From the view which we have taken of this case it is unnecessary to inquire whether the court below was right in holding the school and road district taxes in dispute invalid. The judgment required the plaintiff to pay into court the sum of $1,826.44, and interest thereon at twelve per cent, from January 1, 1884, and that upon compliance with that condition it should take judgment perpetually enjoining the collection of the. district school and road taxes, amounting to $314.25. The court adjudged that the payment by the plaintiff of the sum specified should be
The appeal is “ from the whole and every part of the judgment.” The counsel for the plaintiff insists that the defendants, by accepting the money, waived their right to appeal from the judgment. ¥e think this position is correct, and that the appeal must be dismissed. The case comes fully within the principles decided in Cogswell v. Colley, 22 Wis. 399; Flanders v. Merrimac, 44 Wis. 621; Bennett v. Van Syckel, 18 N. Y. 481; Murphy v. Spaulding, 46 N. Y. 556; Carll v. Oakley, 97 N. Y. 633. These decisions go upon the ground that a party cannot proceed to enforce and have the benefit of such portions of a judgment as are in his favor, and appeal from those against him. In other words, that the right to proceed on a judgment and enjoy its fruits, and the right to appeal therefrom, are totally inconsistent positions. The election to pursue one course must be deemed an abandonment of the other. Here the plaintiff paid all the taxes which it was adjudged it should pay as a condition to enjoining those which the court held illegal. The defendants have seen fit to apply for and accept the money thus paid. By complying with the provisions of the judgment, the plaintiff is forever estopped from questioning the legality, either in law or in equity, of the taxes paid. The defendant’s contention is
The learned counsel for the defendants says the taxes were ordered to be paid into court for the use of the defendants; that they belonged to the county which was justly entitled to them; and that no condition was annexed to the acceptance of the money by the defendants. It is true the judgment does not provide that if the defendants apply for and accept the money paid into court this shall be a Avaiver of the right to appeal from the judgment. But the authorities above cited show that the law attaches that consequence to the acts of the defendants; that it will not allow them to enforce a right conferred by the judgment and at the same time prosecute an appeal from it. The acceptance of the money, under the circumstances, must be referred to the defendants’ right to it under the judgment, and cannot be considered as a voluntary payment by the plaintiff, but as a payment in pursuance of the judgment. The defendants were not obliged to accept the money. They might have let it remain in court until the litigation was terminated, but they chose to apply for and receive it,
By the Court.— The appeal is dismissed.