after stating the case, - delivered the opinion of the couj?t.
As opposed to this motion, there is no 'denial -of the fact that the taxes in dispute have been paid. It is insisted, however, that such payment, was not voluntary, but' was made under duress,.as the only means of avoiding execution; and *553 that payments were made before suit brought only when imposed by the court as á condition for being permitted to bring suit, and after suit brought, only to save property from sale in the absence of any stay or possibility of getting one. But an examination of the affidavit of the principal attorney for the' railroad-company, filed here, discloses the fact that the taxes which are referred to in this connection are the taxes assessed for the years 1884 to 1887, inclusive. In the case of those taxes, the proceedings for their collection were regulated by an act of the New Jersey legislature passed in 1884, which, in its 16th section, provided that if any company should desire to contest the validity of any tax levied thereunder, such contest should be made by certiorari, which might be •granted “ on such terms as the justice or court granting the writ may impose.”
But that act and the proceedings-for the collection of taxu-. under it are in nowise before the court in this case. In the nature of things the proceedings which the attorney describes could not 'have applied to the collection of the taxes for the years 1876 to 1882 inclusive, for this suit which relates to them was disposed of by the Supreme Court of the State long before the act of 1884 was passed. There is nothing in the record to show that the payment of the taxes in dispute w;as imposed by the court as a -condition precedent to the company’s right to bring suit, to test their legality. In fact, no such condition- was imposed, or could have been imposed, when this suit was brought; for there was no statute of the State at that time giving any such power to the court.
■ In respect to the taxes here in dispute, it is claimed that they were also paid involuntarily, because, under the readjustment act of 1886," the readjustment made by the commissioners was “final and conclusive upon all persons, became immediately due, was collectible by the comptroller without interest, if paid within sixty days, and if not paid within six .months, it was made the comptroller’s mandatory duty to sell the -lands assessed, at public auction, to the highest -bidder, and the purchaser at such sale obtained title by fee-simple absolute.”
*554
W e do not tbink the payment of the' taxes, under the circumstances detailed in the affidavits before referred to, and admitted substantially by plaintiff in error, was an involuntary payment,- or- a pa rment under duress, within the meaning of the law. In
Wabaunsee County
v.
Walker,
8 Kansas, 431, 436, cited with approval in.
Lamborn
v.
County Commissioners,
' The case in 98 U. S.
supra,
was a suit by the Union Pacific •Railroad' Company to recover taxes it had paid upon certain of its lands granted to it by Act of Congress. The lands had been >asse_ssed by the county .in : which they lay. for' general and local taxes, and in due time the tax lists, with warrants attached for their -collection, were delivered to the -.treasurer of the county. The warrants authorized the treasurer, if default' should be made in the payment of any of the taxes charged upon the list, to seize and' sell the- personal property of the persons making the default, to enforce the collection. Under the law of Nebraska no demand of taxes was neoessary, but it was the duty of every person subject to . taxation to attend the treasurer’s office and make payment. The company paid the taxes before any - demand had been made for their collection, and before any special effort had been put forth by the treasurer to enforce their collection, at the same time filing with the treasurer a written protest against their payment, for the reason that they were illegally, and wrongfully assessed, and were unauthorized by law, and gafé notice that suit would be instituted to recover back the money paid. In delivering the opinion of.the court, Mr! Chief Justice Waite said: “The real question in'this caseis, whether
*555
there was such an immediate and urgent necessity for the payment of the taxes in controversy as to imply that It was ' made upon compulsion. The treasurer had a warrant in his ... hands which would have authorized him to seize the goods of ■•“the company to enforce the collection. This warrant was in the nature of an execution running against the property of the parties charged with taxes upon the lists it accompanied, and no opportunity had been afforded the parties of obtaining a judicial decision of the question of their liability. As to this class of cases Chief Justice Shaw states the rule, in
Preston
v. Boston,
The reasoning of the court in that case applies equally to the facts of this. In no sense do we think the payment of the taxes • in suit was made under duress. Their payment, under the circumstances above set forth, was in the nature of a compromise, by which the city agreed to take, and the company agreed to pay, a less sum than was originally assessed. The effect of this act was to extinguish the controversy between the parties to this suit.
• This case is clearly distinguishable from
Robertson
v.
Brad
bury,
It is true that the judgment of the court below stands unsatisfied except so far as relates to the costs, which, as before stated, have been paid; but that is immaterial, inasmuch as the controversy upon which that judgment was rendered .had-been extinguished. That in effect satisfied the judgment. Neither -the affirmance nor the reversal of that judgment would make any difference as regards the controversy brought here by this writ of error. It matters not that the taxes from 1884 to 1887, inclusive, were paid under duress. They .are .in nowise before the court; and according to the showing of the plaintiff in error they differ materially from the takes in dispute in this case.
*557
It is well settled, that when there is no actual controversy, involving real and substantial rights, between the parties to the record, the case-will be dismissed. In
Lord
v.
Veazie,
In
Cleveland
v.
Chamberlain,
In
Wood Paper Co.
v.
Heft,
*558
In.
San Mateo County
v.
Southern Pacific Railroad Co.,
A further defence urged against , this'motion is laches. It is urged' that the facts upon which it is' based were known to the defendants in error at least two years ago, and that any objection to the writ of error should have been made before the argument of the case upon its merits. .It is also insisted, incidentally, that the motion' was filed in violation of profes-' sional courtesy, inasmuch as it was through the intercession of the. attorney for the plaintiff- in error that an extension of time was allowed the defendants in error within which they Could be heard on brief, after the argument on' the merits. .
We,do not think, however, the question of laches has any bearing upon this., question. The fact that there is no controversy between parties to the record ought, in the interest of a pure administration of justice, to be allowed to be shown' at any time before the decision of the case. Any other rule would put it in the power of designing persons to bring up a feigned issue in order to obtain a decision of this court upon a question involving the rights of others who have had no opportunity to be heard.
If, as is contended on behalf of the plaintiff in error, the question involved in this Case is one of great importance to the railroad company and- to the State, and is identical with that in a number of other cases pending in the court below, so much the more "important is it that it should not be decided in a case where there is nothing in dispute. Nor is it material that the case was selected by the plaintiff in error .and agreed to by the defendant in error before the writ of error was prosecuted, as one in which the question of taxation under the *559 New Jersey statutes could be fully considered and finally decided by this court; for it is well understood that consent does not confer jurisdiction.
For the reasons above stated
The motion to dismiss the writ of error is grcmted at the costs in this court of the plaintiff im, error, mid it is so ordered.
