Horner v. Coffey

25 Miss. 434
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 25 Miss. 434 (Horner v. Coffey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horner v. Coffey, 25 Miss. 434 (Mich. 1853).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Fisher

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case is before us upon an appeal from a decree of the vice-chancery court at Natchez.

The only point presented by the record for adjudication is, whether the individual property of the appellee, one of the selectmen and an inhabitant of the town of Grand Gulf, is liable to levy for the purpose of satisfying a judgment against the president and selectmen of said town in their corporate capacity.

The seventh section of the act of the legislature, incorporating the town of Grand Gulf, says: “That the said president and selectmen are constituted a body politic and corporate in fact; and in the name of the town of Grand Gulf, and by that name, they and their successors in office shall have perpetual succession, shall have a common seal, may purchase, hold, and convey property; and by the name and style aforesaid, shall be persons capable in law of suing and being sued in all manner of suits or actions, either at law or in equity,” — “ and may do all other acts incident to bodies corporate.”

The tenth section of the act, gives the president and select-jmen power to raise a revenue for town purposes, by taxing * such property as is liable to taxation under the existing laws of this state, “ Provided such tax shall not exceed twenty-five cents on every hundred dollars’ worth of such property in any one year.” Acts of 1833, 96, 97; These being the only provisions of the charter bearing upon the question under consideration, it will at once appear, that it contains no express provision in regard to the right asserted by the appellant, to resort to the individual property of the inhabitants of the town, for the purpose of discharging her judgment against the corpo[441]*441ration. Plence we must look alone to the common law for the rules to guide us in our decision.

"With respect to private corporations, such as banks or insurance companies, it is conceded, that no individual responsibility attaches to the members for the'corporate debts. “ A different rule prevails,” say some of the authorities, “ with regard to the inhabitants of any district; as counties or towns incorporated by statute, which come under the head of quasi corporations; for against them no private action will lie unless given by statute; and if a power to sue them is given by statute, each inhabitant is liable to satisfy the judgment.” Angell & Ames on Corp. 498, 499. The same rule is more broadly stated by the supreme court of Connecticut, in the case of Beardsley v. Smith, 16 Conn. R. 368. The court on that occasion used the following language: “ We know, that the relation in which the members of municipal corporations in this State have been supposed to stand in respect to the corporation itself, as well as to its creditors, has elsewhere been considered in some respects peculiar. We have treated them, for some purposes, as parties to corporate proceedings, and their individuality has not been considered as merged in their corporate connection. Though corporators, they have been holden to be parties to suits by or against the corporation, and individually liable for its debts.” “Such corporations are of a public and political character; they exercise a portion of the- governing power of the State. Statutes impose upon them important public duties. In the performance of these, they must contract debts and liabilities, which can only be discharged by a resort to individuals, either by taxation or execution. Taxation in‘most cases can only be the result of the voluntary action of the corporation, dependent upon the contingent will of a majority of the corporators, and upon their tardy and uncertain action. It affords no security to creditors, because they have no power over it.”

The same doctrine, in language equally strong, has been, in repeated decisions, announced by the supreme court of Massachusetts, and it is, perhaps, now the settled law of all the New England States. In view of the numerous authorities, emanating from judicial tribunals as enlightened as those of the [442]*442New England States, thus settling the law, we have been induced to give the question involved in the case before us a much more thorough examination than it otherwise would have received at our hands. This examination has only served to strengthen the opposition which we from the first conceived against the rule, as well as the principles upon which it has been settled by the authorities cited. We submit with all proper deference and respect, that neither position assumed by the court in the case of Beardsley v. Smith can be sustained by any principle of the common law, in reference to the inhabitants of the town of Grand Gulf. These positions are, first, that the inhabitants of the town are parties to all suits by or against the corporation ; and, secondly, the charter authorizing a suit against the corporation, the inhabitants are personally liable to discharge the judgment when obtained.

In regard to the first position, the suit was in this instance against the corporation. The record shows no other defendant. Hence, if the inhabitants were parties to the suit, they became such by operation of law. Before the law will make, or even presume a man to be a defendant to a suit against another, he must be shown to have been a party to the cause of action upon which it is founded. Were the inhabitants of the town of Grand Gulf parties to the cause of action in this instance ? and if so, was it their own act, or that of the corporation, that made them such ? If of the corporation, had it power to perform the act? The tenth section of the charter already noticed furnishes a conclusive answer to these several inquiries. It prescribes the manner in which, and the extent to which the corporation must act qnd may go in this respect. The statute prescribing the mode in which an act must be performed, is a negative upon all other modes for performing it. Whence it is manifest that the inhabitants of the town were not parties to the cause of action. They could not, therefore, be parties toj the suit, for the plain reason that they had violated no legal! duty. A suit is but a remedy given by law to enable a party who has been injured by the act or violation of duty by another, to recover damages equal to the injury or loss sustained. If the duty never existed, it could not be violated; and without [443]*443both its existence and violation, there was no ground for a suit against the inhabitants of the corporation.

But there is still another light in which this question may be presented. If the doctrine be true, that the inhabitants of an incorporated town are by operation of law parties to all suits by or against such corporation, then it follows, that however just his claim may be, an inhabitant .could not, under any circumstances, either maintain a'suit or enforce a judgment against the corporation. The moment he appears as a plaintiff on the record, the law makes him a defendant jointly with the corporation in the same action. And if he should be so fortunate as to escape a plea in abatement, or a demurrer, if the fact appeared of record, and obtain his judgment, his own property would be as much liable as that of any other inhabitant, to satisfy the execution. This shows to what the doctrine must .lead, and, consequently, its utter absurdity.

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

Related

Fabric Fire Hose Co. v. Mayor of Vicksburg
77 So. 911 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1918)
State Board of Education v. City of West Point
50 Miss. 638 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1874)
Miller v. McWilliams
50 Ala. 427 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1872)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Miss. 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horner-v-coffey-miss-1853.