In Edgerton v. Municipality (1 La. Ann 435), the following observations were made: "On the first view of this question" (said ROST, J.) "there is something very repugnant to the moral sense, in the idea that a municipal corporation should contract debts, and that, having no resources but the taxes which are due to it, these should not be subjected by legal process to the satisfaction of its creditors. This consideration, deduced from the principles of moral duty, has only given way to the more enlarged contemplation of the great and paramount interests of public order, and the principles of government." It was under the influence of the moral sense, referred to in the former part of this passage, that the decision cited for appellant, inSmoot v. Hart (
We are of the opinion, that there was error in the interpretation given to that section. It related to corporations of a private character. This is indicated by the reference in it to the liability of the "stockholder" as such, of the corporations contemplated. Municipal corporations, as Mr. Dillon says, are instituted by the supreme authority of a State, for the public good. They exercise, by delegation from the legislature, a portion of the sovereign power. The main object of their creation is to act as administrative agencies for the State, and to provide for the police and local government of certain designated civil divisions of its territory. To this end, they are invested with governmental powers, and charged with civil, political, and municipal duties. To enable them beneficially to exercise these powers, and to discharge these duties, they are clothed with the authority to raise revenues by taxation, and by other modes, as by fines and penalties. Deprived of its regular and adequate supply of revenue, such a corporation is practically destroyed, and the very ends of its erection thwarted. Based upon considerations of this character, it is the settled doctrine of the law, that the taxes and public revenues of such corporations cannot be seized under executions against them, either in the treasury, or when in transit to it. The doctrine of the inviolability of the public revenues by the creditors is maintained, although the corporation is in debt, and has no means of payment but the taxes which it is authorized to collect. — 1 Dillon on Mun. Cor. § 64, and cases cited These are valid reasons, founded on public policy, concerning affairs and matters of great importance to society, why, without express statutory authority, the revenue of these bodies politic should not be subject to seizure or sequestration by garnishment for individual creditors.
Other like considerations, founded on the disorder which would be thereby produced in public accounts and administration, are stated in a case somewhat similar, Pruitt v. Armstrong, *Page 219
recently decided in this court,
Let the judgment of the Circuit Court in the cause before us be affirmed
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