69 F. 867 | 7th Cir. | 1895
The amended bill, after alleging the names and citizenship of the parties, the organization, under the law of May 29, 1879 (Starr <& C. Ann. St. p. 919 et seq.), and amendatory acts, of the Indian Grave drainage district, as a municipal corporation, the issue by that body of two series of bonds, and the recovery by the complainant, May 24, 1892, of judgment against the district upon bonds and coupons of the second series for §10,709.73, to be discharged out of the proceeds of assessments already levied, or thereafter to be levied, on the assessable property within the district, in con
There is in the evidence no essential discrepancy or conflict, and it is plain that no error was committed against the appellant. He was not entilled to recover in this action a personal judgment against the defendants Thompson and Nickerson because they had used coupons in the payment of the taxes levied upon their own lands. If on that account they became personally liable to him at all, the remedy should be sought in a personal action at law, and not by a bill in equity against the drainage district and its officers in their official characler. Indeed, the record shows that, before the filing of the amended bill, Thompson had died, and a writ of scire facias had issued. requiring his widow and administratrix to show cause v/by she should not appear to and answer the bill; that she demurred to the writ on’the ground that the action was not one which survived against her, as administratrix; and that, without any ruling upon the demurrer, the cause was submitted and heard May 8, 1894, and, the argument having been postponed to the 12th, the amended bill was tiled on that day,—the name of Thompson, as one of the commissioners, being- repeated in the title and body of the bill, without mention of his death. It may be that the appellant is entitled to the whole or a proportionate share of the several sums of cash collected and yet in the treasury; but even if a resort to equity for relief in respect .to those items were otherwise necessary or permissible, there is here no right to sue for them, because he made noi demand therefor before bringing the suit, and his right thereto does not seem to have been denied. The bill proceeds mainly upon the theory that the coupons received in payment of tax levies should, for the purposes of the suit,
Was the appellant entitled to the injunction which he asked against the further acceptance of coupons in discharge of taxes levied for the payment of interest on the second assessment? On behalf of the appellees it is contended that the proper remedy, if the appellant is entitled to relief, is by mandamus to compel the collection under the law, and payment of the amount due him, as if the compromise agreement had not been made. We concur in that view. It is not necessary to decide, but we assume it to be true, that assessments and taxes levied for the payment of assessments and-interest thereon, under the drainage act, are payable only in money, and that the compromise in question, though sanctioned by the county court, in so far, at least, as it provided for the acceptance of coupons in discharge of taxes, made as it was without the appellant’s consent, was not binding upon him. He is entitled to share pro rata with other holders of bonds and coupons in the proceeds of the assessment in which he is interested, and it follows that collections should be made in such way as io effect that result. His bonds and coupons constitute a certain percentage of the entire amount of bonds and coupons secured upon the second assessment, and that percentage, at least, of the collections made upon that assessment, it seems clear, should be in cash for his use. It is no answer to say that there are unpaid assessments in excess of the amount due him. The proof shows that some of the lands are probably worth less than the levies made or to be made upon them; and the consequences of delay in collecting, and the risk of final failure to collect the entire amount due from delinquents, should fall upon all alike, and not upon the appellant alone. It is only in this way, and to this extent, that the compromise agreement can be upheld and enforced. In so far as it inter-feres with the appellant’s right to have levies made and enforced in the manner provided by law, it is, as we assume, illegal. But it does not follow that an injunction is necessary. Mandamus, it is conceded, is the proper remedy to enforce the collection of taxes; and, if proper levies of taxes are not made, mandamus, it is well settled, is the means of relief. Walkley v. Muscatine, 6 Wall. 481; Heine v. Board, 19 Wall. 655; Barkley v. Commissioners, 93 U. S. 258; Chicago, D. & V. R. Co. v. Town of St. Anne, 101 Ill. 151; East St. Louis v. Underwood, 105 Ill. 308; 2 Dill. Mun. Oorp. § 855. There is here no charge, certainly no proof, that taxes have been collected and misappropriated, and there is no ground for apprehending that collections hereafter made, whether made by command of the court or otherwise, will not be properly applied. If there were, an injunction would doubtless be proper. Lawrence v. Traner, 136 Ill. 483, 27 N. E. 197. The decree below is affirmed.