5 S.D. 539 | S.D. | 1894
On the 10th day of July, 1891, plaintiff and respondent recovered a judgment against appellants, a municipal corporation, which at the commencement of this proceeding amounted to $4,717.62, including costs and accrued interest. Appellants charter requires the city council to meet on the first mondayin September of each year, and to levy such sum or sums of money as may be sufficient for the payment of current expenses and debts of the corporation, including the interest on bonds and the principal of all matured bonds; and the city council having failed and refused at the September, 1891, and September, 1892, meetings, and at all subsequent times, to make any levy or provision for the payment of plaintiff’s judgment, or any part thereof, plaintiff applied to the circuit court for an alternative writ of mandamus, which was granted on the 30th day of August, 1893, returnable three days thereafter, and requiring said defendant corporation and its ci-ty council, at its September, 1893, meeting, to levy and include within the 10-mill limit fixed by law a sum of money sufficient to pay plaintiff’s judgment; and the levy was directed to be based upon the assessed valuation of the real and personal property
By stipulation of counsel the matter was argued and submitted on the 1st day of September, 1893; and the court rendered judgment in favor of the appellee, substantially as follows: “It is hereby ordered and adjudged that the city of Huron, a municipal corporation, and the city council of the city of Huron, consisting of H. Ray Myers, Mayor, and F. H. Molton, Walter Briton, George Mallett, Irving Thoman, C. D. Joy, W. F. T. Bushnell, George Grove, and John Ward, aldermen,
It is argued in the brief of counsel for appellants that the court had no jurisdiction to consider the case, and that the judgment is void, because the proceedings were not entitled in the name of the state, on the relation of Joseph D. Howard. The evident object of this proceeding was to enforce a private right, in which the state was in no manner concerned, and in which Joseph D. Howard was the real party in interest. This court has held that in proceedings of this character the party beneficially interested should be named as plaintiff, and the position of counsel cannot be entertained. Smith v. Lawrence (S. D.) 49 N. W. 7; Comp. Laws, § 5505'.
Counsel for appellants maintain that the pleadings raised issues of fact, and that it was error to grant the peremptory writ of mandamus without a trial of such issues. In our opinion, no issues of fact essential to a proper determination of the case, or in any manner affecting the substantial rights of either party, were raised by the pleadings, and we cannot agree with counsel in this particular. Comp. Laws, § 5526; Schend v. Society, 49 Wis. 237, 5 N. W. 355.
It is also contended that the judgment is not supported by the pleadings, and that the peremptory writ does not conform to the alternative writ, and is therefore of no force or effect.
For a reversal of this case, defendants rely chiefly upon the undisputed fact that the city was indebted in excess of the constitutional limit of 5 per cent, on all its taxable property at the time the debt was created which was the basis for the judgment in relation to which the peremptory writ of mandamus issued; and to this subject we will studiously direct our attention, unless we should find, as plaintiff contends, that it is a question not open to inquiry in this proceeding. The defense which appellants urge against the issuance of the mandamus, if admissible and established upon the trial of the cause in which the judgment was obtained, might have been available and sufficient to defeat the plaintiff’s cause of action. But no such defense was interposed, and no effort was made to have the judgment set aside, and no appeal therefrom was ever taken; and the judgment stands in full force, and is fortified by all the favorable presumptions to which a judgment of a court of general jurisdiction is entitled. Plaintiff’s claim has been judicially audited, and so long as the judgment remains unsatisfied, and of record, it will continue to be a legal charge against the city of Huron, which cannot be collaterally. controverted, but must be taken and treated, so far as these proceedings are concerned as the highest evidence of a valid and subsisting indebtedness, for the payment of which it is the duty of the city council, acting within the statutory and constitutional limitations, to levy a tax upon the property of the corporation. The remedy to which plaintiff resorts,. as applied to the case at bar, is in the nature of an execution, being designed to secure and enforce the payment and execution of a judgment; and to allow defendants to assail and attempt to defeat such judgment in these
In the case of Commissioners v. Loague, 129 U. S. 493, 9 Sup. Ct. 327, cited by appellants, the evidence was such that it became necessary to present for consideration and review, on the application for a mandamus, all the facts disclosed by the pleadings and the attending files and record upon which the judgment was based; and the court held that a mandamus should not be granted when the petitioner therefor is obliged to go behind the judgment, and bring all former proceedings before the court, in order to make a showing, with a view to obtaining the desired remedy, when the record which he pre