Mahan v. Sundry

22 La. Ann. 583 | La. | 1870

Howell, J.

The State of Louisiana has appealed from a judgment ordering the Auditor to issue a warrant in favor of the clerk of the Fourth District Court for the parish of Orleans, on the State Treasurer, for $861 78, costs in certain suits, “payable out of the two thousand dollars appropriated by the General Assembly to pay costs in suits, where the State loses the case, per act number thirty-five, approved.. *584sixteenth March, 1870,” which reads: Appropriation to pay costs in suits, where the State loses the case, two thousand dollars ($2000), or so much thereof as may he necessary.”

The facts are as follows: The State tax collector of the First District, city of New Orleans, filed various petitions in the Fourth District Court, asking for the appointment of a curator ad hoe to represent the parties severally named in the petitions as owners of property, in any proceedings which he may institute or acts done in the enforcement of the collection of the one per cent, tax assessed upon such property. This appointment was made and notice thereof given, after which the clerk took a rule on the collector, Auditor and Attorney General, to tax his costs in the said proceedings, and have a warrant issued for the same, which rule was amended in amount and made absolute.

It is contended in behalf of the State that the court a qua erred in directing a warrant to issue upon said fund, because the costs claimed were not embraced in said appropriation, the State not having lost the cases in which they accrued. That this appropriation was not intended to cover costs in such proceedings seems to us manifest. These were proceedings instituted by only one of the many tax collectors in the State, and the amount ($1355) claimed by this clerk alone, would absorb more than half, and the sum allowed is nearly half of the whole appropriation. It is presumable the Legislature would have fixed an amount more nearly proportioned to the costs which must necessarily be incurred in tax suits. But more than this, these can not, in the sense of the act quoted, be considered cases lost by the State. They seem to be yet pending, and the law authorizing the collection of court costs every six months can not be enforced against the State, because the State can not be sued. The State is, doubtless, responsible for all costs legally incurred in its behalf, but the mode of paying them is to be provided by the Legislature. The appropriation in question is not, in our opinion, the provision made for the payment of the costs claimed in-this proceeding. If the statute authorizing the suits or proceedings in which they accrued does not provide for their payment, or some other special statute, the clerk took the risk of the Legislature’s providing for them when applied to. The Auditor can warrant upon, funds only as authorized by law.

It is therefore ordered that so much of the judgment appealed from as directs the State Auditor to issue a warrant in favor of the clerk of the Fourth District Court, for the parish of Orleans, for $861 78, payable out of the appropriation of $2000, made by act number thirty-five, approved sixteenth of March, 1870, be reversed and annulled, with costs of appeal.

Mr. Chief Justice Ludeling and Mr. Justice Wyly-absent.
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