47 So. 409 | Miss. | 1908
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant sued the appellees and recovered a judgment for $8,228 for default in the payment over of the taxes collected by the administrator’s intestate. The appellees ' pleaded the general issue, denying any liability whatever. There was, consequently, no admission of any kind in the pleadings in the case that anything whatever was due the plaintiff. It is true, that looking to the agreed statement of facts, and looking to the correspondence between the attorneys, made an exhibit, and also looking to the course of the trial, especially the evidence intro
The action, be it also specially noted, is one at law, and has no equitable feature about it; and this judgment at law further held that the plaintiff was not entitled to the thirty per centum penalty claimed. Later, after the judgment, the plaintiff coerced, by execution, the payment of the amount of the judgment, $8,228. Still later, the appellant obtained an appeal, not from that part of the judgment disallowing the penalty only, but from the judgment as a whole — the entire judgment. There are several things essential to be borne in mind in order to a correct decision in this case, on this state of the pleadings, in this state. Mississippi is one of the five states of the union which have always rigidly maintained, unwisely, as the writer thinks, the distinction between law and equity, and an absolutely separate chancery system, administered by a chancery court according to the long-settled principles of equity jurisprudence
“If any statute shall provide a punishment of the same character, but of ibilder type, for an offense which was a crime under pre-existing law, then such milder punishment may be imposed by the court, but no conviction, otherwise valid, shall be set aside and new trial granted merely because of an error of the court in fixing punishment; and such error shall only entitle the party injured to vacate or reverse the judgment as to the punishment, and the legal punishment shall then be imposed by another sentence based on the original conviction or plea of guilty.”
“Where the judgment appealed from is for property, real or personal, and damages, the supreme court, finding the judgment to be erroneous as to the damages only, 'may affirm it as to the property and reverse and remand it for a new trial as to the damages, and may adjudge the costs as may be proper.”
The first section (1574) for the first time authorized this court to reverse the judgment in a criminal case as to the punishment and affirm it as to the conviction. This, of course, has no application here; but it shows the trend of legislative thought as to the point before us. Second, the other section (4945) has manifestly no application, since this "is not a judgment for property, real or personal, and damages, in the sense meant by that section. How, now, do the authorities stand ?
We have in our state but one decision on the subject, Meaders v. Gray, 60 Miss., 400, 45 Am. Rep., 414. But that was an appeal from an equity decree, and is not here in point. We have carefully examined all the authorities cited by the very excellent briefs on both sides. We have found several cases apparently maintaining the proposition that, when the plaintiff accepted money paid, he may still appeal, where the object of the appeal is simply to have a judgment modified by increasing his demand, as where sufficient damages had not been allowed, or
Recurring to the judgment in this case, it will be noted that it is a judgment in an action at law in which no equitable feature was involved. That judgment is an entirety. The case of Glover, etc., v. St. Croix County, 71 Wis., 317, 36 N. W., 864, seems directly in point. There the action was to have certain taxes declared void. The court found some $1,800 to be valid, and $314 to be invalid. The plaintiff paid the required sum, $1,800, into court, and the court adjudged that sum to be in -full payment and satisfaction and discharge of- all taxes. This money was paid over, on an order procured to that effect, to the county treasurer, who gave his receipt therefor. The parties who received the money subsequently appealed, and the court
The learned counsel for appellant insists earnestly that he only appealed from that part of the judgment disallowing the penalty, and that all that he seeks here is, not a reversal of the judgment, but a modification of it; but he is plainly in error when reference is had to the proceedings on appeal. His appeal is prosecuted from the whole judgment as an entirety — a judgment, the provisions of which are dependent one upon another. Besides, if we were to pursue the course he indicates, in the face of our-procedure, and reverse a law judgment which is an entirety, and hold that the thirty per cent, penalty should have been allowed, going even that far, we should still be compelled, under our practice, not to enter a judgment here by way of modification for the penalty alone, but to reverse and remand the cause for a new trial. We are dealing with a judgment at law, an entire thing, which has been appealed from as an entirety. ■
In view, therefore, of the case made by the record, and in-view of the wide distinction between the equity and common-law procedure as to this court’s power in reversing an equity decree and a judgment at law, and in view of the absence of any statute such as exists in Kentucky and other states, we are constrained to hold that the plea in bar is well taken. It might be well for the legislature to provide by statute that this -court
The plea in bar is sustained and the appeal dismissed. ■