Cook v. City of Shreveport

6 La. App. 374, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 444
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 6, 1926
DocketNo. 2085
StatusPublished

This text of 6 La. App. 374 (Cook v. City of Shreveport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook v. City of Shreveport, 6 La. App. 374, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 444 (La. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

WEBB, J.

The city of Shreveport, acting through its constituted officers, and under a petition of the required number of property owners, requesting that a certain alley or street be paved under Act No. 187 of 1920, and amendments thereto, ordered the paving to be done under the provisions of said Act.

The Act provides for the payment for the work by the abutting owners and for the time and manner of payment as follows:

“Sec. 5. Be it further enacted, etc., That the amounts assessed in said ordinance shall be due and exigible immediately upon its passage, and if not paid within ten days thereafter the city or town, or its transferees, shall have power to proceed by suit against the assessed properties, and the owners thereof, to enforce the collection of the amounts of said assessment, together with six per cent per annum interest from date of acceptance thereof and ten per cent of the amount of the judgment as attorney’s fees.
“Sec. 6. Be it further enacted, etc., That the governing authorities of the municipality may provide in the ordinance accepting the work and making the assessment that the property owners therein assessed, availing themselves of the privilege within ten days after the passage of the ordinance, may pay in cash twenty per cent of the amount of their indebtedness and pay the balance thereof in four equal annual installments. As evidence of such deferred payments the property owner shall sign and execute four promissory notes payable to the order of the municipality, each for twenty per cent of the amount due by him, dated ten days after the passage of the ordinance accepting the work, maturing, respectively, one, two, three and four years from date, or sooner, at the option of the owner, bearing six per cent yearly interest from date and ten per cent attorney’s fees if placed in the hands of an attorney for collection after maturity, which notes, when paraphed by the city clerk or secretary to identify them with the ordinance levying the assessment, shall carry with them in the possession of any owner the lien and privilege above provided.”

Upon completion of the paving, the city of Shreveport by ordinance accepted same and made an assessment against the abutting property, providing for the payment of the amounts assessed against the abutting property as fixed by the statute, with the exception that where Section 5 of the statute provides for the payment of six per cent interest when the amount is not paid within ten days from the date of the assessment, Section 3 of the ordinance provides for the payment of eight per cent interest, and where Section 6 of the statute provides that the notes representing the deferred payments shall bear six per cent interest, Section 4 of the ordinance provides that the notes shall bear eight per cent.

The relator, Susie L. Cook, was one of the owners of property abutting on the street which had been paved, and she paid to the city of Shreveport, through S. G. Wolfe, secretary-treasurer, twenty per cent of the amount assessed against her property, and offered to give four notes bearing-six per cent interest and otherwise drawn [376]*376as provided by the statute and the ordinance to cover the balance due under the assessment, and this being refused she brought this action in which, after setting forth the facts as shown above, she alleged:

“Relator now avers that the said governing body of the said city of Shreveport did grant to relator and all other abutters of the aforesaid alley the privilege set out in Section 6 of the said Act of 1920 when it passed and adopted Section 4 of the ordinance * * * and that by passing Section 4 of said ordinance it both exercised and exhausted all discretion of option granted it by Act 187 of 1920, and at the same time granted the absolute right and privilege to all abutters on the said alley to pay their proportion of the said pavement according to the terms and conditions set out in Section 6 of Act 187 of 1920, and that it is now its pure and ministerial duty to accept payment for said paving according to the terms and conditions set out in Section 6 of Act 187 of 1920 * * * and she now avers that she has an absolute legal right to demand that the city of Shreveport, its mayor and officials, and especially S. G. Wolfe, secretary-treasurer and tax collector of the city of Shreveport, issue for her signature four promissory notes bearing six per cent interest and otherwise .drawn as provided by the statute and the ordinance.”

An alternative writ of mandamus was issued to the city of Shreveport, L. E. Thomas, mayor; J. T. Dixon, commissioner of finance, and S. G. Wolfe, secretary-treasurer and tax collector, and relator, by a supplemental petition, amended her pleadings and prayed that the defendants be ordered to accept the notes drawn as above for the deferred payments.

The defendants answered, admitting all of the facts alleged by plaintiff, denying the legal conclusion, and alleged that the petition failed to state a right or cause of action for the issuance of the writ of mandamus.

On trial the writ was made peremptory and defendants appealed.

OPINION

We assume that it will be conceded that in order for one to have the right to resort to the extraordinary writ of mandamus it must appear that the relator has the absolute right to demand the performance of the act or duty, that the duty to be performed must be ministerial, and that the relator has no other adequate remedy by ordinary process.

The defendants contend that, conceding to relator the right to demand the performance of the duty and that the duty is purely ministerial, relator has another adequate remedy, suggesting that she could await a suit by the city of Shreveport for the balance due under the assessment and then set up her right to have given the notes bearing six per cent interest.

The recordation of the ordinance levying the assessment fixed a lien and privilege on the property of relator, and conceding that the relator could await the action of the city and then avail herself of the right to give the notes, we are of the opinion that the expense and vexation of a lawsuit in order to have her property cleared of the privilege, would be a very poor substitute for her right to give the notes and to have the privilege can-celled proportionally as she paid the notes; and conceding that relator has a right to give the notes bearing six per cent interest, as provided by the statute, and that it is the ministerial duty of the city of Shreveport, or any one of the named offi[377]*377cers, to perform such duty, we do not think that the remedy suggested would be adequate within the meaning of the law.

To exclude resort to mandamus on the ground that relator has another remedy, such remedy must be an adequate one and well adapted to remedy the wrong complained of; if it is inconvenient or incomplete the court exercises a sound discretion in granting or refusing the writ. Another remedy, tedious and not so well adapted to the nature of the case as that by mandamus will not operate to prevent resort to the latter remedy; and it is said that the other remedy must be one competent to afford relief upon the very subject matter involved; that it must not only be adequate, but specific. (R. C. L., Mandamus, vol. 18, pge. 1342, No. 45.)

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 La. App. 374, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-city-of-shreveport-lactapp-1926.