to simpler form, one of the indictments, purporting to be for a felony, charges, in substance, as follows: That the public service commission of West Virginia had under investigation certain rates and charges for natural gas, established by the Manufacturers Gas Company, a public service corporation, and seven other named subsidiary gas companies, to become effective on May 21, 1913, in order to ascertain whether said rates were excessive and discriminatory, or were just and reasonable; that on the 22nd of April, 1914, after investigation and hearing, said public service commission lawfully made, entered and promulgated a final order, prescribing a schedule of rates and charges for each of said gas companies, which were to be effective on and after May 1, 1914, and declared it to be reasonable and just, (the indictment incorporating in haec [690]*690verba the final order and schedules prescribed); that it was the official duty of the several members of the public service . commission, four in number, whose names are mentioned in the indictment, to uphold, maintain, and proceed to enforce said final order; that the aforesaid gas companies thereafter brought a suit in equity, in the District Court of the United States for the Northern District of "West Virginia, against the public service commission and its several members, praying to have the aforesaid order declared void, and the enforcement of it enjoined; that on the 29th of July the said United States District Court denied the prayer of the bill, and decreed that the rates fixed by the public service commission should be effective from the time fixed in its order; that complainants in the bill appealed from that decree to the Supreme Court of the United States; that, pending said appeal defendant in error “did, on the 24th of October, 1914, in the city of Pittsburg, state of Pennsylvania, counsel, aid, abet, procure, hire and command” Charles D.

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Bluebook (online)
86 S.E. 666, 76 W. Va. 685, 1915 W. Va. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weil-v-black-wva-1915.