61 Ind. 445 | Ind. | 1878
Suit hy the appellant, against the appellee, to recover back one hundred dollars, paid hy the former to the latter.
The complaint alleges, that the appellant was duly licensed by the board of county commissioners, to retail spirituous, etc., liquors; that the town of Salem passed an ordinance requiring a license from said corporation to retail, for which the sum of one hundred dollars was to be paid; and that, “hy reason of threats and menaces of defendant’s officers, to prosecute him under said ordinance, and in fear of arrest, fine and imprisonment,” etc., he did involuntarily pay said sum of one hundred dollars, for which he asks judgment, etc.
A demurrer to the complaint was sustained.
Final judgment for the appellee.
The ruling upon demurrer is assigned for error in this court.
The ruling was not erroneous. The Town of Brazil v. Kress, 55 Ind. 14, and cases cited; Snyder v. Braden, 58 Ind. 148. These cases show what is not duress, and the present case falls within them.
In the case before us, the town of Salem had adopted an ordinance imposing penalties for retailing without license.
The mode of enforcing the ordinances of municipal corporations is by suit for the penalties incurred by breaches thereof. Green v. The City of Indianapolis, 22 Ind. 192; Green v. The City of Indianapolis, 25 Ind. 490; Whitson v. The City of Franklin, 34 Ind. 392; The City of Huntington v. Pease, 56 Ind. 305.
If the appellant, therefore, in the case before us, failed to take out license, and sold without license, he exposed himself to a suit for the penalty, which suit he could have defended, and in which he could have tested the vadidity of the ordinance. Such suit is what he was threatened with, as we must understand, and such threats constituted the duress complained of in this suit, under which he paid the amount demanded for license. The case is .this: The town of Salem adopted an ordinance requiring a license, and imposing a penalty for failing to comply with the requisition. The appellant believed the ordihanee void. He thought he could test its validity in either of two ways, viz.: by resisting a suit for the penalty, or by paying the license money and then suing to recover it back. He voluntarily chose the latter course. The payment was voluntary, though made under a mistaken idea of the law touching the right to recover back the amount thus paid.
It can not be recovered back. Snyder v. Braden, supra, and The Lafayette, etc., R. R. Co. v. Pattison, supra.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.