D'Antignac v. City Council of Augusta

31 Ga. 700
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 31 Ga. 700 (D'Antignac v. City Council of Augusta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D'Antignac v. City Council of Augusta, 31 Ga. 700 (Ga. 1861).

Opinion

By the Court.

Jenkins, J.,

delivering the opinion.

We are not called upon in this case to pass upon the validity of the claim which defendants in error are seeking to enforce against plaintiff, nor do we intend so- to do. It appears from the record, that defendants in error (being a municipal corporation, and authorized by their charter to assess against the inhabitants of the city of Aug'usta, taxes for the support of the municipal government) on the fourth day of February, i860, caused ten executions to be issued by their clerk, against the plaintiff in error, each for the tax due by him for one year, and all covering the ten years from the year 1850 to the year 1859, inclusive. These executions were not issued from a Court of Record, to enforce a judgment obtained either at law or in equity, in a suit inter partes. They were issued by authority of the general [709]*709ordinance of the city council of Augusta, providing for the collection of taxes by a summary proceeding against defaulters. The proceeding thus authorized is exporte summary, and extraordinary, in so far as it departs from the course prescribed by the general law of the land for the collection of debts. The legality of the ordinance is not questioned; it has been treated as a statute, both in the pleadings and iii the argument. These executions having been levied upon certain property of the defendant, he 'filed his bill in chancery, alleging that they had not been issued in conformity with the. ordinance in question, and were, therefore, illegal; and praying that the plaintiff be restrained from proceeding further to enforce them. The injunction was granted, in the inception of this case, but was, upon the filing of the answer, on motion, dissolved — -the Court below holding that they had been legally issued, and this judgment is assigned as error.

Our first inquiry is into the law of the case; and this is to be found iq those sections of the general ordinance of city council of Augusta, which impose upon the inhabitants the duty of paying, and upon the collector and treasurer the duty of collecting taxes; and which define the status of a defaulting taxpayer, and authorize the issue of execution against him.

During the years from 1850 to 1856 (both included), the section governing this case was the 105th, and is in these words: “The collector and treasurer shall collect all taxes due to the city, unless the collection thereof is otherwise provided for,. It shall be the duty of the collector and treasurer to give notice in one or more of the gazettes of this city, and to call at least once at the house of each person taxed, to demmd the taxes, and unless such taxes be paid within tlwee months from the date of said notice, it shall be his duty to make a return of such defaulters to the city council, and thereupon executions shall issue against the goods or person of such defaulters, for the amount of his, her or their taxes, with the addition of ten per cent.,” etc. The remaining portion of this section is omitted, because it is not pretended that it is applicable to this case.

In the year 1857, upon a revisal of the general ordinance, section iii was made to supersede Section 105, above quoted ; but those portions of both sections immediately appli[710]*710cable to the question under consideration, are identical, with this exception, viz.: In framing the 11 ith section of the ordinance of 1857, the words — “and to call at least once at the house of each person taxed, to demand the taxes” — which are found in the 105th section of the pre-existing ordinance, are omitted, and for them the following words are substituted: “And all persons liable for city taxes, shall be required personally, or by agent, to pay the same at his office” [the office of the collector and treasurer].

A new rale was thus introduced, the difference being, that previous to 1857, it was the duty of the collector and treasurer to call upon the taxpayer and demand his taxes; whereas, in and after 1857, it was the duty of the taxpayer to call upon the collector and treasurer, and make payment without any other demand than the notice in the public gazette. In view of this change, the executions we are considering arrange themselves into two classes: 1st, those issued for taxes due prior to; and 2d, those issued for taxes due in and after 1857.

Such being the authority given the collector and treasurer of the city of Augusta in the premises, we next inquire what is the general or public law governing the exercise of this authority.

The following propositions may be regarded as law, settled by repeated adjudications of high authority:

1. That in exporte proceedings of this kind, under special authority, great strictness is required.

2. That in proceedings by statute authority, whereby a man may be deprived of his property, the statute “must be strictly pursued. Compliance with all its prerequisites must be shown.

Ronkendorf vs. Taylor’s Lessee, 4 Peter’s Reports, 359; Williams vs. Peyton, 4 Wheaton’s Reports, 77; Bloom vs. Burdick, 1 Hill’s Reports, 141, 142; Thacher vs. Powel, 6 Wheaton, 119; Jesse vs. Preston, 5 Grattau, 120; Jackson vs. Shephard, 7 Cowen, 90, 91.

In all of these cases the contest was between a purchaser at a public sale, professedly in pursuance and by authority of statute law, and the party whose property was thus sold or his representative or assigns. In all of them, save Bloom vs. Burdick, 1 Hill,'the sale was for the collection of taxes in arrears.

[711]*711They are, therefore, directly in point; and the rule of law recognized in each might, with propriety, if necessary, be more rigidly enforced in the case under consideration, for the reason that the parties here are the government assessing and seeking to collect taxes, and the inhabitant resisting their collection.

Applying, then, these rules of law to the ordinances in question, we proceed to inquire whether the tax executions against the plaintiff in error were legally issued ?

By the letter of those ordinances, execution was authorized to be issued only against defaulting taxpayers. They require that payment shall be made to the collector and treasurer, but that execution, upon failure to pay, shall be issued by the clerk of council'. To make this act of the clerk legal, there are three indispensable prerequisites: 1st, that the collector shall have made such call upon the taxpayer as the ordinance prescribes; 2d, that the taxpayer, after such call made, shall have failed within the time designated by the’ ordinance to pay; 3d, that the collector shall have reported the taxpayer thus failing, to the city council. Anterior to the year 1857, to make the call upon the taxpayer a full compliance with the ordinance, it was necessary that the collector publish notice in one or more of the gazettes of the city, and “call at least once at the house •of each person taxed, to demand the taxes," and to the first class of executions this provision is applicable. It is conceded that he did publish notice in a gazette of the city, but it does not appear that the collector and treasurer, in any one of the’years from 1850 to 1856, inclusive, did “call at the house of the plaintiff in error to demand his taxes.” The complainant in his bill alleges that he did not.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Ga. 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dantignac-v-city-council-of-augusta-ga-1861.