City of Lowell v. Oliver

90 Mass. 247 | Mass. | 1864

Bigelow, C. J.

We have not deemed it necessary to determine the preliminary question, whether a writ of mandamus is a proper remedy, which this court has power to enforce against the respondent in his official capacity, for the purpose of redressing a grievance like that which is set forth in the petition of the relators. The main questions at issue between the parties have been very fully and ably discussed at the bar. We have given to them very careful consideration, and, having arrived at conclusions which are decisive of the merits of the case, we have not stopped to discuss a question which is immaterial to the final disposition of the cause.

The ground on which the relators put their claim to relief is in substance, that they are entitled to receive from the respon dent, as treasurer of the Commonwealth, the full sum of eighty-three thousand dollars, being the amount or proportion due to them for moneys advanced in aid of the families of persons, *251inhabitants of Lowell, who had enlisted and been duly mustered into the military service of the United States; that this sum is due to them under the several acts of the legislature set out in the writ, as appears by the roll kept by the respondent, in which the relators are credited therewith as their share of the whole sum to be paid and distributed among the several town* and cities of the Commonwealth, according to a warrant of the governor drawn on the first day of December last. The right of the relators to receive this sum is denied by the respondent, on the ground that there is due to the Commonwealth from said relators and unpaid by them the sum of about twenty-two thousand dollars, being the balance due from said city of the tax apportioned to and to be assessed' by said city for the reimbursement by the Commonwealth of bounties paid by cities and towns to volunteers under St. 1863, c. 218, after deducting the amount of reimbursement to which said city is entitled according to the provisions of the same act; that the Commonwealth has a right to deduct from the sum of eighty-three thousand dollars, due to said city as aforesaid, the above balance of about twenty-two thousand dollars; that this right is denied by the relators; that there is, by reason of such conflicting claims, an unadjusted account between said relators and the Commonwealth, within the meaning of Gen. Sts. c. 15, § 32, and that the governor of the Commonwealth, having received satisfactory information that said sum of about twenty-two thousand dollars is illegally withholden from the state by said relators, has instructed the respondent to withhold all payments of money to them, in pursuance of the provisions of the statute last cited.

To the answer of the respondent, setting out these grounds of defence to the claim of the relators, they reply that it shows no valid or legal excuse for the refusal of the respondent to pay them the sum to which they are entitled for aid furnished to the families of volunteers, and they allege various reasons on which they rely and insist to show the insufficiency of said answer and the validity of their claim. The first and most important one is, that the provisions of St. 1863, c. 218, directing an apportionment and assessment of a tax to and among the several *252cities and towns of the state for the reimbursement of bounties paid by them to volunteers are unconstitutional and void, and that no claim can be justly made on them by the respondent in behalf of the Commonwealth for any portion of said tax. In considering this grave objection to the statute, it is necessary to have distinctly in mind that by the constitution the right to impose and levy taxes is vested in the legislature in very broad and comprehensive terms. The framers of that instrument were not unmindful of the necessity of providing that the government which they were about to establish should possess, within the sphere in which it was designed to operate, those powers which are essential to sovereignty, and to vigorous and efficient action. They were also well aware, by the experience through which they had passed, that the power of imposing taxes, though inherent and necessary as a means of supporting and carrying on a government, was a difficult and delicate one, always regarded with jealousy by those on whom it is to be exercised, and concerning which there should be clear and explicit provisions in the frame of government, in order that there should be no doubt or dispute, either as to the existence of the power or as to those to whom the authority to use it was delegated. It was therefore deemed important to declare, among the fundamental principles on which the government was to be based, that no subsidy, charge, tax, impost, or duties ought to be established, fixed, laid or levied, under any pretext whatsoever, without the consent of the people or their representatives in the legislature.” Declaration of Rights, art. 23. The right thus recognized and declared was secured by a corresponding provision in the frame of government. In creating and establishing the legislative department, it is provided, among other things, that full power and authority are given and granted to the general court to impose and levy proportional and reasonable assessments, rates and taxes upon all the inhabitants of, and persons resident and estates lying within the said commonwealth; .... to be issued and disposed of by warrant under the hand of the governor of this commonwealth for the time being, with the advice and consent of the council, for the public service, in the necessary *253defence and support of the government of the said commonwealth, and the protection and preservation of the subjects thereof, according to such acts as are or shall be in force within the same.” And it is further provided that, “ in order that such assessments may be made with equality, there shall be a valuation of estates' within the Commonwealth, taken anew once in every ten years at least, and as much oftener as the general court shall order.” Const, of Mass. c. 1, § 1, art. 4; § 2, art. 2. From these provisions, it is apparent that the power of the legislature as to the imposition of taxes is clearly defined, and that the delegation of authority, although very full and ample, and, from the nature of the subject matter, expressed in general terms, is nevertheless subject to restrictions, which are embraced under three heads or divisions. The first is, that the taxes imposed must be proportional and reasonable; the second is, that they must be laid according to a valuation of all estates in the Commonwealth, made within the current decade; and the third and last is, that they shall be levied for objects which are within the general purposes enumerated in the clause of the constitution already cited, for which public money may properly be expended.

