Weaver v. City of Ogden City

111 F. 323 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Utah | 1901

MARSHALL, District Judge.

This is an application for a writ of mandamus requiring Ogden City, its mayor and city council, to make an appropriation for the payment of two certain judgments recovered by petitioner, and to pay the same if the city has sufficient funds for that purpose; otherwise to levy and collect a tax therefor. The petition for the writ alleges the recovery by the plaintiff in this court of two judgments against the defendant; aggregating $22,042.58, a demand on the mayor and,city council of defendant for payment, and its refusal, the subsequent issue of an execution, and a return nulla bona thereon. An alternative writ was issued, to which Ogden City has made return:

“That on the 13th day of September, 1901, the city council of Ogden Oity passed a resolution, which resolution was thereafter signed by the mayor, authorizing the city auditor of Ogden City to issue a warrant payable to the order of William C. Weaver, receiver (being No. 40,871), for twenty-four thousand five hundred sixty-eight and sr/ioo ($24,568.37) dollars, which included the amount of the judgments, together with costs and interest, mentioned in said alternative writ of mandate. That thereafter, on the 14th day of September, 1901, said defendant tendered said warrant to William C. Weaver as said receiver, which said warrant said William C. Weaver then and there refused to accept. And this defendant says that at the time of the issuance of said warrant it had not sufficient funds on hand to pay the same, and this defendant further says that it has no power under its charter or the laws of the state of Utah to- levy a special tax with which to pay said judgments, interest, and Costs, as required by said writ.”

This return has been treated by the parties as the return of all of the respondents.

A hearing was had, at which it appeared that, when the petition for the mandamus was filed, Ogden City had in the hands -of its treasurer $18,500.85 of general funds, and on September 13, 1901, when the warrant described in the return was tendered, it had $24,-042.56; that at the same dates there were outstanding warrants drawn on this fund, and theretofore presented to the treasurer for payment, and payment refused for want of funds, aggregating about $70,000.

As Ogden City is an instrumentality of the state in the government of the people, its revenues are not subject to seizure under execution. Its judgment creditors can have no recourse to such revenues, other than such as the statutes of the. state have prescribed. It is elementary that the remedy by way of mandamus will only lie to enforce the performance of a plain legal duty upon the part of a public officer, and where the petitioner has no other ade*325quale remedy. The petitioner in this case must be able to point to a statute of the state which expressly or by implication imposed some duty upon the mayor and city council which they have failed to perform. The petition for the writ does not allege, nor was evidence introduced to show, the nature of the indebtedness for which the judgments were recovered. The case stands on the existence merely of the judgments. Board v. King, 15 C. C. A. 93, 67 Fed. 945. Hence we must look exclusively to the statutes of the state as they existed at the date of the judgments, in order to determine the rights of the judgment creditor. By those statutes the city council is given power tó control the finances of the corporation, to appropriate money for corporate purposes, to provide for payment oí corporate debts, and to levy and collect taxes for general and special purposes. Rev. St. Utah, § 206. But the general taxes which may be levied are limited in amount by statute, and the objects of special taxes enumerated. The payment of judgments against the city is not one of those enumerated objects. It is further provided that the city treasurer shall receive all money belonging to the city, and shall “pay no money out save upon lawful warrant, except bonds and interest coupons.” Id. §§, 232, 233. And section 234 provides:

“All Wiirrants shall he paid in the order In which they shall be presented, and the treasurer shall note upon the back of each warrant presented l,o him, ibe date of such presentation and when payment is made the date of 'such payment: provided, that any warrant shall be paid by the treasurer in case k sufficient amount of money shall remain in the treasury to pay all warrants issued previous'to such warrant”

And section 230 provides:

'“The city auditor, in’cities having an auditor, and in all other cases, the city recorder, shall draw and countersign all orders upon the treasurer in pursuance of any order or resolution of the city council and keep a full and accurate account thereof in books provided for that pmpose.”

Taking these provisions of the statute together, it is evident that the power of the city council to pay the debts of the city is to be exercised by resolution that a warrant issue directing the treasurer to pay. The auditor then issues the warrant, and the treasurer is required to pay it upon presentation, if there be sufficient funds on hand for that purpose. If not, the warrant is ranked among the unpaid warrants in the order in which such warrants were presented, and is paid in its turn. The mere fact that the petitioner is a judgment creditor gives him no priority. As stated in U. S. v. Macon Co., 99 U. S. 582, 591, 25 L. Ed. 331, 333, “the judgment has the effect of a judicial determination of the validity of his demand and the amount that is due, but it gives him no new right in respect to the means of payment.” He is still entitled to the right, and only to the right, given to him by the statute of the state in relation to cities and the disposition of their revenues. This statute, we have seen, provides a procedure by which he will be paid in his turn. The court is not authorized to change the order of payment. Bailey v. Lawrence Co. (S. D.) 51 N. W. 331, 332. So that, unless an additional tax ought to have been levied, it does not appear that the *326respondents have failed, to perform the duty incumbent on them under the statutes of the state. The power to tax is exclusively a legislative power. A court has no taxing power. It cannot coerce a levy in this case unless the statutes of the state have made it the clear duty of the respondents to levy a tax, and they have failed to perform this' duty. But the petitioner has wholly failed to allege or prove that the city council have not levied for this year the maximum rate of tax authorized by law to be levied for general purposes, and there is no.showing that the judgments in question were rendered upon a kind of indebtedness for the payment of which the law provides that a special tax shall be levied. Nor can the petitioner demand that a specific part of the general tax shall be levied to pay his judgments. Board v. King, 14 C. C. A. 421, 67 Fed. 202. Bor aught that appears,'the respondents have discharged their full duty in this respect. '

But it is argued that the return in this case is insufficient because it is to the effect that at the time the warrant in question was tendered to petitioner there were not sufficient funds on hand to pay the same, but omits to state that there were no funds on hand which could legally be applied in part payment of the warrant. If a mandamus had been sought against the city treasurer, and he had made this return, the criticism would be justified. But Ogden City, its mayor and city council, are the only persons sought to be mandamused. It was only necessary that the return should justify the acts or failure to act of the mayor and the city'- council. As it shows that they caused a warrant to issue and be tendered to petitioner, which would make it the duty of the treasurer to pay to him any money in the treasurer’s hands legally applicable to the payment of the warrant until it was fully paid,* it discloses that they have discharged their duty.

The peremptory writ will be denied.

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