Carlton v. Newman

1 A. 194, 77 Me. 408, 1885 Me. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 6, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1 A. 194 (Carlton v. Newman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carlton v. Newman, 1 A. 194, 77 Me. 408, 1885 Me. LEXIS 85 (Me. 1885).

Opinion

Virgin, J.

While the defendant admits the facts he denies that equity can enjoin the collection of the pretended tax even on the assumption that it was assessed without the authority of law and therefore void; and he contends that the only remedies open to the plaintiffs and all the other tax-payers on whose polls and estates the tax has been assessed are simply such as the law affords, viz. : each to defend the action of debt against himself, provided the collector shall proceed to enforce the collection by such action under the provisions of E. S., c. 6, § 141; or, in case the collector shall resort to the more usual mode, of seizing their individual property under the other statutory provisions for the collection of taxes, then for each tax-payer whose property shall be taken to bring an action for damages, or recover back the money when collected ; and these remedies are said to be "plain, adequate and complete.”

If a tax against an individual be illegal simply by reason of some irregularity in its assessment, as for instance on account of over-valuation, or if laid on property which the tax-payer did not own at the time, he would then have ample remedy therefor by a seasonable application for an abatement. E. S., c. 6, § § 68, 69 ; Gilpatrick v. Saco, 57 Maine, 277. Moreover, it is generally held that a bill to restrain the collection of a tax cannot be maintained on the sole ground of its illegality. Greene v. Mumford, 5 R. I. 472; Sherman v. Leonard, 10 R. I. 469; Guest v. Brooklyn, 69 N. Y. 506; Loud v. Charlestown, 99 Mass. 208; Whiting v. Boston, 106 Mass. 89, 93 ; Hunnewell v. Oharlestown, 106 Mass. 350. There must be some allegation presenting a case of equity jurisdiction. Dows v. Chicago, 11 Wall. 108; Hunnewinkle v. Georgetown, 15 Wall. 547; State R. R. Tax Cas. 92 U. S. 575, 614. Cases cited 2 Dest, Tax. 676-7. In Hunnewell v. Charlestown, supra, brought by a single plaintiff, the court add: " The question is not affected by the fact that there are others, whether few or many, who are [411]*411subjected to a like assessment by the same proceedings of the city council and who propose to contest their liability.”

But we are of opinion that when it appears that an entire school-district tax is illegal because assessed without authority of law, a bill to enjoin its collection brought by all of the taxpayers of the district jointly on whose polls and estates the tax has been assessed, or by any number thereof on behalf of themselves and all the others similarly situated, may be sustained upon the ground of the inherent jurisdiction of equity to interpose for the purpose of preventing a multiplicity of suits; that although each tax-payer has some legal remedy, it is grossly inadequate when compared with the comprehensive and complete relief afforded by a single decree.

The general doctrine coeval with equity proceedings, asserted in a multitude of decisions, that in certain cases where parties have some remedy, equity may interpose and take cognizance for the purpose of preventing a multiplicity of suits, was declared by Chan. Kent to bo "a favorite object with a court of equity,” Brinkerhoff v. Brown, 6 Johns. Ch. 151; and the number of parties and the multiplicity of actual or threatened suits, as stated by Comstock, J., sometimes justify a resort to equity when the subject is not at all of an equitable character and there is no other element of equity jurisdiction. N. Y. & N. H. R. R. v. Schuyler, 17 N. Y. 608. And yet the precise extent and limitations of the doctrine are still unsettled, the decisions being quite inharmonious even as to its fundamental grounds. It is said that " bills of peace ” were founded upon this ground - — ■ to quiet unnecessary litigation as to titles and where one person claimed or defended a right against many or many against one. Sto. Eq. § 864. In these bills originally, whether brought by or in behalf of many against one, or by one against or on behalf of many, " chancery confined its jurisdiction to cases wherein there was some common interest in the subject matter of the controversy, or a common title from which all their separate claims and all the questions at issue arose ; it not being enough that the claims of each individual being separate and distinct, there was a community of interest merely in the question of law [412]*412or fact involved, or in the kind and form of remedy demanded and obtained by or against each individual.” Pom. Eq. § 26S. But at an early day the limitations began to yield and the jurisdiction to extend. Thus in York v. Pilkington, 1 Atk. 282, Lord Chan. Hardwicks at first intimated that the bill would not be maintained for.want of any general right or privity among the parties and because the nature of the defendants’ claims was different and that therefore injunction would not quiet the possession as other persons not parties might likewise claim a right. But after argument he changed his opinion saying bills might be maintained although there were no privity between the plaintiffs and defendants nor any general right on the part of the defendants and when many more might be concerned than those before the court.

This jurisdiction has continued to extend until it comprises a great variety of cases which do not come strictly withiu bills of peace but which courts have declared to be analogous thereto and within the principles thereof and in which there was no common title or community of interest in anything save the question at issue and the remedy sought. Thus in a recent case where the owner of lands on a river sought by a bill against them jointly to restrain several owners of mines from depositing the debris thereof in the river and its tributaries whereby it floated down and was deposited upon the plaintiff’s lands, on demurrer, Sawyer, J., sustained the bill, saying: " The rights of all involved depend upon identically the same question, both of law and fact. It is one of the class of cases, like bills of peace, and bills founded on analogous principles, where a single individual may bring a suit against numerous defendants, where there is no joint interest or title, but where the questions at issue and the evidence to establish the rights of the parties and the relief demanded are identical.” Woodruff v. North B. G. M. Co. 8 Saw. U. S. C. C. 628. This case has been cited and approved by this court in the very recent case of like nature, Lockwood v. Lawrence, 77 Maine 297.

So in a late English case: The bursting of the plaintiff’s reservoir occasioned an inundation which damaged the property [413]*413of many persons. The statute commissioners issued certificates to such as satisfactorily proved their damages and entitled them to costs and could be enforced by action at law. Fifteen hundred of the certificates were alleged to be invalid; and to avoid a multiplicity of suits against itself the bill was brought by the plaintiff against five holders of the certificates " on behalf of themselves and all other the persons named in any of certain pretended certificates.” On demurrer, the bill was sustained first by V. C. Kindeesleb; and on appeal by Ld. Ch. Chelmseord who said : " Perhaps, strictly speaking, this is not a bill of peace, as the rights of the claimants under the alleged certificates are not identical; but it appears to mo to be within the principle of bills of this description.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 A. 194, 77 Me. 408, 1885 Me. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlton-v-newman-me-1885.