41 N.J.L. 362 | N.J. | 1879
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This suit was brought to recover money paid on an assessment for benefits, made against
The first legal proposition on which the learned justice who heard this case acted in the rejection of the plaintiff’s claim, was that it was necessary that the assessment in question should have been set aside before a suit could be maintained to recover the money paid upon it. This is the doctrine of the case of City of Elizabeth v. Hill, decided by the Supreme Court, and reported in 10 Vroom 555, and the question, therefore, is whether that decision is based on correct principle. That adjudication, as I understand it, maintains the broad doctrine that money paid on an assessment of this nature cannot be recovered through an action by the party paying it, no matter how illegal such assessment may be, so long as it remains uncanceled by judicial authority. It is from design that I state the rule in this unrestricted form, because it is in such form that I wish to give it my approval; for it seems to me that this result is the legitimate consequence of the application of general legal principles to the law as it exists under judicial exposition and in practice in this state.
My theory is that, in our jurisprudence, a payment of an assessment of this nature should be considered to possess very much the same force which is given, by operation of law, to a payment made under the influence of legal process. It is not in doubt that, in this latter class of cases, payments are to be taken as, per se, voluntary, and therefore conclusive. The citation of one or two of the decisions that relate to the effect of payment of moneys post litem motam, will serve to show the tendency and scope of this principle as well as its reason. My reference will be to cases only which are concerned with payments made before judgment on initial process.
A leading precedent in this department is that of Brown v. McKinally, 1 Esp. 279, the case presented being that of a sale, at an agreed price per ton, of a lot of iron, with the exception
Now it seems to me that if, with these cases before us, we inquire for the groundwork, in right reason, on which they rest, we will find that it consists in two considerations — first, for the reason that the person paying the demand in suit has been offered an opportunity to resist it; and second, that the public well-being requires that a definite bound should be assigned to litigation. The claims-of distributive justice are fully satisfied by the proffer of the means of defence against the unjust demand. The claims of the community against unnecessary litigation can be enforced only by an adherence to the well-known maxim, “ Interest reipublicce ut sit finis litium.” And these consideration's, in my opinion, afford a complete justification of the doctrine in question.
And such a payment, however made, it appears to me is to be taken as voluntary, for I am entirely opposed to the notion, which has been entertained elsewhere, that the effect of such act is dependent on the circumstance whether it has been done under legal coercion. My conviction is that when the assessment has been made in good faith and under color of right, nothing that can be done in the way of its enforcement will convert such payment into an involuntary act. Courts have frequently held that a payment, of a tax under protest will not have the effect of reserving the fight to sue for the money so paid, and such was the decision in the case of Flower v. Lance, 59 N. Y. 603; but, in my estimation, the rule, to be of any practical value, must go beyond this and have the measure already attributed to it, for otherwise the, party desirous of paying, with a reserved right of reglamation by action, can defer payment until the public officer has committed an act sufficiently aggressive, and in this éasy way defeat the entire operation of the rule. I repeat that the true doctrine is that the intendment that such a payment is voluntary, is not dependent upon collateral circumstances, but is a presumption juris et de jure from the very act itself.
I shall vote to affirm the judgment on this ground.