This is an error proceeding to the court of common pleas of Cuyahoga county, seeking a peremptory writ of mandamus against the board of county commissioners of Cuyahoga county to compel it to make an assessment for the cost of paving what is known as Cedar road, in accordance with the terms of a journal entry of the Court of Appeals, made under pleadings where the issues related only to the opening, grading, and draining of Cedar road, and did not in any manner, except as incorporated in the journal entry, relate to the subject of the pavement of the road, which, prior to and at the time of the entry in question, was only in contemplation as to the future and not an existing fact. The journal entry in question is as follows:
"It has been stated in open court by counsel for defendant (the board of county commissioners), that this assessment was made with the intention that it apply to the 35 per cent. rule when the other improvement was made, and if you desire that you can have it in your journal entry." (An injunction was granted as to certain matters.)
"It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the board of county commissioners of Cuyahoga county, Ohio, in determining the amount of, and in confirming and certifying to the county auditor for collection any further special assessments for paving that part of Cedar road extending from Green road to the Chagrin river road, against the lands abutting and fronting on said Cedar road between said points, and which lands *Page 290 are assessed for the grading and draining thereof, shall apportion such paving assessment so that the total amount thereof, levied against such lands abutting on Cedar road between said points, when added to the amount assessed for grading and draining said road, together shall not exceed thirty-five per cent. (35%) of such combined cost of grading, draining and paving said portion of Cedar road."
It is obvious, after an examination of this entry, that the reason for the incorporation therein of the 35 per cent. assessment was because the court suggested that the understanding between the board and the property owners might be incorporated in the journal entry. However, it remains as a fact that this entry with respect to the paving does not respond to the issuance upon which the judgment of the court was based. It is true that under the terms of the journal entry mandamus would not lie to compel an assessment for the pavement of the road, when there were no proceedings for such an improvement pending before the county commissioners, for the reason that the duty enjoined by law upon the board of county commissioners, as to any future action with respect to pavement, must be performed in conformity with the statutes passed by the Legislature for the strict government of the county commissioners in the establishment of improvements by the assessments required by law. A journal entry of the character of the one at issue could not supersede the positive requirements of the statutes governing the action of the county commissioners with respect to the establishment of the road at a time when there were no proceedings for the same pending before that body, *Page 291 and when the question of pavement was entirely a question of the action of the board under the statute at some indefinite time in the future. The journal entry of a court, repugnant to the proceedings of the statute, could in no manner be paramount to the provisions of the law which the board of county commissioners was bound to follow when the time for the improvement came and the necessary preliminary steps were taken.
Mandamus lies to compel the performance on the part of a public officer of a duty enjoined by law. Necessarily this would apply to the provisions of the statute rather than to a journal entry, which relates to a subject not made an issue in the case, and which does not respond in any manner to the record, except that it came from the suggestion of the court to take care of what was apparently an understanding between the board and the relators in the injunction case brought by them, which related only to the opening, grading, and draining of the road.
Again, it is clear that the court is without power, under the statute that existed at that time, to make any judgment that was equivalent to an assessment of property for paving the road, when that function was a duty enjoined by statute upon the board of county commissioners. Therefore, for this reason the court below committed no error in refusing the writ in the instant case.
It appears clear, from the record, that in 1924 the commissioners, following the specific provisions of the statutes and an agreement made by the property owners with respect to pavement, performed all their specific duties relative to the establishment of the road by way of notice to property *Page 292 owners, assessments, collections, and all other matters necessary for the completion of the improvement, and during a long period of time, in which there were public hearings and public notices, the relator took no legal act to restrain the board from proceeding in the manner now complained of instead of according to the terms of the journal entry. It seems reasonable to conclude that at some stage of these proceedings the relator had full opportunity to take advantage of his legal rights by way of injunctive process, or by otherwise litigating the question of the action of the county commissioners in the courts. This was not done, and we think that this situation in the record was sufficient to justify a court of equity in denying the relief sought by the relator in the proceeding in the court below, and the judgment of the court reflecting this situation, in our opinion, has no element of error in it.
Again, if the peremptory writ of mandamus were to be granted herein against the board of county commissioners, what performance of duty remains that the court could enjoin upon the board? The board has done substantially all that the statute requires in relation to the pavement improvement, so that, speaking specifically to the record, the board cannot be enjoined to undo what has been done, when it is too late, by substituting therefor such action on the part of the board as the journal entry apparently directs. This leaves a situation where there is no public duty enjoined by law which the board of county commissioners can be compelled to perform. Therefore, it seems to us that there is but a moot question here presented, and it is well-established doctrine in Ohio that *Page 293 moot questions are of no avail in courts of law. We cite the following authorities: Lewis v. State, 4 Ohio, 389; Tracy v.Card, 2 Ohio St. 431; Pfeifer v. Graves, 88 Ohio St. 473,104 N.E. 529; Pollitz v. Pub. Utilities Com., 93 Ohio St. 483,113 N.E. 1071. Referring to the nullity of the journal entry in question, we cite the following: Southward v. Jamison, 66 Ohio St. 290, 64 N.E. 135; Russell, Adm'r., v. Fourth National Bank,102 Ohio St. 248, 131 N.E. 726.
We reproduce from the latter case a quotation from Ruling Case Law as follows:
"Even where a court has jurisdiction over the parties and the subject-matter, yet if it makes a decree which is not within the powers granted to it by the law of its organization, its decree is void."
These decisions make inapplicable the authority of State exrel. v. Toledo Home Telephone Co., 72 Ohio St. 60, 74 N.E. 162.
The judgment of the lower court is hereby affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
LEVINE, J., concurs.
VICKERY, J., not participating. *Page 294