New Orleans v. Fisher

180 U.S. 185, 21 S. Ct. 347, 45 L. Ed. 485, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1296
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 28, 1901
Docket46
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 180 U.S. 185 (New Orleans v. Fisher) 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
New Orleans v. Fisher, 180 U.S. 185, 21 S. Ct. 347, 45 L. Ed. 485, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1296 (1901).

Opinion

Mk. Chief Justice Fullee,

after making the above státement, delivered the opinion of the court.

Fourteen errors were assigned in the Circuit Court of Appeals, which were considered and disposed of seriatim: Many of these alleged errors raised questions not within the exceptions to-the master’s report, and, in any view, we think the case may be determined without minutely retraversing the ground.

Mrs. Fisher and her husband recovered judgment against the board of school directors in the state District Court, May 22, 1890, which, on appeal, was affirmed by the Supreme Court. Fisher and Husband v. School Directors, 44 La. Ann. 184.

February 23,1892, Mrs. Fisher and husband brought an action against the school board on the judgment so recovered, i.n the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Louisiana. The petition set forth that Mr. and Mrs. Fisher were citizens of the Kingdom of Spain, and that the judgment sued on was recovered on certain claims for school teachers’ salaries, including Mrs. Fisher herself. An exception was filed to the jurisdiction of the court on the ground that the assignors *195 of the school warrants held by Mrs. Fisher as assignee could not have sued in that court. The matter was submitted to a jury, and a verdict returned in plaintiffs’ favor, whereupon the exception was overruled, and afterwards the case went to judgment payable out of the school taxes levied prior to 1879. This judgment was rendéred May 19, 1892, and on May 11,1896, the present bill, in the nature of a creditor’s bill, was filed on behalf of Mrs. Fisher, joined and authorized by her husband, (setting up that judgment and others,) and of all others similarly situated, to compel an accounting for their benefit by the city in respect of the school taxes ‘levied prior to 1879, and the interest thereon, collected and not -paid over to the school board, as a trust fund for the payment of the expenses of the public schools, it being averred that the school board had refused to require such accounting.

After demurrer filed and overruled, the city answered, admitting the recovery of the judgments as alleged; that they had become final; and that they Avere payable as provided therein; and denying that the school taxes collected constituted a trust fund ; any liability for interest collected; any privity between Mrs. Fisher and the city; and pleading prescription by the lapse of ten years.

The cause was referred to a master, who reported certain amounts of school taxes, and of interest on school taxes, collected by the city. The city filed exceptions to the conclusions of the master that the city was indebted to the school board for interest collected; and that the amount reported as collected out of the school taxes from 1871 to 1878, inclusive, was due by the city to the school board “ at any time since its collection.”

The facts are not in controversy, and the questions raised, or attempted to be raised, are questions of laAV.

The bill invoked the ordinary exercise of equity jurisdiction in this class of cases. The school taxes collected Avere held in trust by the city, and, as the school board declined to require an accounting, these creditors, whose claims were payable out of the taxes, Arere entitled to the interposition of a court of equity to reach the fund. The suggestion of Avant of privity between complainants and the city, as defeating the jurisdiction, *196 is without merit,- Nor is the defence of the statute of limitations well founded.

The judgments were rendered since 1890, and were made payable out of these taxes; the school certificates were merged in these judgments; and this bill was filed within ten years.

As between the city and the. school board, the city did not hold these collections in her own right. The possession of the''one was the possession of the other; the possession of-the city was precarious, and not animo domini; and being trustee she could not acquire the trust fund by lapse of time: There was no adverse possession in repudiation of the fiduciary relation. Oliver v. Piatt, 3 How. 333, 411; New Orleans v. Warner, 175 U. S. 120, 130.

After the master’s report and the exceptions thereto had been filed, the city undertook to raise the question of the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court on .the ground of the want of competency in the assignors of Mrs, Fisher to sue in that court, and of want of diversity of citizenship between Mrs. Fisher and the city. The first of these objections had been made and after trial overruled in the proceedings which resulted in the judgment of May 19,1892. The petition in that case also alleged that Mrs. Fisher and her husband weré citizens of Spain. The judgment was conclusive on both points, and not open to impeachment as to eith er collaterally or on a creditor’s bill. Mattingly v. Nye, 8 Wall. 370, 373; Evers v. Watson, 156 U. S. 527, 533; Laing v. Rigney, 160 U. S. 531, 539.

On July 1,1897, a. plea to the jurisdiction of the court in this case because Mrs. Fisher was a citizen of Louisiana was put upon, the files with put leave of court, and was stricken off as irregular on December 20. This action of the court is not open to review, and as this bill was merely ancillary the plea was immaterial. Root v. Woolworth, 150 U. S. 401, 413.

The city on the same day, December 20, applied for leave to file a plea alleging that Mrs. Fisher was a citizen of Louisiana ■at the time the original action was brought in the Circuit Court,' and had so continued down to the filing of the bill; that she had fraudulently otherwise represented; and that the city had no information of the facts until after the exeeptions to the mas *197 ter’s report were filed, which was on the seventh of June. This application was denied by the Circuit Court, and it is impossible for us to say that in this ruling the court abused its discretion.

This was not the proper way to-attack the original judgment on the ground of fraud; nothing was said in the proposed plea as to the citizenship of Mr. Fisher, who was a party plaintiff, and a necessary or at least proper party, if the choses in action sued on were community property, iand even if paraphernal, La. Civ. Code, §§ 2385, 2402, 2404; and the record, so far from indicating fraud, showed that Mr. Fisher was an alien, being'a subject of the British crown residing at Cuba, which had led to a mistake of counsel in framing the pleadings.

It may be added that there was nothing in the case bringing it within the exceptional rule applied in Lawrence Man. Co. v. Janesville Cotton Mills, 138 U. S. 552

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 U.S. 185, 21 S. Ct. 347, 45 L. Ed. 485, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-orleans-v-fisher-scotus-1901.