21 Ga. 50 | Ga. | 1857
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
The affidavit of illegality was made and put in by two of the tax collector’s three sureties, and the executor of the third. The Court below dismissed the affidavit, holding that, upder the Tax Act of 1804, there could be no judicial interference with a tax execution.
On this reason of the Court, two questions arise. First: Does the Tax Act of 1804 forbid the Courts to entertain such
The twenty-fourth section of the act is the part that imposes the prohibition on the Courts, if any part does. It is as follows : “In case any collector of taxes for any county in this State, shall not settle his accounts with the Treasurer, and. pay in the amount of his collection by the time pointed out by this act, the Treasurer shall publish in one of the gazettes of this State, a notification, requiring all and singular the tax collectors, who may be in arrears, to come forward and settle their accounts, and pay the balance they may respectively owe into the treasury, within two months from the date of such notification, which shall be regularly published for six weeks successively, stating the sums due by such collectors, their names and securities, and in case of failure to make settlement and pay in the moneys as aforesaid, the Treasurer is authorized and required to issue his execution against every collector so in default, directed to all and singular the Sheriffs of this State, and transmit it to the Sheriff of the county for which the collector is appointed, who is required to levy the same immediately, if there is any property of the defendant’s, if not, to transmit the same to any other county where the defendants, or either of them, may have property, and the Sheriff of such other county is in like manner to levy the same, and no execution issued by the Treasurer in manner herein prescribed, shall be stayed by reason of the death of the said collector or his securities, as to the sum due or the legality of the execution. Cobb’s Dig. 1052.
The execution in the present case was issued, not by the “Treasurer,” but by 'the “Comptroller General.” Still, that does not prevent the execution from being within this section, for this section is to be considered as having been amended by the third section of thfe Act of 1823, “further to define the duties of Comptroller General &c.y — -a section in these words: '“The Comptroller General is hereby required to issue execu?
This section considered as an amendment of the said twenty-fourth section of the Act of 1804, brings the execution, though issued by the Comptroller General, and not the Treasurer, within that twenty-fourth section.
I remark, that the Act of 1804, with all of its amendments, is still in force. This is an effect of the Tax Act of 1840. Ib. 1072.
Even before the twenty-fourth section of the Act of 1804, had been amended by the third section of the Act of 1823, it might well have been considered as extending, both to the case of the defaulting collector himself, and that of his sureties, for it speaks of “defendants” using the word in the plural, and also, it says that no execution shall be stayed by reason of the death of the collector or his “securitiesbut since the section was so amended, it must be considered as having that extent
The closing words of the said twenty-fourth section are these; “and no execution issued by the Treasurer in manner herein prescribed, shall be stayed by reason of the death of the said collector or his securities, as to the sum due on the legality of the execution.”
Do these words prohibit the Courts from entertaining such an affidavit of illegality; as that which was interposed in the present case?
We think that they do.
If the “death” of the collector or his sureties was not to be a sufficient reason to stay the execution “as to the sum due, or the legality of the execution,” that is to say, on any question, “as to the sum due or the legality of the execution,” it is difficult to conceive what was to be a sufficient reason.
And the opinion derives support from the following part of the twenty-first section of the Act of 1804; “and no replevin shall he, or any judicial interference be had, in any levy or distress for taxes under this law, but that the party injured be left to his own proper remedy at law.” Whatever reason can exist for non-interference with an execution proceeding against a defaulting tax-payer, must equally exist, for noninterference with an execution proceeding against a defaulting tax collector and his sureties.
And the opinion also derives support from this, that there has not been, so far as we know, any precedent of judicial interference, with the collection of an execution proceeding against a defaulting tax collector and his sureties.
The result is, that the Tax Act of 1804, does forbid the Courts to entertain affidavits of illegality in cases like the preset.
Is the act in this prohibition constitutional?
It was argued for the plaintiffs in error, that the act in this prohibition violates the first section of the first article of the Constitution of the State. That section is in these words: “The Legislative, Executive and Judiciary departments of the government shall be distinct,. and each department shall be confided to a separate body of magistracy, and no person or collection of persons, being of one of those departments, shall exercise any power properly attached to either of the others, except in the instances herein expressly permitted,” Cobb’s Dig. 1111.
And the following was the argument:
The Legislative department cannot exercise any power properly attached to the Judiciary department
The power to entertain such an affidavit of illegality as the
Therefore the Legislative department cannot prohibit the Judiciary department from entertaining such an affidavit of illegality as the present.
But this conclusion is plainly a non sequilur. What is the sequilur is, that the Legislative department cannot itself exercise the power to entertain such an affidavit of illegality as the affidavit of illegality aforesaid.
And it is manifest that a want of power in the Legislature to do that, is quite a different thing from a want of power in the Legislature to prohibit the Judiciary from doing it. The. Legislature lacks power itself to pass any judgments except a few, yet it has ample power to prevent the Courts from passing many sorts of judgments. Perhaps it has power to prevent the Courts from passing- any judgments whatever; for it has power to repeal those laws without which the Courts would not have the means of passing any judgments. And in the exercise of its power, the Legislature is constantly regulating, and, more or less, changing, the jurisdiction of the Courts.
The conclusion then drawn by the counsel, for the plaintiffs, is not the correct one, even if both of the premises were true.
But one of the premises is not true. It cannot bo admitted, that-the power to entertain an affidavit of illegality, interposed to stay the collection of an execution proceeding against a defaulting tax collector and his sureties, is a power proper to be attached to the Judiciary.
Such a power, I think, has never been given by any people to its Courts. Whether a claim for taxes is to be exacted or not, is a question everywhere, as far as I know, for the Executive, not for the Judiciary. If the Executive exacts the claim, and collects the money, and it turns out, that the claim was unfounded, the government sometimes itself gives redress, sometimes provides a mode by which redress may
If this is not universally true, is it certainty generally true.
And if such a power had been one that the Courts ought to have had, it may be fairly insisted that governments would generally have given the power to the Courts.
But on general principles, is it not best that this power should be withheld from the Courts ? How could a government calculate with any certainty upon its revenues, if the collection of the taxes was subject to be arrested in every instance, in which a tax payer or a tax collector could make out, prima facia, a technical case for arresting such collection. Far better is it, I think, to let the individual pay to the government what it demands of him, at the time of the demand, as he will be certain of getting it back with interest, after more or less of delay, if it was not due.
The conclusion of this Court is, that the part aforesaid of the Act of 1804, that prohibits the Courts from entertaining such an affidavit of illegality as the present, is constitutional..
And therefore, the general conclusion of this Court is, that the judgment of the Court below dismissing the affidavit of illegality, was right. Judgment affirmed.