45 Ga. 85 | Ga. | 1872
This was a petition for the writ of prohibition against the tax collector of Muscogee county, to prevent the collection of twenty cents per gallon on liquors sold by the petitioners, and also to prohibit him “from assessing and collecting from them a tax of $1,000 should they fail to pay said liquor tax,” under the Tax Act of 1869.
The Court refused to grant the writ, (upon what ground is not stated) and his decision is excepted to. As the tax collector distinctly makes the issue in the record that the Court is prohibited from interferring, by Revised Code, section 3618, we presume the decision of the Court is based upon that section. At least, two cases have lately been before this Court, where it was sought to restrain the tax collector by injunction, from collecting taxes alleged to be illegal, in neither of which does the present question appear to have been made, and the Court proceeded to pass upon the merits of the case: Kenney et al., vs. Harwell, 42 Georgia, 416. McCowan, tax collector, vs. Davidson et al., from the Eastern Circuit, July Term, 1871. It might well be that the Executive desired the question made in this shape before the Courts in order to inform his conscience as to whether he should enforce the collection of an alleged illegal tax, and so waived the question of jurisdiction. In the earlier decisions of the Court, however,
Our judgment is, (keeping in view that the effort here is to restrain the collection of a tax due the State, it not being
Judgment affirmed.