Findlay v. McAllister

113 U.S. 104, 5 S. Ct. 401, 28 L. Ed. 930, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1657
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 12, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 113 U.S. 104 (Findlay v. McAllister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Findlay v. McAllister, 113 U.S. 104, 5 S. Ct. 401, 28 L. Ed. 930, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1657 (1885).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Woods

delivered the opinion of the court. He recited the facts in the foregoing language, and continued:

The facts stated in the petition are admitted by the demurrer, and, for the present consideration of the case, must be taken as *109 true. The statutes of Missouri, which were in force when the bonds mentioned in the petition were issued, and which still remain in force, provide as follows: There shall- be a collector of revenue for every county, who shall give bond conditioned that he will faithfully and punctually collect and pay over all State, county and other revenue for the two years next ensuing the first day of March thereafter. After the tax book for the year has been, corrected, and-the amount of the county tax stated therein, the County Court shall cause the same to be delivered to the collector, and he'shall be charged with the whole amount of the tax book so delivered to him. The collector, shall diligently endeavor and use all lawful means to collect the taxes which he is required to collect in his county. After the first day of October he shall have- power to seize and sell the goods and chattels of any person liable -for taxes, in the same manner as goods and chattels are or may be required to be seized and sold under executions issued in 'judgments at law; .and no property shall be exempt from seizure and sale for taxes due on lands and personal property. The collector, having made settlement according to law of the revenue collected, by him, shall pay the amount found due into the county treasury.

When a demand against a county is-presented to the County Court,' the court shall- ascertain the amount due and order it to. be paid out of the-particular -fund — designating it — applicable to the payment of - such demand, and, order their clerk to issue a warrant therefor on the treasurer of "the county, which shall designate the particular fund out of which the same is to be paid.

The treasurer of the county is required to make an entry in á book to be kept by him of all warrants for money lawfully drawn by the County Court presented to him for payment; and all warrants so presented shall be paid out of the funds mentioned in such warrants, and in the order in which they shall be presented for-payment. See sections 5370, 5394,- 6733, .6754, 6774, 6821, 6822, Revised Statutes of Missouri of 1879.

The question presented by the demurrer to the petition is not one of the measure of damages. If the plaintiff has sustained any substantial injury by reason of the wrongful acts of *110 the defendants set out in the petition, fqr which he is entitled to his action against them, the demurrer to the petition should have been overruled.

It is evident from the provisions of the statutes-of Missouri, whose substance has been given, that the money received by the collector of Scotland County in payment of the special tax ordered by the County Court bo be collected for the payment of the judgment of the plaintiff and other judgment creditors, would, when collected, constitute a separate fund in the county treasury, applicable to this purpose. If the special tax had been collected, the plaintiff would have had such an interest therein that a court of equity would at his instance enjoin its diversion to any purpose save that for which it had been levied and collected, and compel its payment to the satisfaction of the judgment of the plaintiff. Meriweather v. Garrett, 102 U. S. 472, 514, 515; Attorney-General v. Dublin, 1 Bligh N. S. 312. And see Davies v. Corbin, 112 U. S. 36. The use of the money by the county, except for*the payment of the judgments, which the writ of mandamus had been issued to enforce, would have been a clear contempt of the orders and process of the Circuit Court, as well as a violation of the law of the State. -

The writ of mandamus under which the collector, according' to the averments of the petition, was proceeding to collect the money to pay the judgment of the plaintiff, was a substitute for the writ of fieri facias, and was the only remedy by which the plaintiff could enforce satisfaction. He had, therefore, as clear an interest in the money to be raised by the special tax for the payment of his judgment, as he would have had in the money to be collected by the sheriff on execution if his judgment had been- against an individual. It would seem fairly- to follow that he had the same rights in the one case as in the other, against those 'who, to prevent the satisfaction of his judgment, unlawfully interfered with the officer in the discharge of his duties.

It is plain that the injury of which the plaintiff complains is not one common to himself and the public at large, as it would have been had the defendants interfered to prevent the collection of the general taxes of the county. The alleged unlawful *111 acts of the defendants could injure only the plaintiff and the other judgment creditors of Scotland County, for whose bene- . fit the special tax was levied. If there is any cause of action against the defendants, it belongs to the plaintiff and other judgment creditors individually, and,the public has no share in' it. The objection that the plaintiff is only injured in common with all the other members of the body politic, and has no separate and individual cause of action, cannot be successfully urged.

The right of a judgment creditor to proceed by action against those who rescue the person of his debtor arrested on mesne or final process, of interfere with the goods of his debtor so as to prevent a levy or sale by the sheriff to satisfy his judgment, is well recognized at common law.

Thus, in Smith v. Tonstall, Carthew, 3, 4, adjudged on demurrer in the King’s Bench and affirmed in the House of Lords: A, a judgment creditor, sued B for procuring J. S., the judgment debtor, to confess a judgment in favor of one J. N., to whom he did not owe anything, and J. N. sued out execution on this feigned judgment by virtue of which he seized all the goods and chattels of J. S., which he esloined to places unknown and converted to his own use, by reason whereof the plaintiff lost his debt. Held, that the action lay.

In Coniyns’s Digest, under the head of Action on the Case for Misfeasance, A. 5, it is stated that an action will lie for rescue of a person arrested upon mesne or judicial process, citing 2 Cro. 419, 486; Cro. Car. 109; or of goods taken in execution. And the action lies by the party to the suit in which the arrest was, citing 2 Cro. 486 ; Cro. Car. 109; 2 Eolle’s Ab. 556, pi. 14, 15.

Under the head of Bescous, D. 2, the same author says: “ So, if a person arrested upon mesne process be rescued, an action upon the case lies against the rescuers by the plaintiff in the suit; for he has the loss and no remedy against the sheriff,” referring to 2 Cro. 485-6, above cited, and also to 3 Bulst. 200.

In 2 Bolle’s Ab. 556, pi. 14, 15, it is said : If a sergeant of London or bailiff of the counter take a man on a capias in process at my suit, and J. S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 U.S. 104, 5 S. Ct. 401, 28 L. Ed. 930, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/findlay-v-mcallister-scotus-1885.