5 Kan. 518 | Kan. | 1870
By the Court,
The plaintiff in error obtained an injunction restraining the defendants from issuing two county warrants to one Lane, on the alleged ground of illegality in the claims of Lane. The judge of the district court discharged the injunction, which decision the plaintiff in error brings to this court for review.
The only question raised by the briefs, and the only one we shall consider, is whether the plaintiff in error has shown such an interest in the subject matter of the suit as will entitle him to claim the interposition of the equitable powers of the court in this manner. He founds
Action: Interest of Plaintiff in the Subject Matter. It is true that every citizen has a deep interest in the good order and moral character of the community of which he is a member, and it is equally true that the allowance of a claim manifestly illegal and unjust, with a knowledge of that fact, has a tendency in some degree, perhaps appreciable, to affect injuriously the character of the whole community, and to that extent a damage is done to every resident. Every improper act, however done, and wherever permitted, is in its very nature calculated to exercise some unfavorable influence upon society; but it is not all such injuries that the law affords redress for. It is beyond its scope, and would require more than human abilities to measure, and a greater than human power to redress all evils arising from unjust or immoral deeds. In a much more limited sphere the law only interferes when such wrongs directly and immediately affect the person, character or property of the individual. The unfavorable influence which the allowance of an unjust claim must necessarily have in the community of which the plaintiff is a member, is an injury for which there is no redress in the courts; society must correct this evil by the influence of an enlightened public opinion, brought to bear upon its offending members ; so that it is only as a tax payer that the plaintiff has an interest which the law will deal with.
Is this such an interest as authorizes him to maintain this action ? The amount of taxes which he pays is not
State, or an Officer, the proper party to redress public wrongs. It is well known that the general rule is, that for wrongs against the public, whether actuo o x 7 a]}y committed or only apprehended, the remedy, whether civil or criminal, is by a prosecution instituted by the state in its political character, or by some officer authorized by law to act in its behalf, or by some of those local agencies created by the state for the management of such of the local affairs of the community as may be entrusted to them by law. The individual citizen does not in his own name interfere in behalf of the interests of society, but society acts through and by its properly constituted agencies. The law, as a general principle, has not deemed it proper that offenses or grievances of a public character should be investigated at the suit of a private individual, nor that the officers, to whom important trusts have been confided, should be held liable for their act to any one. When those acts affect every one alike such officers are as amenable as private citizens for any abuse of their authority. If the injury is one that peculiarly affects a person, he has his right of action: if it affects the whole community alike, their remedy is by proceedings by the state through its appointed agencies.
Com’rs of Counnes: Allowance of Claims. In a case like the present, the law has en- . trusted the examination and allowance of claims against the public to a tribunal created by law and responsible to the people. They are allowed a large discretion in acting for the interest of the county.
ID: AUTHORITIES. The principles involved in this case have been often passed upon. In 14 Connecticut, 578, the learned judge delivering the opinion of the court says: “To preserve and enforce the rights of persons as individuals, and not as members of the community at large,
While the action in which this principle is asserted was one to prevent a public nuisance, brought by a person having a right in common with all other owners of property, still the principle is correctly stated, and is in its' reason and authority as applicable to this case as to an apprehended public nuisance. The principle was reaffirmed in 17 Connecticut, 374, and in many subsequent cases in that state, especially in 31 Connecticut, 165. The exact principle involved in the case before us was decided in the cases of Doolittle v. Supervisors of Broome County, [18 N. Y., 157,] and of Roosevelt v Draper, [23 N. Y., 319.] These cases were decided by a unanimous court, and an elaborate opinion delivered in each by Denio, J., and hold “that an act of administration likely to produce taxation is not a matter of private or individual concern. It is an affair altogether public, and- the only remedial process against an abuse of administrative power tending to taxation which one can have, is furnished by the elective franchise, or a proceeding in behalf of the state, or in the case of an act without jurisdiction, in treating the attempt to enforce the illegal tax as an act of trespass.” Smith v. City of Boston [7 Cushing, 254] is to the same effect, though the action in that case was to recover damages for the discontinuance of a street in the city of Boston. The court held he could not recover, inasmuch as the injury experienced by the petitioner was one in common with all the rest of the members of the community. “He may feel it more,”
To the same purport is the remark of the chancellor of New Jersey, in 3 Stockton, 500; and for the reason of the rule see 4 Blackstone, 167. The reference to Blackstone is to show the reason of the rule, although the rule itself refers to public nuisances. In Putnam v. Valentine [5 Ohio, 189] the court refused to sustain an injunction obtained by a supervisor of highways to restrain the commission of great and irreparable injuries to a highway, saying: “Suits to prevent the infraction of rights purely public are generally commenced and conducted in the name of the state, or the officer intrusted with the conduct of the public suits,” although it is not certain from the opinion that the case was decided upon this principle, but more likely on the want of power in the supervisor to conduct suits of that character in his official capacity.
A contrary doctrine seems to be maintained in Iowa. See Collins v. Ripley, county judge, [8 Iowa, 131,] and Rice v. Smith, county judge, [9 Iowa, 576;] but in neither of these cases are authorities referred to, and the reasons given are very unsatisfactory. An injunction is likened to a mandamus, without observing that in the latter class of cases the proceedings are in the name of the state, and by the relator in certain cases, by express authority of law, a fair illustration of what we have endeavored to make appear in this opinion, that the private citizen as such cannot sue in his own name for