41 W. Va. 602 | W. Va. | 1896
The County Court of Taylor county, 2d July, 1895, allowed and ordered payment of various demands against it,
The county court demurred to the bill, and moved a dissolution of the injunction; but by decree of 30th September the injunction to the order of 8th July, laying the levy, was perpetuated, and the injunction to the order of 2d July, allowing the demands against the county court, and ordering their payment, was continued until a proper levy should be made, the court being of opinion that the said levy was in excess of the sum necessa ry to pay the demands against the county court. Thereupon, on 7th October, 1895, the county court, after making up and entering of record an estimate of the amount to be levied for, ordered another levy, and then filed an answer to the injunction bill, showing this new estimate and levy; and the court, by decree of 9th October, 1895, dissolved the injunction restraining payment of the allowances made by the county court’s order of 2d July, 1895, thus allowing their payment. From both decrees, Armstrong has appealed.
What can he say against the first decree? It gave him a final injunction against the order laying the levy, and he can not complain of that, as he asked that. He complains that this decree did not give him a final injunction against payment of the various claims allowed by the order of 2d July, instead of letting the injunction stand until a proper levy should be made; but it seems improper to allow a sweeping injunction, forbidding payment of all of a large number of allowances to different persons, merely because some are invalid. Why not single out theinvalid? I do not think a levy order itself could be wholly enjoined merely because it goes to pay some particular items not lawful charges on the county, because the objection runs only against those items, and their payment could be stopped without tying up the whole levy, and entailing distress on all the county’s creditors. And he could not ask an injunction without making the creditor of the county—the
The point is made against this decree that this second levy was made while the injunction was yet pending against payment of the claims allowed 2d July, and in contempt of it. Not at all. It was a levy order, not disobeying the injunction; and, besides, the very decree itself allowed a second levy, and only continued the injunction to the county court order of 2d July until a new levy should be made; and besides, further, section 31, chapter 39, Code, allows a second levy when a former one has been superseded by legal proceedings. It is a necessity. It was proper to make it known to the court by answer. Decrees affirmed.