44 Iowa 458 | Iowa | 1876
In The Iowa Railroad Land Co. v. The County of Sac,
Sections 496 and 497 of the Code confer no power whatever to levy a tax. They simply limit the amount which may be levied for two expressed objects. The power to levy, if it exists at all, must be found either in section 454 or section 495. If it is not found in the former, we think it is by plain implication in the latter. But in neither case is any limit imposed. Jeffries et al. v. Lawrence et al., 42 Iowa, 498, is cited by appellant, but the decision in that case is not applicable to this. That decision was made under a special charter which contained an express limitation upon the taxing power.
Again, it is obvious that section 496 of the Code has no application to a levy of a tax for the payment of a judgment like the plaintiff’s. His judgment, it appears, was recovered for personal injuries. .Section 496 limits the amount which may be levied for “ general and incidental expenses.” If we are correct in our view that the levy was legal, we need not inquire whether the fact that the tax had been collected would justify us, in case it was illegal, in compelling the treasurer to' apply it to a purpose for which it should not have been levied rather than to a purpose for which it might have been levied.
The judgment of the Circuit Court should be so modified that a writ of mandamus issue, commanding the defendant to pay to plaintiff his said judgment with interest and costs, so far as he may be able to do so with funds in the city treasury collected either from the tax of 1874, levied “for judgment fund,” or from the tax of 1875, levied “for city judgment tax,” whether the same may have been transferred or credited to any other fund or not.
The injunction restraining the diversion of said taxes was properly granted.
Modified and affirmed.