21 Ala. 661 | Ala. | 1852
— The act of the Legislature of the 13th of February, 1843, (Acts 1843, 134,) which, provided that it should be lawful for the Court of Commissioners of Roads and Revenue of the county of Tallapoosa to impose such a tax, in addition to the tax laid for county purposes, as should be necessary to pay any amount of money that the court-house commissioners should be liable to pay for building a court-house and jail in said county, was construed by this court on a previous adjudication of this case (17 Ala. 527) as compulsory on the Commissioners’ Court of Tallapoosa county, to levy the amount required to discharge the liabilities of the court-house commissioners; and it was also held, upon demurrer to the petition of the relator, that sufficient appeared upon the face of the petition to entitle him to the relief sought.
The only question now presented is, as to the sufficiency of the return; and it is insisted in argument, that the return is insufficient in not being verified by the oaths of all of the defendants. This objection cannot prevail. The return which is made to the alternative writ we do not understand is required to be verified by the oath of the party. It is taken as true by the court; and, in the absence of any statute providing for traversing the return, the party injured must proceed for the false return, and if found to be false by the jury, he recovers damages equivalent to the injury sustained, together with a peremptory mandamus to the defendant to do his duty. 3 Black. Com. 111.
Several distinct and separate grounds are 'taken in the answer, as a justification on the part of the defendants below in not levying the tax; but there is no error in this, as the statute (Clay’s Dig. 332, § 109,) allows the defendant, in all cases, to plead as many matters as he thinks necessary to his defencej and we see no good reason why this act should not appíy to "proceedings by mandamus, as well as to other causes •hit law. The terms are broad enough to admit of this construction, and the evils which were intended to be removed by its enactment would be but partially suppressed, if the
In relation to the degree of certainty which is required in the pleadings in cases of mandamus, the English rule has been somewhat relaxed since the statute of Anne, ch. 20, which allows the facts stated in the return to be traversed and tried by a jury. 1 Evans’ Stat. 176; Stephens’ Nisi Prius, 2330; but, as in this State no such statute is in force, the facts must be pleaded with such a degree of certainty as to enable the court to decide whether they are, in law, sufficient to justify the party in failing to do the act.
Under the rules we have laid down, that portion of the return which goes to the insufficiency of the buildings cannot be sustained. The act of 1843 was passed after the liability of the commissioners accrued, and that liability, as the petition alleges, was fixed by the judgment; but independently of this, there is nothing stated in this head of the answer that shows with certainty and precision that the relator was not liable. The contracts may have been entered into, and the court-house and jail received by the other commissioners, and in relation to duties of this character the acts of the majority are binding. Caldwell v. Harrison, 11 Ala. 755. But again, there is no averment as to what the buildings were actually worth; no averment of the precise amount which the relator or the other commissioners have received. It would be impossible to render a judgment upon a plea as defective as this is.
The second head is equally defective. There is no principle upon which the relator could be held responsible for the acts or defalcations of the other commissioners. Independent of the manifest injustice which would be worked'’it would be'difficult to find any person, if this construction was to prevail, who would take upon himself public duties in connection with
The third ground which is taken is, that the relator is not entitled to fees, costs or expenses for the defence of the suit. If the commissioners, acting in good faith, regarded it as necessary to defend the suit commenced against them, it was their duty so to do; and the expenses legitimately incurred in the discharge of their public duties, properly constitute the liability intended to be covered by the act of 1843; and such we understand to have been the decision of this court when the case was last before it. 17 Ala. 527.
The fourth, fifth and sixth grounds, as stated in the answer, are also defective; the fourth being entirely inferential, in drawing the deduction that no account had been presented, from the fact that no evidence, petition or motion was to be found upon the files of the court, the averment in substance being simply, that no proper application had been made; while the other two are defective in that degree of certainty which is required, as well as in stating legal conclusions rather than facts.
The seventh and last ground of the return, however, we consider as well taken. By the act of 1843, before referred to, it was made the duty of the Court of Commissioners of Eoads and Revenue of Tallapoosa county to impose a tax sufficient to discharge,the liability of the court-house commissioners of-that county; but in order to impose this tax, it was necessary that the court should be advised of the extent of the liability which the tax was intended to meet. The ac