A question presents itself which, I confess, has greatly perplexed me, requiring close thought and nice discrimination for its solution. Does mandamus lie in this case? Until our present election law, called the “Australian Ballot,” courts did not know political parties as such. They had no status as such in legal contests except in congress and other political bodies, but under the new election law they have distinctive legal existence whenever questions arising under it come before the courts.
Two certificates of nomination forjudge of the eighth circuit, emanating from two conventions, each claiming to be the true democratic nominating convention, were presented to the ballot commissioners of Wayne county, each asking a place on the official ballots, in exclusion of the other. The commissioners were bound to decide which should go on the ballots as the representative nominee of that party. They determined in favor of one. The plaintiff seeks to have this Court compel the ballot commissioners to place him on the ballots, thus reversing the action of the ballot commissioners. It is said this can .not be done by mandamus, because the decision by the board of ballot commissioners between the competing nominations involved discretion — involved a decision of facts, a quasi judicial function; and that mandamus does not lie; and that recourse must be had to a writ to review this action — appellate process; and that this writ is certiorari.
*265I admit the doctrine laid down in State v. County Court, 33 W. Va. 589 (11 S. E. 72) that mandamus will not He to control the exercise of the discretion of any court, board, or officer when the act complained of is either judicial or quasi judicial in its nature; that the inferior tribunal may be compelled to act in such case if it unreasonably neglects or refuses to do so, but, if it does act the propriety of its action, however erroneous, can not be questioned or controlled by mandamus — followed in Miller v. County Court, 34 W. Va. 285 (12 S. E. 702) and State v. Herrald, 36 W. Va. 721 (15 S. E. 974). But it is equally well settled that if the act to be performed is not one of legal discretion — that is judicial in nature — but is merely ministerial, mandamus will lie. Board v. Minturn, 4 W. Va. 300; Doolittle v. County Court, 28 W. Va. 158 full note; Dane v. Derby, 89 Am. Dec. 732. It turns, then, on the character of the act. The board of ballot commissioners is not a court, but a merely ministerial body. But is its function of admitting the names of nominees to a place on the official election ballots in nature one of discretion, judicial in nature, or merely ministerial?
A ministerial act is one which a person performs in a given state of facts, in a prescribed manner, in obedience to the mandate of legal authority, without regard to his own judgment upon the propriety of the act being done. Merrill, Mand. § 30; Flournoy v. City, 79 Am. Dec. 468, and note; Security Co. v. Fyler (Conn.) 22 Atl. 494. Chapter 3, Code 1891, provides how nominations for public office shall be made and certified to be put on the ballots, and in section 33, says that it shall be the duty of the ballot commissioners to provide ballots for every election, “and cause to be printed on the appropriate ballot the name of every candidate whose name has been certified to or filed with the clerk of the circuit court in the manner'provided for in this chapter.” Now, I confidently assert that, when a name of a candidate for office so certified comes before this board, it is its bounden duty to put it on the ballot, and that this duty is ministerial, because the board has no discretion as to putting it on. Ministerial is the nature of the duty of the board when but one certificate of nomination is before *266it. But when a second certificate of nomination is before the board, does it at once change the nature of the duty from what it was before, simply ministerial, into one of judicial nature? Here the question is close and difficult. Notice that the above definition of a ministerial act says it is ministerial when the officer or tribunal has no discretion as to the propriety or impropriety of doing the act, -but must do it; that is, when he has no power to say whether he will or will not do the act, it is ministerial; but when he has power or discretion to do or not to do the act, as his judgment on the facts directs him, the act is judicial in nature, not ministerial. Merrill, Mand. §§ 80, 83. Clearly, this board had no discretion to say it would put no name on the ballot, and therefore the general nature of its function was ministerial. But this does not dispose of our trouble, for, though the general nature of making up election ballots by these commissioners be ministerial, yet it does not follow that mandamus inevitably lies; for, “it is not the office of the writ to control discretion even in the act of performing ministerial duties,” says Spell. Mand. § 1395. If, to discharge the ministerial duty, it becomes necessary for the tribunal to decide on law and facts between contesting claims or rights, it becomes judicial in nature. When the two contestant nominees were both before the board, the matter became a lis, a controversy between two parties upon their respective rights, which called on the board to investigate facts, and upon them say which, in the eye of this election law, was entitled to the Democratic place on the ballot. This was then a judicial question, called quasi judicial when the matter is before an officer or a tribunal, not a court; and such a question can not be made the basis of a mandamus at common-law.
