85 So. 396 | Ala. | 1920
This was an application to the circuit court for a writ of mandamus to the mayor and aldermen of the town of Samson commanding them to levy a special tax and to include in the annual appropriation ordinance the amount of the principal and interest of a bond issued by the town and past due and unpaid. Demurrer was sustained in the trial court, whereupon, petitioner, declining to plead further, the petition was dismissed. Relator appeals.
One ground of the demurrer was that it did not appear from the petition that the validity of relator's claim had been established by the judgment or decree of any court. In the federal courts the rule is as indicated by the ground of demurrer, but that is because in those courts the writ of mandamus can only be granted in aid of an existing jurisdiction. There a judgment at law on the indebtedness is necessary to support the writ, which is granted as in the nature of an execution to carry the judgment into effect. Bath County v. Amy, 13 Wall. 244,
Relator's petition alleges that, in the settlement evidenced by the decree supra, the municipal authorities, in order to provide funds to meet the bonds and interest as they should fall due, agreed that an annual tax should be levied sufficient for the purpose, and that the town council would annually include such amount in its appropriation ordinance, that the town was insolvent, and that prior recorded judgments were a superior lien upon all its leviable property. In view of these averments of the petition, respondents took the point by demurrer that, for aught appearing, the municipal authorities may have levied taxes to the limit of their authority under the Constitution and law of the state, and the town's entire income may be necessary to meet its legitimate current expenditures for governmental purposes; but this answer to the petition (good, if proved, White v. Decatur,
It results that the demurrer, considered as of the time of the judgment, should have been overruled.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and BROWN, JJ., concur.