Ex parte Royall

1 Ga. L. Rep. 537
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 1, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ga. L. Rep. 537 (Ex parte Royall) 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
Ex parte Royall, 1 Ga. L. Rep. 537 (Ga. 1886).

Opinion

Harlan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 29th of May, 1885, William L. Royall filed two petitions in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern district of Virginia, each verified by oath, and addressed to the judges of that court.

In one of them he represents, in substance, that he is a citizen of the United States j that, in June, 1884, as a representative of a citizen of New York — who was the owner of certain bonds issue,d by Virginia under the act approved March 30,1871, entitled “An act to provide for the funding and payment of the public debt” — he sold in the city of Richmond, to Richard W. Maury, for the sum of $10.50 in current money a genuine past-due coupon, cut from one of said bonds in petitioners, presence, and which he received from the owner, with instructions to sell it in that city for the best market price; that said coupon bears upon its face the contract of Virginia that it should be received in pay[538]*538ment of all taxes, debts and demands due that Commonwealth ; that he acted in said matter without compensation; and consequently, the transaction was a sale of the coupon by its owner.

The petition proceeds:

“That on the second day of June, 1884, the grand iury of the city of Richmond, Virginia, found an indictment against your petitioner for selling said coupon without a license. That the before-mentioned coupon is the only one that your petitioner has sold. That your petitioner was thereupon arrested and committed to the custody of N. M. Lee, sergeant of the city of Richmond, to be tried on said indictment, and that he will be prosecuted and tried on said indictment for selling said coupon without a license,, under the provisions of section 65 of the act of March 15, 1884, relating to licenses generally, and the general provisions of the State law in respect to doing business without a license. That your petitioner had no license under the laws of Virginia to sell coupons. That the act of the General Assembly under which your petitioner was arrested, and is being prosecuted, requires any person who sells one or more of the said tax-receivable coupons issued by said State of Virginia to pay to said State, before said sale, a special license tax of $1,000, and, in addition thereto, a tax of twenty per cent, on the face value of each coupon sold.

“ That said act does not require the seller of any other coupon, or the seller of anything else, to pay said tax, but it is directed exclusively against the sellers of such coupons. That your petitioner is being prosecuted under said act because he sold said coupon without having first paid to said State said special tax of twenty per cent, on the face value thereof. That said act of the Genesal Assembly of Virginia is repugnant to section ten of article one of the Constitution of the United States, and is therefore null and void. That if the said State can refuse to pay the said coupons at maturity, and then tax the sale of. them to tax-payers, she may thus indirectly repudiate them absolutely, and thus effectually destroy their value.

“That your petitioner has been on bail from the time he was arrested until now, but that his bail has now surrendered him, and he is at this time in the custody of t.he said N, M. Lee, sergeant of the city of Richmond, to be prosecuted and tried on said indictment. That he is held in violation of the Constitution of the United States, as he is advised.”

In the other petition he represents in substance, that, under the provisions of the before mentioned act of 1871, Virginia issued her bonds, with interest coupons attached, and bearing upon their face a contract to receive them in payment of all taxes, debts and demands [539]*539due to that Commonwealth'that another act, approved Januaryl4,1882, provides that said coupons shall not be received in payment of taxes until after judgment rendered in a suit thereon according to its provisions; that the validity of the latter act was sustained in Antoni vs. Greenhow, 107 U. S., upon the ground that it furnished tax-payers with a sufficient remedy to enforce said contract; that by the provisions of §§• 90 and 91 of chapter 450 of the laws of Virginia for the year 1883-84, it is provided that attorneys-at;law who have been licensed to practice-law less than five years shall pay a license tax of fifteen dollars, and those licensed more than five years twenty five dollars, and that such license shall entitle the attorney paying it to practice law in all the-courts of the State; that it is further provided by said 91st section that-no attorney shall bring any suit on said coupons under said act of January 14th, 1882, unless he pays, in addition to the above-mentioned license tax, a further special license tax of $250 ; that petitioner had been licensed to practice law more than five years, and that in the month of' April, 1884, he paid twenty five dollars, receiving a revenue license to practice law in all the courts of the State; but that he had not paid the additional special license tax provided for in said 91stsection; that, underemployment of a client who had tendered coupons, issued by Virginia under the act of March 30th, 1871, to the treasurer of Richmond city in payment of his taxes, and thereafter had paid his taxes in money — the coupons having been received by that officer for identification and verification, and certified to the hustings court of the city of Richmond — he brought suit under the act of January 14th, 1882, to recover the money back after proving the genuineness of the coupons; that the grand jury of the city- of Richmond thereupon found an indictment against him for bringing the suit without having paid the special license tax ; that he brought it after he had paid his license tax above mentioned, and while he had a license to practice law until April, 1885 ; that he was thereupon arrested by order of the hustings court of Richmond, committed to the custody of N. M. Lee, sergeant of that city, and is about to be tried and punished under said indictment; that the act requiring him to pay a'special license tax in addition to his general license tax is repugnant to §10 of article 1 of the Constitution of the United States, and is, therefore, null and void ; and that the act providing for punishing him for not paying the special license tax is likewise repugnant to the Constitution.

After stating, at some length, the ground upon which he contends that the before-mentioned acts are repugnant to the Constitution, the petitioner avers that he “ is now in the custody of the said N. M. Lee, sergeant of the city of Richmond, under said indictment, and he is,, therefore, restrained of his liberty in violation.of the Constitution of the United States.”

[540]*540Each petition concludes with a prayer that the circuit court award -a writ of habeas corpus directed to that officer, commanding him to produce ■the body of the petitioner before that court, together with the cause of his detention, and that he have judgment discharging him from custody.

In each case the petition was dismissed upon the ground that the circuit court was without jurisdiction to discharge the prisoner from prosecution.

These cases come here under the act of March 3, 1885, c. 353. which so amends §764 of the Revised Statutes as to give this court jurisdiction', upon appeal, to review the final decision of the circuit courts of the United States in certain specified cases, including that of a writ of habeas corpus

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Ga. L. Rep. 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-royall-ga-1886.