44 N.J.L. 395 | N.J. | 1882
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The relator, being a judg-
ment creditor of the city of Rahway, applied to the Supreme Court for a mandamus to require the assessors of that municipality to levy the amount so adjudged to be due, in compliance with the supplement to the “ Act respecting executions,” approved March 27th, 1878, (Pamph. L. 1878, p. 182,) and that application having been granted, the object of this writ of error is to review that determination.
The supplementary act thus referred to, being the act upon which the action of the Supreme Court has been based, provides to the effect that when an execution shall have been issued against a municipal corporation, and there shall be no property whereon to levy, the officer authorized to execute such process shall serve a copy of the same, not only on the collector of such municipal corporation, but also on the assessor thereof, and it shall thereupon be the duty of such assessor to assess and levy, in addition to the regular taxes, the amount due upon the said execution, with interest, and that this tax shall be assessed and collected at the same time and in the same manner, and under the same conditions, restrictions and regulations as taxes for other purposes are required to be assessed and collected in such municipal corporation. The defendant in error having conformed in his proceedings under his judgment to the requirements of the law, and the assessor of the city of Rahway having refused to assess according to these statutory provisions, the sum so due, the Supreme Court adjudged such refusal illegal, and, the case having been heard on a return to an alternative writ of mandamus, ordered peremptory process to issue, commanding the assessor to make the assessment in question.
Pirst, then, with regard to the repeal of the supplement of the year 1878.
It is contended that this effect is the necessary result of the enactment of the act entitled “ A further supplement to an act entitled ‘An act for the better regulation of proceedings upon writs of mandamus,’ passed the second day of December, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-four,” approved March 8th, 1880. The regulations established by this law are to this effect: that whenever application is made for a writ of mandamus to require a municipal corporation to raise, by taxation, any judgment against it, the court to which such application shall be made shall, at the request of such municipal corporation, upon a rule to show cause, or upon affidavits, or otherwise, ascertain and determine, (1) the total indebtedness of such corporation, the time when payable, and the rate of interest payable thereon; (2) the real value, for purposes of taxation, of the taxable property within such corporation; (3) the amount required to be raised within such corporation for necessary expenses for municipal and other purposes during the current year; and (4) the highest rate of taxation capable of being imposed on such corporation without injury to the interests of the creditors of the corporation whose claims are not yet due. The second section of this act is in these words: “That it shall not be lawful to require any municipal corporation, by mandamus, to raise for any such judgment, in any one year, more than such sum as, in addition to the amount found to be required for necessary expenses as aforesaid, will be raised in such municipal corporation by imposing the highest rate of taxation, as determined
The Supreme Court refused to execute this statute, on the ground that it deprived the defendant in error of a remedy for the enforcement of his contract on which his judgment is founded, existing at the time when such contract was made, and was, consequently, repugnant to the constitution of this state and to that of the United States.
In order to understand the question thus presented for our consideration, it is necessary to look at the legislation in force at the date of the transaction between these litigants, which subsequently took the form of the judgment in question.
It appears in this case, and it is admitted, that the debt which the defendant in error recovered against the city, accrued on four certain writings obligatory, and on certain interest warrants and coupons thereto attached, issued by the city of Rahway and under its seal, and delivered to the defendant on the 1st days of September and October, respectively, in the year 1875; as, therefore, it thus appears that the supplement to the Execution act, and which provided for an assessment in favor of a judgment creditor upon service of a copy of the execution on the assessor, was not passed until the year 1878, and was thus subsequent to the time of the contract, such supplement could be no bar to the enactment of this essentially inconsistent act of 1880. The pertinent legislation which was in operation on the 1st days of September and October, 1875, the dates of these contracts, was the following, viz., by section 47 of the charter of the city of
It thus appears that at the point of time at which the defendant in error became the creditor of the city, his remedies, in default of payment of his debt, were these: first, seizure under execution on leviable property belonging to the city; second, service of a copy of his execution on the collector of the city, and payment out of the first corporate moneys coming to his hands; third, in case the city council refused to impose a tax in order to raise money to pay the judgment, an appli- . cation to the Supreme Court for a mandamus.
As the first and second of these remedies have not in any wise been disturbed or affected by legislative interference, and as they are entirely inefficacious in the present instance, they will be laid out of the discussion. It is the third mode of redress, the municipal power of taxation enforceable by mandamus, which exclusively demands our attention.
By section 7, paragraph 3, of article IV. of the constitution of this state, it is declared that “ the legislature shall not pass any bill of attainder, ex post facto law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts, or depriving a party of any remedy for enforcing a contract which existed when the contract was made.” This last clause relative to the remedy appears to
Assuming for the moment, for the purpose of exposition, that the authority to impose taxes in order to pay the public debts of the corporation, as it was lodged in the common council when these bonds were issued, was irrepealable, so far as related to past debts; that the defendant, as a creditor, had the legal right to require, by the means of a mandamus, such right of taxation to be put into effect in his favor, there would seem to be no reasonable ground for a doubt that this law of 1880, just referred to, is an invasion of the constitutional rights of the bondholder. Viewing the matter from the standpoint of the assumptions just stated, it would obviously follow that having originally a complete and highly effective remedy, the creditor has been turned over to a remedy utterly inadequate and altogether precarious; for, instead of a right to a judicial order upon the municipal authorities to raise, by taxation, the amount of the moneys due him, he is, by this later legislation, enforced to accept, from year to year it may be, a quota of such sum as a judicial tribunal may, in its discretion, declare can be realized from taxation without injury to the interests of creditors whose debts have not matured. The substitution of such a means of redress as this latter one
These are the issues which were the principal matters of discussion before this court, and which have been treated with much acuteness and force of reasoning in the briefs of the respective counsel.
