Badger v. City of New Orleans

21 So. 870, 49 La. Ann. 804, 1897 La. LEXIS 649
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 12, 1897
DocketNo. 12,438
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 21 So. 870 (Badger v. City of New Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Badger v. City of New Orleans, 21 So. 870, 49 La. Ann. 804, 1897 La. LEXIS 649 (La. 1897).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Miller, J.

The Relator demands that this court order the city of New Orleans to place upon its budget of expenses .for the year 1897, to be paid from the yearly revenues, one hundred and twenty thousand dollars claimed by the relator for the company he represents, under its contract for removing the garbage of the city; the contract having been entered into in 1893 for the period of twenty years, with stipulated payments of ten thousand dollars per [806]*806month to be provided for in the annual budgets. Pending the application for the injunction, the city prepared and published its budget, omitting the company, but placing in the proposed annual expenditures one hundred and twenty thousand dollars for removing garbage, and thereafter the relator obtained an injunction, prohibiting the city from disposing of the one hundred and twenty thousand dollars and other items on the budget, to the prejudice of his demand for payment out of the revenues of 1897. The City answered, averring the nullity and non-performance of the garbage contract,- and prosecutes this appeal from the judgment in relator’s favor.

The demands of the relator are modified in argument, and instead’ of payment he asks that the amount he claims be put on the budget as accruing to him, or that the amount now on it for garbage removal be ordered to be retained until the relator’s rights be determined insults to be brought by the city or by him. The City in argument urges the invalidity and non-performance of the garbage contract- and relies on the resolution of the council declaring the contract null. It is brought to our notice, too, that there is a pending suit in the United States Circuit Court brought by the relator asserting his-right under the contract, a-nd in which suit the city relies on its defences. It is thus manifest the binding obligation of the garbage contract is controverted by the city, and is at issue in the pending litigation in the Circuit Court.

Modified as are the demands by the argument, it is clear that the-relief he asks at our hands is in aid of the contract obligation he asserts, disputed as is the obligation by the city through its council and in the courts. If we give the relief we place at the relator’s disposal, should he eventually obtain judgment, the amount he claims under his contract; we take from the city to the same extent the control of its budget and the control of its revenues required for' the municipal functions. If we give this relief we necessarily give a-disputed contract recognition, .and make provision to secure performance by the city. The question confronts us at the outset,, whether by mandamus, restricted as it is to enforce purely ministerial duties, with all the aid afforded by the injunction, we can make-obligatory on the City even to the extent claimed an alleged contract the existence of which is denied, and force the City to place on its-budget the amount it refuses to recognize.

In our present discussion we deal first with the proposition to en[807]*807join the City from disposing of the one hundred and twenty thousand dollars now on the budget for garbage removal, not put there for the garbage company, but to be expended by the city through its ordinary instrumentalities for the removal of garbage. All can. appreciate that items placed on the budget for the specific purposes stated may be protected from diversion by the parties in interest. It is equally appreciable that funds placed on the budget, destined by law to the satisfaction of a class of creditors, may by injunction be preserved from any application to any other class. See the case of Barber Asphalt Paving Company vs. City of New Orleans, 43 An. 464, and other cases of that type. But in this case there is no provision whatever on the budget for the relator. What is asked in effect is, that the injunction shall restrain the application of an amount which is on the budget, but not for him, to which he conceives he is entitled and should, in his judgment, be allotted to him. Under the form of an injunction, he, in effect, asks that provision be made for him on the budget, not, it is true, that it shall be ordered paid to him, but none the less, that it shall be placed and retained on the budget to abide his rights. We think it must be recognized as familiar, that creditors can not in advance of judgment with exceptions unnecessary to be stated, enjoin the disposition of the debtor’s property. In Mr. High’s comprehensive chapter on the subject of injunctions to municipal corporations he has exhibited the uses of the writ. The misappropriation of municipal funds is, of course, prominent in his discussion. Thus, he instances appropriation of county funds in aid of a private corporation without authority of law; donations without legal authority for school houses; the disposition by county commissioners of the surplus revenues in an illegal and unauthorized manner, and similar cases are stated by him as affording the basis of an injunction. But there is no recognition in the chapter, of an injunction of a creditor to restrain the disposition of the corporate funds. As to creditors we understand the general principle to be that injunction to restrain the debtor’s control of his property can not be obtained. “ It is to be observed, however, that the jurisdiction (i. e., of injunction in behalf of creditors) is not exerted in favor of mere contract creditors, or creditors at large, whose claims are not reduced to judgment, and in the absence of statutory provisions authorizing the relief courts will not interfere by injunction to [808]*808restrain the debtor from any disposition of his property, however fraudulent the disposition he may seek to make,” etc. 2 High, Chapter 27. The answer that the creditor of the city of New Orleans dependent on the annual revenues for his payment and with a contract right to that payment is not a “ mere contract creditor ” does, in our view, withdraw him from the general principle announced by the text writer. Every creditor of the city for labor, supplies, or in other respects, is entitled by law to be placed on the budget for the year in. which his debt accrues, but that, in our view, would not, if he were omitted, entitle him to an injunction to restrain the City from making provisions on its budget for the annual expenses of municipal government. Hard as his condition might be if omitted, he could claim no such injunction as is asked for at our hands, but would be remitted toother relief. Again, in exceptional cases, it is the judgment creditor on whose behalf the injunction, issues to restrain the debtor’s disposition of his property. The judgment establishes his right. Here, it is asked by one who has no judgment, whose asserted debt is disputed and is the subject of pending litigation. With the best consideration we have been able to give this part of the case, we cans not see our way clear to grant the injunction. If there is any warrant for enjoining a municipal corporation from making its annual budget and providing for municipal expenditures, because there is an omission of a creditor with a contract stipulating he shall be put on the budget, but the validity and performance of whose asserted obligation the Oity disputes and contests in court, the authority has eluded our research. If we, in view of the hardship of this case, pressed on us in argument, issue the injunction, we make the precedent repugnant, as we think, to settled principles and apt to prove extremely embarrassing in the future.

But the injunction in this case is the mere auxiliary of the mandamus,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State ex rel. Wanner v. Fitzgerald
163 So. 2d 819 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1964)
State Ex Rel. Le Blanc v. Democratic State Central Committee
86 So. 2d 192 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1956)
State ex rel. Gill v. Soule
61 So. 2d 605 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1952)
Houeye v. St. Helena Parish School Board
35 So. 2d 739 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1948)
Ernest M. Loeb Co. v. Avoyelles Drainage Dist. No. 8
60 F. Supp. 296 (W.D. Louisiana, 1945)
State Ex Rel. Kennington v. Red River Parish School Board
193 So. 225 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1939)
State Ex Rel. City of New Orleans v. Louisiana Highway Commission
156 So. 806 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1934)
State ex rel. Smit v. Lafayette Bldg. Ass'n
85 So. 228 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1920)
Williams v. Police Jury of Morehouse Parish
68 So. 946 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1915)
State ex rel. Douglas v. Kennedy
46 So. 796 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1908)
State ex rel. Kaffie v. Smith
35 So. 584 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1903)
Blanks v. City of Monroe
34 So. 921 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 So. 870, 49 La. Ann. 804, 1897 La. LEXIS 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/badger-v-city-of-new-orleans-la-1897.