Lewis v. Board of County Commissioners

POLLEY, P. J.

The defendants in this action are the members of the board of county commissioners of Brown county. At the regular January, 1920, meeting said board designated the Brown ’County Journal as one of the official newspapers, of said county for the year 1920. Plaintiff, wjho is the owner, editor, and publisher of said newspaper, accepted the appointment, and said newspaper, became and was one of the official newspapers of said county and continued to be such until the 2d day of June, *61920, when said' board at an adjourned April meeting, without any notice to plaintiff, adopted a resolution as follows-:

“Whereas, the Brown County Journal, heretofore designated as one of the county official newspapers has expressed dissatisfaction with said arrangement, be it resolved that the designation of said paper as an- official paper be and is rescinded and canceled, and in lieu thereof be it further resolved that the Claremont New Era be and hereby is designated as an official paper from and after the date hereof.”

Plaintiff, claiming that the board of county commissioners was without authority to act upon the matter of designating official newspapers or to cancel the designation of plaintiff’s paper and fill the vacancy caused by such cancellation at the above named- time,-sued'out by a writ of certiorari from- the circuit court of Brown county directing the -defendants to certify to said court all proceedings concerning the removal of said Brown County Journal from! the office of official paper of said county and the appointment in lieu thereof of the Claremont New. Era.

[ 1, 2.] It is contended by respondents that -certiorari is not appellant’s proper remedy, that the order complained of by appellant is an appealable order, and that therefore certiorari does not lie:

Section 5886, -Code 1919, provides that an appeal shall be allowed to the circuit court, by any person aggrieved, “from, all decisions of the 'board of- county commissioners upon matters properly before it.” This does not allow appeals from all decisions -of the- board, but only from decisions upon -matters properly before it, and it is the contention of appellant that the matter upon which the d'ecision com-plained of was made was not properly before the board, and therefore is not appealable.

By section 2996, Code 1919, certiorari will lie when inferior tribunals have exceeded their jurisdiction and there is no appeal nor, in the judgment of the court, any other plain, speedy or adequate remedy.

Chapter 151, Laws 1919, provides that—

“At first regular meeting in January of each year it shall be the duty of the Board of County Commissioners to designate three legal' newspapers printed in the county as official newspapers. * * * ” - ■

*7There is no provision miade for the hoard to: act on the matter of designating official newspapers' at any other time than the first regular meeting in January, and it is appellant’s contention that the board is without authority to act on such matters at any other time; in other words, that the matter could' not be properly before the 'board at any other time, and that therefore, under the provision of section 5886, an appeal does not lien and certiorari is the only remedy. In this contention appellant is clearly right. Whether the board of county commissioners would have authority to act on the matter of designating official newspapers at a time other than the first regular meeting' in January, if for any reason it became necessary to fill a vacancy at any other time, need not be determined in this case. The law prescribes a certain dtaty for the board to perform and fixes the time when such duty should be performed. This duty had been performed at the timie and in the manner specified by law. This left the board without authority to take action on the matter at the time it attempted to rescind the designation of plaintiff’s paper, and such attemped recission and designation of the Claremont New Era as an official newspaper was void. 29 Cyc. 696; Hall v. County of Ramsey, 30 Minn. 68, 14 N. W. 263; Finnegan v. Gronerud et al., 63 Minn. 53, 65 N. W. 128, 348. Appellant’s paper had -been regularly designated as the official newspaper for the period of one year. The statute prescribes certain services to be performed by him and a fixed compensation to be received for such services. It is not claimed that appellant’s paper was not a legal newspaper nor that appellant did not in all respects comply with the law. It is true it is recited in the resolution that the appellant was dissatisfied with the arrangement, but this furnished the board no ground for acting upon the matter or for canceling the appointment. It is not being claimed that appellant failed or refused to properly perform all the services required by law, therefore the board had no right to take any action in the matter, and the same was not and could not be properly before the board at the time the action complained of was taken. 'For this reason the decision is not appealable tinder the provisions of section 5886, and there being no other plain, speedy, or adequate remedy certiorari is the proper remedy. From this it follows that the attempted- rescission and cancellation by the board on the 2d day of *8June, 1920, of the designation of appellant’s paper as one of the official newspapers of Brown county for the year 1920 was unauthorized and void, and should have been set aside 'by the circuit court.

The judgment appealed from is reversed, and the case is remanded to the circuit court, with directions to enter judgment in conformity with the views expressed in this opinion.