The first argument that was urged in behalf of the plaintiff in error was, that the power to tax, with which this city council was clothed at the dates of these contracts, was a discretionary power, the charter providing that this body, in each year, should be empowered to raise such sum or sums of money as it “ should deem expedient ” for the purpose designated. It was insisted that this reference to the judgment of the council as to the expediency of raising any given amount of money in a particular year, put the matter entirely in its discretion and removed it beyond the supervisory control of the courts. But the words thus emphasized are, in truth, valueless for any legal purpose, for if they should be entirely erased from the sentence in which they stand, the sense of the clause would remain unaltered. Every legislative grant to a municipal body to exercise the power of local taxation, carries with it, unless the terms of such grant are restrictive, the authority to levy such an amount of moneys for the public uses as such body may deem expedient. In almost all instances the sums to be raised are left to the judgment of the taxing body. But such judgment cannot be capriciously exercised, and must be conformed to those standards of conduct which are the acknowledged measures of legal obligation. If it seeks to violate such principles the judicial tribunals are bound to intervene. A municipality, so long as the ability and the
■ Another consideration considerably pressed upon the attention of the court against the enforcement of the taxing power to pay this judgment was, that such judgment is founded on a bond which was issued to raise money to pay for municipal improvements, and that in the charter of this city there is á special provision that the costs of such improvements shall be assessed upon the owners of lands upon the line of the street so improved. It is true that such a provision is to be found in the charter of this city, but such provision, as is conclusively established by the existence of the judgment in this case, was not of such a character as to compel this creditor to resort to it as the sole means provided for the recovery of his debt. Had such been its effect, it would have afforded a defence to the action which has resulted in this judgment. Under the circumstances now exhibited, the inference is one of law that this bondholder, when he entered into his engagement with the city, had the right to look, for the repayment of his money, not only to the supposed ability of the municipal authority to impose a special tax on the lands benefited by the improvement, but, as well, to its other sources of revenue. That these bonds, even if they are to be assumed to be of the class known as improvement bonds, as was alleged by counsel, must now be held to have imposed a general liability upon this corporation, is plainly ruled by the case of United States v. New Orleans, 98 U. S. 381. But, in point of fact, the argument upon this head is as irrelevant as it is untenable, for there is nothing which appears in any wise before this court which serves to show that the debt, of which these bonds were the evidence, was in any respect connected with any local im
But it was further urged, iu opposition to this judgment in the court below, that the writ of mandanus is not, in a constitutional sense, “ a remedy for enforcing a contract,” and that if it be such remedy it is a discretionary writ, and finally, that the power of taxation confided to a municipal corporation could, unless in certain exceptional cases, be withdrawn or modified at the pleasure of the legislature.
The proposition that the writ in question is not a remedy for the enforcing a contract is, it seems to me, plainly inadmissible. It is true that it is not one of the usual methods for that end, but it is one of the extraordinary instrumentalities. If a judgment should be obtained in an inferior court, and such court should refuse, without legal reason, to issue an execution upon it, the mandamus compelling such action would be as much a remedy for enforcing such contract as would be either the judgment or final process. And so in many other cases which might be enumerated. That a municipal corporation owing a debt will, under common circumstances, be compelled by the use of this power to procure the funds to defray such debt, is a well-known procedure, and in-such instances I see no reason for the assertion that this writ is not strictly a remedy for the enforcement of an agreement. The contention is not countenanced by authority and is not sustainable.
With regard to the position that the writ is one resting in the discretion of the court, and that therefore it will not be issued when, on the whole, its effect would be detrimental to public interests, it is to be observed, in the first place, that a concession of the tenability of such position could not purge this act of 1880 from the taint of unconstitutionality. Even on the assumption designated, such act would impair the remedy, as its effect is to hem in and weaken the power of the
I turn, then, to the last exception taken to the proceedings in the court below, and that is that the taxing power of this city, as it existed at the time when these contracts were entered into, was repealable at the will of the legislature, and that, consequently, the modification of such power made by the act of 1880 was constitutional.
The argument on this branch proceeded on the ground that, as the franchise to lay taxes was a part of the prerogative of the state, it could not be implied that a municipal corporation to which a portion of such prerogative was granted, had, by merely entering into a contract, imposed upon itself an obligation to use such franchise in the fulfillment of its stipulations. It was insisted that the cases in the United States court have gone no further than to hold that the legislative control over the municipal capacity to impose taxes continued nntrammeled, except in cases in which such capacity had entered into the contract sought to be enforced by way of security for its performance, or where a judicial order had been made for the exercise of such power in a particular case, before its revocation by the legislature. It is not to be denied that this position has some color of legality from certain ex
From these extracts from this opinion, it will be perceived that what is decided is this : that when a municipal corporation is in possession of a general power to lay taxes for the payment of its debts, and such corporation, so circumstanced, enters into a contract for the payment of money, such taxing
It is not perceived how this reported case is to be distinguished from the case now before us for decision, and as, upon the subjects involved, its determinations are of imperative and indisputable authority, such subjects must, as it is conceived, be considered to be res adjudieata.
With respect to the complaint that the court below refused to consolidate the proceedings in the several writs of mandamus, in conformity with the requisition to that effect contained in the act of 1880, it is sufficient to say that such matter has not been placed before this court by this writ of error. It is not shown that a motion to consolidate these cases was made in the Supreme Court, or that any judgment was passed with respect to that subject.
The judgment is affirmed.
For affirmance—The Chief Justice, Depue, Knapp, Scudder, Yan Syckel, Clement, Cole, Whitaker, Green. 9.
For reversal—None.