Court Opinion

ID: 7091328
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:06:26.574896+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:06.199449
License: Public Domain

Weight, C. J.
The writ of mandamus, under the Code, issues to any inferior tribunal, board, or person, to compel the performance of an act which the law especially enjoins as a duty resulting from an office, .trust or station; but it is not to issue in any case, where there is a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy, in the ordinary course of the law. Sections 2179, 2182. In this case, the only question we shall consider, is, whether the relator has this speedy, plain, and adequate remedy, in the ordinary course of law; or, in other words, whether, under the circumstances disclosed in this record, he was entitled to the process prayed for, in order to the ascertainment of his rights. We think he was not. It is not to be denied, that it was the duty of the county court, when the party presented his claim, to pass upon it, and either allow or disallow the same. Having *382failed to so act, however, it by.no means follows that the relator is entitled to a mandamus, to compel it to act.
Under the statute of 1843, (chapter 31), any person having a claim against a county, was required to first present the same to the board of county commissioners for payment, and the party aggrieved, by any decision thereon, was given an appeal. In Wappello Co. v. Sinnamon, 1 G. Greene, 413, it was held, that the common law remedy, by action against the county, was not taken away by this statute, but that the party had his election to either appeal from the decision made, or institute his action in the district or other proper court. In that case, Sinnamon had presented his claim, but, being dissatisfied with the allowance made, instead of appealing, commenced suit before a justice of the peace; and thus the controversy arose. And see Steele v. Davis Co., 2 G. Greene, 469.
The. Code makes each county a body corporate, capable of suing and being sued. Section 93. Under the Code, however, it is not necessary that a claim shall first be presented to the county court. And, therefore, much more clearly, may a party elect to proceed upon his common law remedy, by action against the body corporate. If he may do so upon a claim not previously presented, or if he may do so, as was held in the case above cited, after the court has audited and allowed a part of his claim, and is not required to appeal, much more clearly may he do so, where, as in this case, he has asked that it shall be audited, and the court has refused to act upon it. The county would, by such act of its legally authorized agent, be estopped from claiming that the demand should first be presented to, and audited by, the county court. ¥e conclude, therefore, that the relator had a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy, in the ordinary course of the law, by an, action, in the usual form, against the county, Having1 such, he had no right to resort to this proceeding.
It is suggested, that the county may have no property, from which the judgment recovered could be collected. To this, it may be answered, in the first place, that after *383judgment, the party could have the amount thereof audited, and a warrant drawn and paid from the treasury. In the next place, that the plaintiff might not be able to collect his judgment when recovered, for want of property in the hands of the debtor, cannot enter as an element into this question. If the law gives him a plain, speedy and adequate remedy, by which his claim may be adjudicated, and the amount thereof ascertained and determined, the ability of the debtor to pay the same, cannot become a legitimate subject of inquiry in a proceeding by mandamus. And, finally, it may be suggested, that these views derive additional force from sections 1726, 1895-6-7 of the Code; and that under those sections, a party is given an ample remedy, not only against the county, but also, in case of a neglect of duty, against the officers thereof.
One further remark is, perhaps, necessary. In Clapp v. Cedar Co., 5 Iowa, 15, and in Campbell v. Polk Co., 3 Iowa, 167, it would seem to have been assumed, that unliquidated claims, like the one in this case, must first be presented to the county court, before a party could resort to his ordinary action before another tribunal. No such question, in fact, arose for determination in those cases, and the remarks there made, were probably the result of a prevailing opinion, not controverted by cortnsel, that such was the express requirement of the Code. Anti now, when the question first arises, we would remove any impression which might possibly arise from the language used.
Judgment l’eversed.