We do not think it material, in the present case, to inquire how far it is competent for the judicial department of the government to interpose its authority to prevent the collection or payment of a tax, on the ground that the legislature in imposing it have transcended the limits within which it is empowered by the constitution to act. It may be questionable whether some of the restrictions which the constitution imposes are not in their nature directory, designed as a guide for the discretion of the legislature, and not as an absolute limitation on its powers. For example, is it within the province of this court to decide whether a tax is reasonable, and, if in their judgment it is not, to overrule the action of the legislature, and declare the statute imposing it unconstitutional and void? Could such a power be exercised without trenching on another explicit provision of the constitution, that the judicial department shall not exercise legislative powers ? Declaration of Rights, art. 30. But *254waiving these and other similar questions, the answers to which are not material to the decision of the present case, and assuming that this court has the power to afford a remedy to the relators, if their alleged grievance is well founded, we have only to inquire whether the statute in question is obnoxious to the objections urged against it, as being an unauthorized and invalid exercise of the power of taxation intrusted to the legislature The tax which it imposes certainly cannot be said to be disproportionate or unequal. It is imposed in exact accordance with the provisions of the constitution and laws. It is levied on all the polls and estates in the Commonwealth, according to the last decennial valuation, in the same manner as the aggregate of the annual state tax is apportioned for the current year. And it is now conceded by the learned counsel for the relators, that the respondent has calculated with fidelity and accuracy the several sums for which each city and town is liable to assessment on the basis prescribed by the statute. Where then is the inequality or disproportionate assessment of which the relators complain 1 If we understand the argument on this point urged in behalf of the relators, the objection is not that the tax was not apportioned and laid in a proper and legal mode, but that the money which is to be raised by means of the tax is not to be distributed or paid out of the treasury of the Commonwealth among the several towns proportionally or equally; in other words, that it is to be disbursed neither according to the valuation of the property in the several towns, nor yet according to population, but that the basis of distribution is the number of enrolled soldiers enlisted as volunteers from each town in the service of the United States under the calls of the president issued in July and August 1862; and that even on this basis the distribution of the money is unjust and unequal, because the several towns do not receive the same sum for each enrolled soldier furnished by them, but only the amount of bounty actually paid to such soldier, and not even that, if it exceeds one hundred dollars. Conceding that this is a true statement of the mode of distribution of the proceeds of the tax, as prescribed by the act, we are at a loss to see in what way this alleged *255inequality of distribution affects the validity of the tax itself. We know of no provision either in the constitution or laws which requires payments to be made from the public treasury according to any principle of apportionment or equality. If the tax is duly apportioned and levied, and the purpose for which the money is raised is within the purview of the objects enumerated in the constitution, for which the funds in the treasury may be drawn out and expended, there is certainly no violation of any restriction, either express or implied, on the power of the legislature. On the contrary, within the sphere of action prescribed by the constitution, the authority of the legislature is supreme. The mode or amount of appropriation of public money for legitimate objects is exclusively a matter of legislative discretion, which can neither be regulated nor controlled by the judicial department of the government.

This brings us to a consideration of another objection to the validity of the tax in question, which has been suggested by the learned counsel for the relators. Starting with the admitted proposition that the disposition of money raised by the legislature by means of a tax is expressly limited by the provision of the constitution already cited, c. 1, § 1, art. 4, the relators insist that the proceeds of this tax are not appropriated for a purpose which comes within the fair scope of this provision. If this be so, then it is also true that the money which the relators seek to recover of the Commonwealth, and by means of these proceedings are endeavoring to have the respondent commanded to pay over to them, has been unlawfully appropriated by the legislature, in violation of the same clause of the constitution as that on which the relators rely to establish the invalidity of the disposition of the proceeds of the tax which they refuse to pay. It certainly needs no argument to sustain the proposition that, if it is an excess of authority in the legislature to appropriate money raised by taxation for the payment of bounties to volunteers enlisted in the service of the United States, or to reimburse towns and cities for such bounties advanced by them, a fortiori, the payment of money from the public treasury in aid of the support of the families of such volunteers, or to refund *256to towns and cities the sums advanced by them for such purpose, is unlawful and without authority.

