32 La. Ann. 884 | La. | 1880
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The relator obtained judgment in 1873 against the parish of St. Martin for four thousand five hundred dollars, with interest as stipulated. Under the provisions of section 2628 of the Bevised Statutes, the Court directed the assessment and collection of a special tax to pay the judgment, which reads as follows: .
“In the above entitled case, the law and the evidence being in favor of plaintiff, and against the defendant, it is ordered, adjudged; and decreed that said plaintiff, Thomas W. Nelson, have judgment .against and recover from the defendant, parish of St. Martin, the sum of four
The validity of this judgment was assailed, and an injunction was obtained to arrest its execution, but the court dissolved the injunction and maintained the judgment. On appeal this judgment was affirmed. 28 An. 578.
Proceedings were next taken against the tax-collector and assessor to force the levy of a tax to satisfy the judgment. This Court held that the proceedings should have been directed against the police jury, and that a mandamus can not issue against the tax collector and assessor. 30 A. 1103.
The present proceeding is instituted against the police jurjr of the parish of St. Martin, and has for its object to compel them by mandamus to assess, collect, and apply a special tax for the payment of the relator’s judgment.
The application is resisted on two grounds:
First. The State and parish tax-collector was not made a party.
Second. The law under which the judgment was rendered for the levy and application of the tax was repealed by Act No. 56' of 1877.
As a corollary, it was argued in the pleadings that said law being •essentially a remedial law, its repeal did in nowise impair the relator’s rights, but merely suspended or abolished one of the means by which his said vested rights could be exercised or executed; it is, therefore, valid and constitutional.
The judgment of the lower' court directed the assessment of a special tax of one per cent, and the police jury has appealed from it.
First. The State and parish tax-collector was served .and has joined issue. He is, therefore, a party to the suit.
Second. The act of 1877 should be no bar to the exercise of the remedy accorded by law to the plaintiff, and which was in force at the time that he obtained his judgment, and which, not only theoretically, but practically, formed part of that judgment, provided the judgment be founded on a contract.
The only evidence before us is the judgment itself. Neither the pleadings nor the evidence on which the judgment was rendered are in the record. The very petition in the present proceeding is silent on the subject of the obligation of the parish to pay the judgment, as spring
The relator’s counsel has affirmed in his argument that plaintiff has recovered on the strength of a contract, but this statement, however respectable and correct it may be considered, cannot be accepted to supply the deficiency.
' We do not consider that the insertion in the judgment that a tax shall be assessed and applied to the payment of this judgment, adds any force to the claim of the relator for a mandamus. The law in existence at the time it was rendered, directing such an insertion, forms as much part of the judgment, without being so embodied, as the formal incorporation of its provision does. The relator has acquired no right by the insertion which he would not have had otherwise.
We think that the relator has not presented a case shielded by the Constitution of the United States, which forbids States from framing laws impairing the obligations of contracts, and, even then, that he has failed to substantiate by proper and sufficient evidence that it is so protected.
If the judgment relied upon was not founded on a contract, we would be powerless to enforce its payment in the manner proposed, prohibited as we would be from so doing by article 209 of the Constitution of 1879, limiting taxation to ten mills, as was held in the case of the State ex rel. Folsom Bros. vs. the City of New Orleans, recently decided and not yet reported.
It is in evidence that the parish of St. Martin is without property liable under seizure and execution, and it is admitted that there are no funds in the treasury to pay this judgment. The parish indebtedness, exclusive of the judgment, is about two thousand five hundred dollars, ahd there is an appropriation made in the current taxes of nine hundred dollars to pay all back indebtedness.
The special tax of one per cent imposed by the lower court is, by itself, a tax of ten mills, the valuation of the taxable property in the parish, under the assessment, being proved to be one million of dollars. The existing respective quantum of per centage of parochial taxes annually levied and collectible was not proved, and is not, therefore, specifically known to us. Whatever the parochial quantum be, it exists, as the parish has no means of self-support other than those 'realized by taxation. It is undeniable that it has a budget of expenditures provided for in that manner.
Added to the ten mills ordered to be.raised by the judgment in this ease, the total of the parochial tax and of the special tax ordered to be • assessed would clearly exceed the constitutional limit stated, which,
We think it our duty, in furtherance of the ends of justice, to remand the case, in order that the relator may have an opportunity of establishing that his judgment is founded on a contract, if such be the case,, and that the defendants may adduce such further evidence and make such other defenses as the nature of the suit may require.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the judgment appealed from, making peremptory the mandamus asked, be reversed, and that this case be remanded for further proceedings according to law, appellee to pay costs of both courts.