34 Mich. 123 | Mich. | 1876
Hpon full consideration the court fail to see any distinction in principle between this case and others decided formerly. After the reception by Mr. Bera, as township tfeas■urer, of money for the public,.it may be assumed to have-been taken from him by robbery, as he claims, and there would seem to be no doubt about its having been so taken
Whatever may be said in favor of the moral fitness of the purpose to relieve Mr. Bera, there can be no doubt of complainants’ right to question their legal obligation or liability in the premises, nor of their right to escape payment if not liable; and that as matter of law they were not liable appears to the court to have been settled • beyond controversy. A repetition of the reasoning of former cases is not necessary, and if further reasons might be added, they are not called for.
The objection based on the joinder of complainants who are separate tax-payers is answered by Scofield v. Lansing, 17 Mich., 437; and the more important question concerning the constitutional validity of the act of the legislature is distinctly determined in accordance with the position taken by complainants in The People v. The Supervisor of Onondaga, 16 Mich., 254. The decision there made and this enactment cannot stand together, and in the opinion of the c'ourt that case was correctly decided.
It follows that the act for raising the tax is not war