22 S.E. 157 | Va. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellee, J. M. Rowe, obtained from the judge of the circuit court of Gloucester county, May 19, 1894, an injunction to restrain Joel Thomas, oyster inspector for district No. 10, Gloucester county, from selling at public auction certain property of Rowe levied on by Thomas, inspector, to satisfy claims in his hands for oyster-ground rent, surveying, assigning, etc., advertised May 18, 1894, for sale, as to three canoes, stock of oysters, on May 22, 1894, and as to four cows, yoke of oxen, and three heifers, on June court day. The bill filed by Rowe states “that on the 24th of April, 1894, he was in possession of, holding, and using certain oyster-planting ground in the county of Gloucester ; that it had not been assigned to him, or surveyed at his request, or rent paid, under the act of the general assembly of Virginia approved March 5, 1894 ; that on the 24th day of April, 1894, Joel Thomas, inspector for district No. 10, Gloucester county, served notice on complainant, as the law provides; that on May 18, 1894, Thomas, inspector, posted notice of the sale of his property, as before stated; that the levy was made, as claimed by inspector, for back rént; that complainant owed no back rent, having never rented ; that there could be no renting till the rent is paid in advance,” — vouching Acts Assem. 1893-94, § 2, approved March 5, 1894. And the bill then charges that Inspector Thomas
Thomas, the inspector, and only defendant, demurred to this bill, as being insufficient in law, and filed his answer thereto, which states that he went to complainant in June, 1892, and asked him if he wanted the oyster-planting ground he had been occupying, and Eowe replied that he did ; that Eowe then went with respondent, and marked off the ground as he wished it surveyed, and was present when all except one parcel was surveyed ; that Eowe’s oyster ground consists of several parcels, and that he had before designated how he wished that parcel surveyed, which, though surveyed in his absence, was surveyed in accordance with his wishes ; that, after this survey, Eowe refused to pay the rent, or the fees of the inspector and surveyor ; that Eowe did apply for the oyster-planting ground in question, and to have it surveyed, and for two years has been using and occupying it with oysters planted thereon, and persistently refuses to pay one cent of the rent or fees ; and that respondent, failing to collect of Eowe the amount due to the state, and fees, did levy on Eowe’s property, and advertise the same, to satisfy the claims in his hands as in
. Upon a hearing of the cause on the bill and its exhibits, and the demurrer and answer of Thomas, inspector, the circuit court overruled the demurrer, and, without stating in the decree the grounds upon which it was decreed, perpetuated the injunction ; and an appeal was allowed Thomas, inspector, to this court.
The questions to be disposed of are :
1. The jurisdiction of this court. It is insisted by appellee’s counsel that there is no constitutional question involved in the case, and as the amount in controversy is not $1,500 this court is without jurisdiction, and must dismiss the cause. The bill filed by Rowe in the court below charges, as we have seen, that the act of the assembly under which Thomas, inspector, was acting in endeavoring to collect revenues to which the commonwealth was entitled as rent for oyster grounds, the property of the commonwealth, and the costs, etc., incident to their collection, under the act of March 5, 1894, was unconstitutional, whereby the validity of the statute is called in question ; and he cannot, therefore, question the jurisdiction of this court on the ground that there is no constitutional question involved. Const. Va. art. 6, § 2 ; Com. v. Chaffin, 87 Va. 545, 547, 12 S. E. 972.
2. Did the circuit court of Gloucester err in overruling Thomas’, inspector’s, demurrer, and perpetuating the injunction? An allegation in a bill for injunction that the legislative act under which the wrong complained of is being committed is unconstitutional will not, of itself, confer jurisdiction upon a court of equity to grant the relief prayed for ; and, where the other allegations do not make a case for equitable relief, a demurrer to such a bill should be sustained. The allegations of the complaint in the court below attack the act of March 5, 1894, as unconstitutional, and specify that section 7 is plainly unconstitutional, because it authorizes the inspector to impose
"We are of opinion that the circuit court erred both in overruling the demurrer to the bill filed by Rowe, and in not dismissing the cause, when heard on the bill and the answer of Thomas, inspector. The answer being responsive to the bill, negativing all of its equities, and being sworn to, was entitled to the weight of an affidavit. Code Va. § 3281. And upon a motion to dissolve the injunction, heard, as if it was, on the bill and the answer, the injunction should have been dissolved. 1 Bart. Ch. Prac. 414, 426 ; North v. Perrow, 4 Rand. (Va.) 1; Hogan v. Duke, 20 Grat. 244; 2 High, Inj. (3d Ed.)§ 1472 ; Moore v. Barclay, 23 Ala. 739; Rogers v. Bradford, 29 Ala. 474. The decree of the circuit court will therefore be reversed, and this court will enter such decree as the circuit court should have entered, sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the bill.