But it is not necessary to put this part of the case on so narrow a ground. The objection on which the relators insist is open to a more comprehensive and decisive answer. The use of the money to be raised by the tax in question for the purpose for which it is appropriated by the statute is within the letter of the constitution, as well as its spirit. It is in the strictest sense a disposition of the money “ for the public service, in the necessary defence and support of the government of the said commonwealth, and the protection and preservation of the subjects thereof.” These words are not to be interpreted with reference merely to the reciprocal duties and obligations subsisting between the government of the state as established by the constitution of Massachusetts, and .the people of the Commonwealth as the subjects of that government. By the ratification and adoption of the constitution of the United States, a portion of the allegiance which each citizen originally owed exclusively to the government of the state was transferred to that of the United States. The government and people of the state became thereby bound to defend and support the national government, and to bear their part or proportion of the burden of “ protecting and preserving ” it from the assaults of domestic foes as well as of foreign enemies. To the extent of the new relation thus created and the new duties and obligations thus assumed, the provisions of the constitution must be deemed to have been modified and changed, in order that the two governments, each supreme within its appropriate sphere of action, might be adapted to each other and work harmoniously together. No one can doubt that it would have been competent for the legislature to expend money raised by taxation for the purpose of supporting and defending the government of the state against treason and rebellion, while the whole sovereignty was vested in it under the constitution of Massachusetts. It certainly cannot be deemed to be an excess of authority or an illegitimate use of the public moneys, to appropriate them to the preservation and protection of the government to which a *257portion of that sovereignty has been transferred, against similar attempts to weaken and destroy it.

Nor do we see any force in the suggestion that the appropriation of the money raised by the tax in question was unlawful or unauthorized, because it was designed to reimburse payments already made by towns and cities, and not for the purpose of meeting present exigencies or discharging prospective liabilities of the Commonwealth. If the object of the appropriation is a legitimate one, it is quite immaterial whether the money has been actually expended and the tax is laid to pay a debt previously incurred or for the reimbursement of sums advanced by third persons for a public object, or whether it is to anticipate expenditures which the future requirements of the public service may render expedient or necessary. We can see no valid distinction in principle between a right to raise money for a specific object yet to be accomplished, and a right to raise it to defray the expense of the same object after it has been attained.

To the further objections urged by the relators to the validity of the tax, that it is apparent that the legislature did not intend that any tax should be levied under the statute, and that in effect the provisions of the act are designed only to declare that a certain class of towns is indebted to a certain other class, it is a sufficient answer to say that these grounds of objection are not only contrary to the letter of the statute and its clear and explicit enactments, but that they can be supported only by imputing to the legislature a want of good faith and fair dealing for which we can see no warrant whatever.

Two objections of minor importance were urged in behalf of the relators in support of their claim to a writ of mandamus, which may be briefly disposed of. One is, that it was impossible to add the tax, which the statute imposed, to the county and city taxes for the year 1863. But the facts disclosed do not support this objection. It only appears that the county and city taxes had been made up and committed to the treasurer of the city for collection. It is not shown, however, that he had taken any steps to collect those taxes, nor that the warrant to him might not have been recalled for the purpose of adding the *258tax which the relators were directed to levy by the warrant of the treasurer of the Commonwealth in pursuance of the provisions of the statute. It is also alleged that the time allowed to the assessors of the city of Lowell for the assessment and collection of the tax in question was unreasonable and insufficient. No facts are shown which sustain this allegation. We cannot judicially know that the time between the receipt of the warrant from the treasurer of the Commonwealth and the day when the tax was due and payable to the state was not amply sufficient for its assessment and collection.

The only remaining objection ¡is, that the respondent was not justified in withholding from the relators payment of the full sum demanded by them, under the instructions of the governor. This objection is put on two grounds. The first is, that no authority is vested in the governor to give such instructions to the treasurer of the Commonwealth after a warrant has been drawn by the governor with the advice and consent of the council, and delivered to the treasurer. But such power is expressly conferred on the governor by Gen. Sts. c. 15, § 32, wherever there is an unadjusted account between the Commonwealth and the person claiming money from the treasury. The exercise of this authority thus vested in the governor does not give him the power to set aside the warrant of the governor and council. That remains in full force. The effect of the instruction which the governor is authorized to give is only that the sum due from any person to the Commonwealth shall be taken in payment of the amount due to him under such warrant. The statute merely provides for an equitable adjustment of claims due to and from the Commonwealth.

The other ground is, that the governor is authorized only to direct the treasurer to withhold all payments of money to any person with whom the Commonwealth has an unadjusted account, and that this authority was not duly exercised in the present case, because the order from the governor only directed the treasurer to withhold from the relators the amount due to the Commonwealth, and to pay to them the balance after deducting that sum. But the greater includes the less. An *259authority to instruct the treasurer to withhold an entire sum includes the power to retain a portion of such sum. But were it otherwise, in the exercise of our discretion we should certainly refuse to interfere by mandamus to order the respondent to pay over to the relators the entire sum which they claim, in a case in which it is made satisfactorily to appear that they are not justly entitled to receive it.

Upon the whole case, confining the expression of our opinion to the grounds of objection to the validity of the tax urged by the relators, our judgment is that they are not entitled to the writ. Peremptory mandamus refused.