delivered the opinion of the court.
The question whether, even if the act under which the tax in question was imposed were unconstitutional and the tax void, complainant on behalf of the express company was •entitled to the relief accorded, meets us on the threshold.
It was ruled in
Dows
v.
Chicago,
In
Union Pacific Railway Co.
v. Cheyenne,
Irreparable injury is the sole ground upon which jurisdiction in equity can bd regarded as invoked in this casé. The jurisdictional averments are: “ That the property of said United States Express Company in Tennessee is employed in interstate commerce in the said express business, and necessary to-the conduct of it; that if seized by the said sheriff it will greatly embarrass the company in the conduct of such business and subject it to heavy loss and damage, and the public served by it to great loss and inconvenience.” And “that-your orator and the United States Express Company are-, without adequate remedy at law in the premises.”
The latter allegation is a mere matter of inference, and it is necessary that by facts averred or proven the conclusion should be made out. The answer denied, in the language of the previous motion, that any irreparable injury or other ground of equitable jurisdiction was shown in the bill, and asserted that, the plaintiff had full, adequate and complete remedy at law under the act of 1873. As the case was tried on bill, answer- and replication, it is taking the most favorable course for complainant to determine whether the decree must stand or fall by the averments of the bill alone. But testing it in that way, we do not see how it can be sustained. The trespass, involved in the levy of the distress warrants was not shown to be -continuous, destructive, inflictive of injury incapable of being measured in money, or committed by irresponsible persons. So far as appeared, complete compensation, for the resulting injury could have been had by recovery of damages in an action at law. There was no allegation of inability on the part of the express company to pay the amount of tÉe taxes claimed, nor any averments showing that the seizure and sale of the particular property which might be levied on,, would subject it - to loss, damage and inconvenience which would be in their nature, irremediable. The bill showed the company to be doing a vast business, and it was an unreasonable inference that it must submit to the sale of its wagons
*597
■and horses, or that such sale would work that kind of mischief which justifies the interference of equity in the application of a preventive remedy. Nor did the mere fact that its property might • be used in the conduct of interstate commerce give jurisdiction. But in addition to all- this, since 1873 there has been a statute in existence in Tennessee, providing a remedy at law, which has been pronounced by this court simple and ■effective.
Tennessee
v.
Sneed,
This act has been sanctioned and applied by the courts of Tennessee.
Nashville
v.
Smith,
86 Tennessee, 213;
Railroad
v.
State,
8 Heiskell, 663, 804. It is, as counsel observe, similar to the act of Congress forbidding suit for the purpose of restraining the assessment or collection of taxes under the internal revenue laws, in respect to which this court held that th;e remedy by suit to recover back the tax after ’payment, provided for by the statute, .was exclusive.
Snyder
v.
Marks,
It is..asserted by counsel that a court of equity has jurisdic
*598
tion to restrain the collection of a tax when the tax is wholly illegal and void, and that such jurisdiction has been uniformly exercised in the Federal courts.
Allen
v.
Balt. & Ohio Rail
road,
In Allen v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, Allen was auditor of public accounts of Yirginia, and Hamilton, treasurer of Augusta County, in that State. The auditor had assessed certain railroads upon their real estate, not having any rolling stock, as being in default for non-payment of taxes assessed by the board of public works, and had placed copies of the assessment in the hands of the defendant Hamilton, as treasurer of Augusta County, for collection, in pursuance of which he had levied upon certain cars and locomotives belonging to complainant, and used by it in operating said railroads as lessee, for part of the taxes, and threatened to make further levy upon other cars and engines and sell them for payment of said taxes; and the bill prayed for an injunction on the several grounds of irreparable damage, avoidance of multiplicity of suits, removal of cloud upon title, etc. It was admitted in the case that if the property of the complainant levied on should be sold, great sacrifice and loss must result therefrom, and that the withdrawal of the rolling stock and machinery proposed to be sold would cause serious and prolonged embarrassment to complainant’s business; that much delay must accrue before said rolling stock and machinery, if sold, could be replaced; and that it would be difficult, if not impracticable, to ascertain and estimate with even proximate certainty the losses and damages which would result to complainant from the sale, so that although the estate of Hamilton might be sufficient to meet any verdict for damages if the sale should be adjudged to be illegal, the pecuniary value of complainant’s losses and damages could not be properly and adequately ascertained and fixed by the verdict of a jury. This admission made a case of irreparable injury.
*599 In Osborn v. Bank of the United States, the court held that the effect of the law of Ohio in question would be the expulsion of the bank from the State; that the injury done thereby would be in its nature irreparable; and further that as by the amended and supplemental bill it appeared that the rponey and notes of the bank were in the' possession of one of the defendants and kept separate and apart from all other money and notes, the principle of preventing the transfer of a specific article, which if transferred might be lost to the owner^ applied.
In Cummings v. National Bank, the jurisdiction was maintained upon the ground of preventing multiplicity of suits, as well as that the remedy by injunction against an illegal tax was expressly granted by a statute of the State whose levy of taxes was drawn in question.
The ground upon which Dodge v. Woolsey proceeded was that a stockholder had a remedy in chancery against the directors of his corporation to restrain them from doing acts which would amount to a violation of the charter, or to prevent any misapplication of their capital or profits, which. might lessen the value of the shares, if the acts intended to be done amounted to a breach of trust or duty, and that the refusal of the directors to resist the collection of a tax, which they themselves believed to have been imposed upon them in violation of their charter, was in legal effect a breach of trust:
The Circuit Court held the act of 1873 inapplicable to an unconstitutional tax, upon the authority of
Poindexter
v.
Greenhow, 1
1
4
U. S. 270. That was an action of detinue brought by Poindexter, a taxpayer, against Greenhow, treasurer of Bfchmond, Virginia, for a desk belonging to plaintiff, seized and taken by Greenhow for the purpose of raising the tax claimed to be due from plaintiff after he had tendered coupons in payment thereof in pursuance of the Virginia act of 1871, making the coupons receivable for taxes. In 1882, Virginia passed an act providing that, in case of proceedings instituted against a taxpayer for the collection of his tax, notwithstanding his tender of coupons in payment thereof, he should pay the tax under protest in lawful money, and then
*600
sue the officer for the amount, and if it should be determined that it was wrongfully collected, the amount should be returned,. and that no writ of injunction, supersedeas, mandamus, prohibition or other writ whatever should be issued to hinder or delay the collection of the tax. At the same time several other acts were passed calculated to impede the operation of the act of 1871. This court held that the tender was equivalent to payment; that the taxpayer had the right to stand .upon such payment once made'; and that the acts of 1882 were unconstitutional so far as they had the effect of depriving the taxpayer of his remedy by detinue,' or trespass, or case, or other proper action, for unlawful seizure of his goods after tendering tax-receivable coupons in payment of his taxes.
McGahey
v.
Virginia,
We are constrained to hold upon this'record that the decree cannot be sustained, and it is therefore
Reversed and the cause remanded to the cowrt below with a direction to dismiss the bill.
