The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an application by the petitioner to this Court in its original jurisdiction for a writ of injunction'against the respondent as Comptroller General, whereby he should be perpetually 'enjoined from proceeding under an act of the General Assembly, the license act of 1904, amended in 1905, to assess and charge against petitioner a tax of one-half of one mill upon each dollar of its capital stock paid in and outstanding, amounting to the sum1 of five hundred dollars, and upon the refusal of the petitioner to pay said tax within the times stated in the act, to proceed to collect the same as directed therein. A rule to show cause why the injunction prayed for should not be granted was issued on March 29th, 1907, directed to the respondent, and in the meantime restraining him from all further proceedings against the petitioner under said license act. The petition alleges in brief that the act in question is unconstitutional,- null and void, and that the respondent is proceeding entirely without authority of law.
It is one of the fundamental principles of law that for every wrong or injury there must be an adequate remedy. At the common law the remedies obtainable were in many cases far from adequate. In order to supply this need, the system of equity with its great adaptability came into existence, and where the common law was inadequate the litigant had his remedy in that court. This, of course, took place only when the law by its generality and hardness, so to speak, was unable to give justice. Among the powers thus acquired was the right in certain cases to issue the preventive writ of injunction. In our State, with the development of the equity system, the number of instances in which the writ was applicable and would issue, as a remedy, increased so that at the time of the adoption of our Constitution of 1868, its usefulness in South Carolina was even more extended than in England. As was said above, one purpose for which its' power was exercised was the restraining of the collection of illegal taxes. This power the Constitution left remaining in the equity court. Looking, then, to the principle, at least one of the great principles, upon which our government is founded, namely, that each of the three departments must remain forever separate and distinct, we are of the opinion that where there is no legal adequate remedy, it is beyond the power of the Legislature to say that the *216 collection of taxes shall not be enjoined by any writ or other order of any Court or Judge thereof.
When the Legislature provides an adequate remedy, a court of equity, upon one of its own fundamental principles, namely, that where there is an adequate remedy at law equity will not interfere, loses jurisdiction. This is no new scheme or principle. It is the very mode by which our modern law court has become so embedded with many of the beneficial remedies formerly cognizable only by a court of equity. In holding section 412, above quoted, constitutional, we think the act was regarded as practically reiterating the maxim that, where there is a legal remedy, resort cannot be had to a court of equity. In this view the opinions above referred to are sound.
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The judgment of this Court is, that the motion be denied and the petition dismissed.