As seen above, the definition of a ministerial act says it is one that must be done, without any right on the part of the officer or tribunal called upon to perform it to say whether it ought or ought not to be done. Then what act is that in this case? To solve thiscase we must know what act it is on the part of the board about which it must have no discretion to do or not to do it, which will justify mandamus. Is it the act of the board in putting some name for *267judge on the Democratic ticket? or is it the act of saying which is the true Democratic nomiuee between Marcum and Harvey — in other words the act of putting or not putting Marcum’s name on it, that being the particular act sought to be enforced by the mandamus? If it were the former, mandamus would lie, because the general nature of the duty of putting nominees on a ticket is ministerial; but obviously the particular thing which the mandamus seeks to have done is the insertion of Marcum’s name on the ticket, and as the board exercised discretion as to that because called upon to decide which of the two nominations was the true one entitled to a place on the ticket, that act is quasi judicial, and mandamus could not enforce it under the common law of mandamus. I can see that it may be said that the act of deciding between the two nominations is only what is known in the law of mandamus as a “preliminary question”, and that though the decision of such a “preliminary question,” involve matters judicial in character, that does not exclude the use of this writ, because its decision is a mere incident, leading up to the main function or act, that of making out the ballots, as it must put some name on, and, to do so, must inevitably decide which of these two names it will recognize; and it is the main or ultimate act — the putting a name on — which gives cast to the act.
It is true that, in law, the character of a purely “preliminary question,” though it be judicial, does not test the right to use the writ of mandamus. Merrill, Mand. § 44, says: “It often happens that a ministerial duty exists which may be enforced by mandamus provided certain facts exist. It becomes important to decide whether the determination as to the existence of these facts is a judicial or ministerial act. Hardly a case can be imagined when a public officer or tribunal is required to take action upon the happening of an event or the existence of a certain condition of things wherein there is not some discretion to be exercised as to whether the event has happened, or the condition of things has occurred. * * * Any board or tribunal must determine whether the proper parties are before it, and whether the facts calling for its action exist. If such de*268termination is judicial, and is adverse to taking any action, such officer or board can not be called on to do an act which it is his duty to .do only in case the facts are different from such conclusion, because no judicial determination can be reviewed or overthrown in -mandamus proceedings. If it should be held that in all cases the determination of such preliminary questions calls for the exercise of judicial discretion, the writ of mandamus, as has been often said, might as well be expunged from the remedial code. If such determination is not an exercise of judicial discretion, then the courts can review such determination, and finding the facts to justify the demand, can order the performance of the ministerial act, which is a duty under these circumstances.” Just here I note that this doctrine as to the decision on a “preliminary question,” not rendering an act in nature ministerial, judicial, is asserted by Judge White in Com. v. Justices of Fairfax County Ct. 2 Va. Cas. 9.
Now, apply this law touching a “preliminary question” in this case. What is that preliminary question in this case to which that law applies? It was whether there was before the ballot commissioners a certificate of nomination in the form and with the signatures required by law; for if there was, the event had occurred, or the condition of things existed, giving them jurisdiction to act. The decision of whether it was in proper form, and signed by the proper parties, was the “preliminary question,” just as the question whether a deed presented for record is properly authenticated is a preliminary question to be decided by the clerk, or whether a'surveyor’s report of land sold for taxes is in proper shape, as shown in the cases of Dawson v. Thruston, 2 Hen. & M. 132, and Manns v. Givens, 7 Leigh, 689, and Delaney v. Goddin, 12 Gratt. 266. In deciding on the certificate, questions of law, in greater or less degree, will have to be decided; but they are only on a preliminary question. But, having decided this preliminary question as to one certificate, the board finds a second proper on its face. What then ? Another question springs up: Which is'the one entitled to appear on the Democratic ticket? and it is one which must be decided on facts outside the certificates. The question addressed to the board was: *269Shall Marcum’s name go on the ticket, or Harvey’s ? In the decision of this question the board had right of judgment, because it must put one name on, not both, and that judgment was the result of fact and law. Marcum’s mandamus, seeks to place his name on the ticket, and that is just the act about doing or not doing which the board necessarily had discretion to exercise, and it is judicial in character, and mandamus does not lie, unless the new statute gives it.
