3 La. Ann. 260 | La. | 1848
The judgment of the count was pronounced by
The plaintiffs have enjoined the sheriff of .the parish of Concordia from collecting a tax of five cents per .superficial acre, imposed by the police jury of that parish on certain waste lands, owned by them, within its limits. There was judgment against them in the court below, dissolving the injunction with damages, and they have appealed.
The grounds of injunction are these:
1.That the police jury had no power or authority to enact the ordinance .of the 17th November, 1841, by virtue of which the tax was assessed.
2.That the discrimination in favor of the riparian proprietors, by which in effect they pay less, by two-thirds, of a tax levied for the general benefit of th-e parish, than the other inhabitants, would make the ordinance and assessment of the tax under it illegal and unconstitutional, .even if it possessed the highest legislative sanction.
3.That the tax was never legally assessed .at any certain .or fixed rate., and, even if fixed, was nevertheless illegal and unconstitutional.
The ordinances of the 17th and 19th November, 1841, though unauthorised by law at the time of their passage, became binding for all taxes assessed after the promulgation of the act of the 26th March, 1842, by which those ordinances became laws of the State. The forms pursued by the legislature in their adoption, were the same as those used in the .adoption of the Louisiana Code and of .the .Code .of Practice.
The next point relied on by the appellants is, the irreguality of the tax arising from an ordinance passed by the police jury on the 9th of May, 1845, which provides that the riparian proprietors who have, in front of their lands, levées made according to law, shall be entitled to a credit of two-thirds of the levée tax assessed on their lands. If this disposition was found in the ordinance imposing the tax, and it was held to be an entire ordinance, the illegality of a part of it would annuli the whole, according to the principle recognized in the case of Morgan v. Municipality No. Two, 1 Annual Rep. 111. But those dispositions form the subject of two different ordinances, passed in different years, the last of which is in these words: ‘j Resolved, That the levée tax for the present year be five cents per acre .on .all uncultivated lands, and ten cents per acre on cultivated lands ; and that it be collected in the same manner as the State taxes are collected by law.” It makes 'no reference wbateyer to the ordinance of 1845j and cannot be affected by its illegality.
We are not prepared to say that the dispositions of the ordinance of 1845 are a proper exercise of power, or that they do not fall within the exception reserved in the case of Oakey v. Mayor et al., cited at bar, and in .the añore recent case of Municipality No. Two v. Duncan, 2 La. Rep. p, 1. 2 Annual Rep. Í82.
The broad delegation of plenary and unlimited power to the police jury of this parish, must be understood of course as embracing only such powers as can be rightfully exercised under .a government of laws. We incline to the opinion that the partial exemption from taxation of the riparian proprietors attempted by this ordinance, is not such a power. But. that question is not before us in such a form as will enable us to pass finally upon it. The parties for whose benefit the ordinance was passed are not before the court.
W.e.are satisfied there is no error in the judgment appealed from.
Judgment affirmed.
The act of 26 March, 1842, ,eh. 164, is in .these words :
“ Whoreas the police jury of the parish of Concordia did, at the November session of the said jury, in the year 1841, make and ordain two ordinances, in the following words, to wit:
[Here the two ordinances are transcribed at large.]
“ And whereas doubts have arisen whether the said jury had the legal power to ordain .the same:
Section 1. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Stats
Sec. 2. Be it further enacted, &c.”