37 P. 66 | Or. | 1894
Opinion by
“It is not sufficient,” says Mr. Justice Miller, “to say in the bill that they are ready and willing to pay whatever may be found due. They must first pay what is conceded to be due, or what can be seen to be due on the face of the bill, or be shown by affidavits, whether conceded or not, before the preliminary injunction should be granted. The state is not to be thus tied up as to that of which there is no contest, by lumping it with that which is really contested. If the proper officer refuses to receive a part of the tax, it must be tendered, and tendered without the condition annexed of a receipt in full for all the taxes assessed”: State Railroad Tax Cases, 92 U. S. 575. As we understand it, adopting the language of Mr. Justice Sawyer, “the court distinctly holds that some tax, according to some rule of taxation, ought to be paid on all taxable property, and that the bill which does not allege a payment of so much of the tax as the party concedes, or, if not conceded, may be seen from the bill, or shown by affidavits, ought to be assessed and paid, does not present any equity to justify an injunction.” Here the amount
Affirmed.
Note.—The great multitude of cases more or less conflicting on the right to an injunction to restrain the collection of illegal taxes are collected and analyzed in a note to the case of Odlin v. Woodruff (Florida), 22 L. R. A. 699.—Reporter.