70 Tenn. 204 | Tenn. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the court.
The Legislature, by an act passed on the 29th and approved by the Governor on the 31st of January, 1879, enacted that all • the acts under which the city of Memphis was chartered, or its charter altered or
By another act, passed and approved on the same days, the several communities embraced in the territorial limits of all municipal corporations in the State as have had or may have their charters abolished, or may surrender the same under the provisions of the act, are created “taxing districts,” in order to provide the means of local government for the peace, safety, and general welfare of such districts; the act provides f< agencies and governing instrumentalities ” for these districts, and directs “that the necessary taxes for the support of the government thus established shall, be imposed directly by the General Assembly of the State, and not otherwise.” By the 14th section, all the
By section 5, taxes imposed prior to 1875 may be settled in the valid indebtedness of the city at rates prescribed, and so of taxes imposed after 1874, “when there is no lien or equity requiring the same to be paid in current money,” any question raised to be determined by the court, on motion.
By section 6 the receiver is limited to the collection of one-fifth of the taxes due from any individual annually, so as to distribute the whole through five equal annual installments, commencing with the qualification of the receiver, “ provided, however, that nothing herein contained is intended to interfere with any vested right which entitles the party having such right to a speedier collection, but only to extend the indulgence where the State has the power to do so without interfering with vested rights.”
By section 7, the funds collected are to be paid out, from time to time, to those entitled, “as the chancery court may adjudge and decree.”
By section 13, it is provided “that the proceedings in all suits now pending for the collection of taxes due said extinct municipalities, shall be suspended until the filing of the general creditor’s bill, and the consolidation provided for in this act.” The Governor appointed Minor Merriwether “receiver and back tax collector” under the preceding act, who gave bond and qualified as required by law, and on the 31st March, 1879, filed this bill. The bill is not the general creditor’s bill as prescribed by the statute, but a bill
Whether third persons can be made parties to a suit in chancery upon their own application, and against the wishes of those who. are actually litigants, is a question about which there may be some doubt, but that such persons can apply to have a suit between litigants dismissed, or to induce the court to decline to proceed therein, be-oause the applicants have an interest in the questions involved, has, perhaps, never, or rarely ever, been heretofore
The difficulty in the way of the litigants in this suit grows out of the record itselfj and the case made by the agreement. The record shows that the Chancellor
For another reason, the questions so ably argued by the learned counsel cannot be settled in this proceeding. If the points submitted involved only the right of the complainant to collect, and of the defendant to pay the taxes sued for, the court might safely act. For the result would only affect the actual litigants, but the agreed case calls upon the court to determine whether the mode of payment of the taxes prescribed by the statute is obligatory. The statute itself, under which the action is brought, expressly, as we have seen, reserves vested rights in the taxes, and any lien or equity requiring them to be paid in other money, or more speedily than is prescribed. The intention of the Legislature is unmistakable to bring before the court, in the one suit directed to be brought, and with which all previous suits are to be consolidated,
The cause will be stricken from the docket as prematurely brought to this court, and the appellant will pay the costs of this court.