I call attention to the fact, as stated by Judge Green in Doolittle v. County Court, 28 W. Va. 158, that the old Virginia cases are not so rigid against mandamus in the application of the rule that it lies only in matters ministerial, as most other states, as is seen from the cases he cites. And I call attention to the case of Dew v. Judges of Sweet Springs Dist. Ct. 3 Hen. & M. 1, holding mandamus to be a proper remedy to compel a court of record to reverse its action in appointing a clerk ill room of another, and restoring that other to his office, which would seem to be a judicial act. Also, Lewis v. Whittle, 77 Va. 415. Judge Green said in the Doolittle Case, that, in deciding on the question whether a duty is ministerial, our courts should be governed largely by the spirit pervading the decisions of Virginia. Judge Green also said it seemed to him that it was the general nature of the main act to be performed being ministerial that tests whether the suit lies, under the Virginia cases, and the act of putting a name on the ballot being ministerial, we might, under the Virginia cases, with force hold that without the aid of a statute, it lies in this case; but as Judge Green said in the Doolittle Case, the Virginia rule needed modification, and as the principle is almost universal elsewhere, forbiddiug mandamus except in purely ministerial matters, and as this Court has often said that such is the true rule, I come to the conclusion that without statute aid, mandamus does not lie in this case. Board v. Minturn, 4 W. Va. 300; State v. County Court, 33 Id. 589 (11 S. E. 72); State v. Herrald, 36 W. Va. 721 (15 S. E. 974); Miller v. County Court, 34 W. Va. 285 (12 S. E. 702).
I now turn to another feature in the case, arising under statute. Section 89, chapter 3, Code 1891, provides that any *270officer resting under any duty under tbat chapter might be compelled to perform it by mandamus from the circuit court, and to promote early decision, dispensed with the usual preliminary rule, and commanded a speedy hearing. That was not, in the opinion of the legislature, sufficiently adequate in its remedial provisions, for in 1893 (Acts 1893, chapter 25) it greatly enlarged that section, by providing, not only that officers under it should be compelled to perform their duties by mandamus from the circuit court, but gave a writ from the Supreme Court “to compel any officer to do and perform legally any duty herein required of him.” It requires the supreme court to convene not later than ten days from the date of the writ to hear it, giving it precedence over other business, and requiring it to be determined within five days. Was it intended to give mandamus only as limited by the common-law before this statute — that is, where the action was ministerial only ? If so, why the need of this provision when the common-law already gave it that scope? Was not something more designed? Did not the legislature reflect that speedy decision was essential in these matters ? The statute shows this in the features above spoken of. May it not be plausibly said that it intended to enlarge the efficacy of the writ of mandamus by adding it to certiorari as a cumulative remedy, because more speedy? In the emergencies arising in election matters, as for instance, in this very matter of making up the ballots, it would not do to wait upon a slow certiorari in the circuit court, and then a writ of error in this Court. The day of election would be past before judgment final. Application to the Court of Appeals by certiorari could not be giveu, because this Court has no original jurisdiction in certiorari as it has in mandamus; and hence recourse was given to mandamus, for the purpose of trying all questions and matters, if in nature reviewable, pertinent to the subject, treating all duties of officers under this act as ministerial for this purpose, giving the writ of mandamus in such instances as cases sui generis. And note that section 89 declares generally that “any officer or person upon whom any duty is devolved by this chapter may be compelled to perform the same by writ of mandamus,” not using the ad*271verb “legally”; but in giving the writ from the Supreme Court, it grants it to compel any officer herein to do and perform legally any duty herein required of him. Why use the word “legally”? The power to compel performance is given in general words in the opening of the section, but later in the section it grows more specific, by using the word “legally,” thus using it sedately. We must give every word a meaning, especially as the lawmaker grew more precise or emphatic by that word. It is an implication quite strong in connection with other features that the officer should be compelled to perform all ■ duties, of every cast, ministerial or judicial, according to law. It seems to me the legislature intended to use, for the sake of speedy final determination in the court of last resort, the only writ available under the circumstances — mandamus as a writ of review to operate as a writ of certior-ari; taking cognizance of all questions arising in the case, if the matter be one in nature at all reviewable on certiorari. The legislature was afraid to risk certiorari in such cases of emergency. If we give the statute any other construction, it would leave parties in many cases in grave matters without relief.
