County Commissioners v. Bryson

13 Fla. 281
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 1, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 13 Fla. 281 (County Commissioners v. Bryson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County Commissioners v. Bryson, 13 Fla. 281 (Fla. 1869).

Opinion

RANDALL, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was a suit in chancery, brought by the County Commissioners of Columbia County against William Bryson and the sheriff of that county, for an injunction and general relief. Tiie Judge of tire Circuit Court refused to grant the injunction and dismissed the bill, whereupon the complainants sued out a writ of error, in pursuance of which writ a return is made to this court.

The Supreme Court of this State, in Bradford, executor, vs. Marvin, 2 Fla., 101, decided that a writ of error could not he used as a process to remove an equity cause to this court. This L in accordance with the terms of tiie statute, and with tiie uniform practice where the. distinction between suits at law and in equity has not boon abolished.

However, it may ho proper to refer to' some of the questions argued by counsel in presenting the case. Tiie facts are briefly these:

James Stephenson and four others, as county commissioners of Columbia county, tiled their bill in Columbia Circuit Court, praying an injunction against Bryson and the sheriff of that county, to restrain them from serving and enforcing a peremptory writ of inandamm issued out of the Circuit Court. In IStirt, Bryson tiled his petition for a writ [283]*283of mandamus, to be issued for the purpose of compelling Silas L. Hiblaek and others, then county commissioners','to levy a tax to pay certain coupons representing the interest upon bonds issued by the commissioners under the'22d section of the act known as the Internal Improvement Act, approved January 6, 1855, in payment of stock subscribed by them in the Florida, Atlantic"and Gulf Central Eailroád. Company. An alternative writ was issued and served, arid on hearing the return of the commissioners, the court'awarded a peremptory writ of mandamus, in pursuance 'of which a tax was levied, and the collector seized property to satisfy the tax against one of the citizens, when Bryson’s counsel requested the collector to suspend proceedings for the time, and the tax was not collected. The matter remained this •until 1867, when Bryson moved that another peremptory-writ bo issued under the proceedings had in 1860, and another writ was awarded to be directed to Geo. B." 'Smithson and others, the successors of Hiblaek and others, as county commissioners.

Sb'om the order awarding this writ an appeal was taken, bond given, &c., but soon afterwards the,courthouse and records of Columbia county were destroyed'by fire, to-wit: October 9th, 1867. At the spring term, 1868, the records in the case were re-established, and the court thereupon directed a peremptory writ to issue as soon as a board óf county commissioners should be organized. On the 15tb' October, 1868, this writ was issued pursuant to the order made in April, 1867, directed to and commanding the complainants to levy and collect the tax, and the writ was served upon the éomplainants. Ho action was taken toward the further prosecution of the appeal, nor for its dismissal.

It is claimed that the fqrmer writ was directed-to the commissioners named, but not to their “ successors in office',” and hence that the force of the writ was expended, and ño alias writ could issue to the successors in office. It is further claimed that no order could he made by the Circuit Judge [284]*284after the appeal, until the appeal was disposed of by the Supreme Court; that they were deprived-of the benefits of their appeal by the destruction of the records; that they relied on their return to the alternative writ; that the counties of Suwannee and Bradford had been taken from the territory of Columbia county without the consent of the . latter, and that the new counties had not been made parties in the proceeding, nor had Columbia county any means of compelling them to contribute ; that the only proper remedy of Bryson was by suit at law upon the bonds or the coupons, and that the act under which the bonds were issued was un- ■ constitutional and void, and the bonds were therefore void. It is further claimed that new facts have come to their knowledge, which, if known and pleaded, would have led to a different result; but no new facts are stated in the bill "which can avail the complainants.

It is further claimed that the basis upon which the bonds were issued was in part slave property, which has been taken from the citizens by the State without making compensation therefor, and that the new constitution prohibits the levying of taxes upon persons for paying the interest of any bonds issued by counties or corporations for the benefit of any chartered company, and therefore the tax cannot be levied at all. Wherefore, the complainants pray for an injunction and for general relief. Upon presenting the motion for injunction upon the bill and accompanying affidavit, the judge ' denied the motion and dismissed the bill, which order is alleged to be erroneous.

We are met here by the objection, on the part of the appellees, that courts of equity will not interfere by injunction to stay proceedings on a mandamus. Story’s Eq. Juris., sec. 898, says: There are cases in which courts of equity will not exercise jurisdiction by way of injunction to stay proceedings at law in any criminal matters, or in cases not strictly of a civil nature, as, fo.r instance, they will not grant an injunction to stay proceedings on a mandamus, or an in[285]*285dictment, or an information, or a writ of prohibition. 2 Ves., 896.

Lord Hardwicke allowed a demurrer to a bill for an in- . junction to stay proceedings on a mandamus issued to compel the lord of a manor to hold a court, and said that the court has no jurisdiction to enjoin proceedings on a mcvndamus.” An inj unction will not be granted if the person seeking it could, by proper vigilance, have protected himself by the ordinary means at law. See 3 Dan. Pl. and Pr., 1723, 3 Am. ed., where numerous authorities are cited; and Story’sEq. Juris., sec. 894, quotes: “ Courts of equity will not relieve against ' a judgment at law, where the ease in equity proceeds upon a defence equally available at law, but the plaintiff ought to establish some special ground of relief. The doctrine goes yet farther, and it may be asserted to be a general rule, that a defence cannot be sét up as the ground of a bill in equity for an injunction, which has been fully and fairly tried at law, although it may be the opinion of a court of equity that the defence ought to have been sustained at law. If there are any exceptions to this rule, they must be of a very special nature. But relief will be granted where the defence could not, at the time or under the circumstances, be made available at law without any laches of the party.” This question was considered by this court in Dibble vs. Truluck, 12 Fla., 185.

If it were competent to grant an injunction in a case of mandamus to restrain the writ, it is not considered that the circumstances of the present case present a proper case for injunction. The “ newly discovered facts,” as disclosed, are facts which were patent at the trial, and if their presence was not then discovered, it was not because the discovery was difficult. Indeed, it appears from the bill that all the material grounds of defence were urged before the chancellor, and the complainants were embarrassed for a timé, and prevented from prosecuting their appeal by the destruction of the record; but in the meantime, no advantage was [286]

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Bluebook (online)
13 Fla. 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-commissioners-v-bryson-fla-1869.