Thomas v. Commissioners of Beadle County
Thomas v. Commissioners of Beadle County
Opinion of the Court
This was an application of plaintiff, E, M,
It is not necessary for us to consider either of the questions raised by the appellant, viz., the construction of the statute above cited, or the remedy to be purchased, because, conceding the remedy as followed by the appellant to be the correct one, his petition is fatally defective, in not alleging that the appointing board had knowledge of the fact that plaintiff was an honorably discharged soldier, or that this fact was brought to their attention in any way, at the time the appointment was made. If the statute means anything, or confers any right not common to all citizens in general, it is because of the fact that the applicant was an ‘ ‘honorably discharged soldier of the late war,” and was not physically impaired, and possessed all the necssary qualifications and business capacity to discharge the duties of the office. If the attention of the appointing board was not called to that fact, in some positive and direct manner, at the time it was legally acting on the appointment, it had the right to treat all applicants as standing on an equal footing before the law; and a choice made by it, under such circumstances, must be considered binding. When a statute confers the authority in itself in what manner a party shall be entitled to take advantage of it, he must avail himself of it at the proper time, and in the .form and manner prescribed. This is an old and elementary rule. The petition failing to show that this was done in the case at ■ bar, the decision of the court below in denying the peremptory writ of mandamus is affirmed.
Reference
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- If Sections 2474, 2475, Comp. Laws, confer any rights upon honorably discharged soldiers of the late war, in appointment to office, not common to all legal voters in general, the fact that the applicant for appointment was an honorably discharged soldier of the late war must bo made known to the appointing power at the time and place of appointment. If not, the appointing power has a right to treat all applicants as standing on an equal footing before the law, and a choice made by it, under such circumstances, must be considered binding. (Syllabus by the Court.