State ex rel Diebold Safe & Lock Co. v. Getchell

Decision Date25 April 1893
Citation55 N.W. 585,3 N.D. 243
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court

Appeal from District Court, Eddy County; Rose, J.

Application by the Diebold Safe & Lock Company for writ of mandate to Fred O. Getchell, county auditor of Eddy County. Application denied. Plaintiff appeals.

Affirmed.

Edgar W. Camp, (E. B. Graves of Counsel) for appellant.

Mandamus is proper remedy to compel auditor to sign and deliver a warrant. Merrill on Mandamus § § 126, 121; Lachauce v. Auditor General, 43 N.W. 1005; State v. Tarpen, Auditor, 1 N.E. 209. In issuing warrants the auditor acts ministerially. State v. Ames, 18 N.W 277. The petition alleges that the cells and corridor were delivered to Eddy County. The contract was one the county had power to make, consequently even if the contract was not properly made, yet by user and acceptance the informal contract might be ratified. Bank v. School Dist., 1 N.D. 479; Bank v. School Dist., 6 Dakota 248, 19 Am and Eng. Enc. Law 47, 15 Id. 1102.

J. F Keime, for respondent.

The auditor must certify that the warrant has been issued "pursuant to law" and that "it is within the debt limit." The making of this certificate involves a judicial discretion. Section 187 Const. Debates Const. Con 439-440. Where the act sought to be coerced by mandamus involves an examination, the exercise of judgment or discretion mandamus will not lie. Peo. v. Supervisors, 12 Johns. 414; Peo. v. Auditor, 10 Mich. 307; Tilden v. Supervisors, 41 Cal. 68; State v. Judge, 53 N.W. 433, 3 N.D. 43; High. Ex. Leg. Rem. 45 to 47, 24, 80; Merrill on Mandamus 112. There could be no ratification in this case § 3972 Comp. Laws. Capital Bank v. School Dist., 1 N.D. 486, 494. A public corporation cannot be estopped by the void acts of its agents. Bigelow on Estoppel 530; McPherson v. Foster, 43 Iowa 48; Schaffer v. Bonham, 95 Ill. 368; Ottawa v. Perkins, 94 U.S. 260.

OPINION

CORLISS, J.

The appeal is from an order denying relator's application for a writ of mandamus to compel defendant, as auditor of Eddy County, to attest and certify a county warrant issued by the board of county commissioners, and signed by the chairman thereof. The relator did not secure, in the first instance, an alternative writ, but applied on notice for a permanent writ. The better and more regular practice is to obtain the alternative writ on an ex parte application. The alternative writ constitutes both the process and the pleading in the special proceeding. But it cannot be doubted that there are precedents warranting an application for a peremptory writ on notice without the preliminary issue of the alternative writ, and our Code recognizes this practice. Sections 5520, 5521, Comp. Laws. Accompanying the notice of application for the writ was an affidavit, and in the notice it was stated that the relator would apply for a "writ of mandamus" upon the facts set forth in such affidavit. On the hearing a petition was also filed, embodying, in substance, the same facts embraced in the affidavit. In this petition there was a prayer for a peremptory writ of mandamus. The defendant filed an answer on the return day, and also an affidavit in which were set forth the same facts which were contained in the answer. The contention of the relator in this court is that he applied on this hearing for an alternative writ, and that the court erred in refusing to issue such writ. We do not so construe the record. It is apparent from the record that the parties intended to and did submit to the court all controverted questions of fact upon the pleadings and the affidavits, and upon admissions made in open court after the answer was filed. The order denying the application for the writ recites that there was a hearing of the relator's application for a writ of mandamus at a regular term of court, and that on this hearing these affidavits were read and filed, and that certain facts were admitted by the parties to the proceeding. Why these admissions were made, if the only object was to ask for an alternative writ, it is impossible to discover. The issues to be tried would be formed by the return or answer to the alternative writ, were it intended that such writ should be issued. Why, therefore, make admissions in the application for such a writ? The time for admissions, and the use of affidavits, would be upon the trial of such issues, after the alternative writ had been granted. What possible object could the relator have had in securing an alternative writ? To this writ the same answer would have been made, and the same issues would have been presented for trial which were already before the court for trial in this more informal manner. Section 5520 of the Comp. Laws contemplates that there may be a trial of matters of fact upon the hearing, based upon notice, instead of upon an alternative writ. It provides that when the application is upon notice the peremptory writ may be issued in the first instance. But the peremptory writ will never issue so long as a material fact is in controversy; and if it may issue in the first instance, in such a case, it must be that the court has power, upon the hearing based upon notice, to try and determine all disputed matters of fact. There is no absolute right to a jury trial. The court, in its discretion, may order the issues to be tried before a jury. Section 5522, Comp. Laws.

As we are of opinion that the parties submitted the case on the merits, and that, therefore, the relator asked for a peremptory writ, the question arises whether the court was bound, in any view of the case, to award such peremptory writ. In deciding this question we must assume that the trial judge found in favor of the defendant any and all facts necessary to support his decision, of which there was evidence before him. The county warrant which the relator is seeking to compel the defendant to attest and certify as auditor was ordered to be drawn, by resolution of the board in payment for jail cells and a corridor furnished during the year 1891 by the relator to Eddy County, and put in place by the relator, in the jail of such county, under a contract made in 1891 with the board of county commissioners of such county to pay therefor the sum of $ 1,785. In the answer it is alleged "that neither said sum of $ 1,785 alleged in the petition, nor any part of said sum, could be paid out of the current revenue of said county for said year 1891; that to pay said sum it was necessary to create an indebtedness." And in the defendant's affidavit used upon the hearing it is stated "that the current income of Eddy County in the year of 1891 was not large enough to pay the warrants drawn in that year, and the said county was at that time owing a larger sum of money on unpaid county warrants than one year's revenue...

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