I must be frank to say that in this hastily prepared opinion I have not made a case entirely free from all doubt in my own mind, but it seems better to me than would be a contrary conclusion. And there is this further reflection to give better satisfaction than would a contrary conclusion, and that is that, if Marcum has any right that has been denied, we ought not throw his cause out of court merely because of mischoice of remedy, unless such mischoice be clear. It is always a hard case to deny relief merely because of mischoice of remedy, when the party would have been entertained had he chosen .another form of remedy. Here a dismissal of the writ would be a denial of all relief to which he may be entitled by reason of the nearness of the time when ballots must be printed and the election held.
Question has been raised whether the action of ballot commissioners is reviewable at all in any mode. If not then the most flagrant innocent mistakes and wrongs of in*272tent by an inferior tribunal, hurtful not merely to citizens’ rights as candidates, but to the public, and defeating' the will of political parties, might exist, and there would be no redress. This Court has held supervisors and county courts acting as canvassers in election matters, in several cases, as subject to review; and why should not the action of ballot commissioners be also ? Suppose there were no review, then in Cabell county one candidate would be a party’s candidate forjudge or congress or senate, in Wayne another, in Logan another. But, under the construction of the statute above given, the legislature has made their action the subject of review.
Another question is presented important to decide. There were certain irregularities in the magisterial convention sending delegates to the county convention of Cabell county, and certain irregularities in the county convention which sent two competing sets of delegates to the circuit convention. We are asked to look back as far as, not only the county convention, but the magisterial district convention, and say which set of delegates was the proper delegation representing the democracy of Cabell county. But we can not do so — can not go behind the circuit convention. That convention, like the two branches of the state legislature and congress, like all deliberative bodies having power to organize, is the judge of the election, qualification, and returns of its own members. If we go back of the circuit convention, how far shall we go? What shall limit our inquiry? Must we overlook every convention or primary election to say whether its members were old enough or of the politics to entitle them to participate ? There must be a limit of reason to our powers. That is the convention whose nominations are in question before us. To hold otherwise would be for this Court to assume power to supervise and review the organization of political conventions — practically to organize them.
Coming later to a decision of the case on its facts, without detailing them, we find that a Democratic nominating convention for said circuit assembled,but, owing to controversy, dissension, and disturbance, split into two sections which organized into two separate bodies each claiming to *273be, tbe true convention. Without elaborating this branch of the ease, it is enough to say that the refusal of the ballot commissioners to put a candidate’s name on the ballot is to be taken as right until shown to be erroneous. To warrant in reversing their action, we must see that the convention making the nomination is the convention properly authorized to speak the will of the party it represents, and the case must be made clear enough to say that a given one is that convention. Two clashing conventions may be so circumstanced as to warrant the conclusion that neither is authorized to speak for the party. We hold that neither of these conventions was so authorized. The law is that the writ of mandamus “will not lie unless the relator shows a clear legal right to have the thing done, which he asks for. If the right be doubtful, the writ will be refused.” Merrill, Mancl. § 55. The plaintiff has not shown such clear right, and we therefore refuse the peremptory mandamus.