New Orleans v. Houston

119 U.S. 265, 7 S. Ct. 198, 30 L. Ed. 411, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1986
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 6, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 119 U.S. 265 (New Orleans v. Houston) 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. Houston, 119 U.S. 265, 7 S. Ct. 198, 30 L. Ed. 411, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1986 (1886).

Opinion

Me. Justioe Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 27th of January, 1881, the Louisiana State Lottery Company, alleging itself to be' a corporation under the laws of the State of Louisiana, filed its bill in chancery against -the City of New Orleans and the tax assessors for the Parish of Orleans, the object and prayer of which were to obtain a perpetual injunction restraining the defendants from the assessment and collection of certain taxes, about to be enforced against the complainant by the seizure and sale of its property. On final hearing there .was a decree in conformity with the prayer of the bill, from which the defendants below prosecute the present appeal.

The allegations of the bill are in substance, that by an act of the Legislature of the State of Louisiana, passed in 1868, being Act No. 25 of that year, the Louisiana State Lottery Company was established and organized as a corporation : —• that, among other immunities and franchises granted by said" act, it was provided in article 5 that the company “ shall pay the State of Louisiana the sum of forty thousand dollars per annum, which sum shall be payable quarterly in advance, from and after-the 1st day of January, 1869, to the State Auditor, who shall deposit the same in the treasury of the State, and which shall be credited to the educational fund; and said corporation shall be exempt from all other taxes and licenses of any kind whatever from the State,'parish, or municipal authorities ” : — that in the year 1871 legal proceedings were instituted by the City of New Orleans against the said company, in the Superior District Court for the Parish of Orleans, for the purpose of enforcing on behalf of said city certain taxes alleged to have been assessed against it, notwithstanding said exemption contained in its charter, the City of New Orleans claiming therein that said exemption was void: — that such proceedings were had thereon that on final hearing in the Supreme Court of Louisiana a judgment was rendered in favor of the lottery company, declaring said exemption to be valid and the said *267 taxes illegal: — tbat tbe.said company claims that the provision in its said charter exempting it from taxes as aforesaid beyond the sum of $40,000, payable annually, is a contract between the-State of Louisiana and itself, and has been expressly confirmed and' recognized as such by the present Constitution of the State of Louisiana, adopted in 1879, in article 167, all the provisions of which, it is alleged in the bill, the complainants have complied with.

The bill further alleges that, notwithstanding the provisions of the said charter,, and in defiance of the judgment of the Supreme Court .of Louisiana, and contrary to the Constitution of the State, the defendants “are about to levy and assess a tax upon the capital stock' and other property of your orator, and the other defendant's hereinbefore named have threatened and are about to take proceedings against your orator for the collection of said illegal tax, .which is- illegal because prohibited by the Constitution of the- United States as violative of the said contract between your orator and the State of Louisiana”; that the said officers of the State pretended to justify their action under the provisions of Act No. 77 of the Legislature of Louisiana of 1880, which the complainant avers to be null 'and void and of. no effect, so far as it may be construed to authorize the proceedings of the defendants. The bill alleges that the complainant has always promptly paid the amount called for by its charter to the State Treasurer, and in advance, arid owes nothing to the State on that account; and accordingly prays for an injunction to restrain the defendants from further attempts to enforce the collection of the tax complained of.

To this bill a joint and several answer was filed by all of the defendants. That answer admits the incorporation of the Louisiana State Lottery Company, as alleged in the bill, and that its charter constitutes a valid contract between the State of Louisiana and the company. It admits that the defendants are about to levy a tax upon the capital stock and upon other property of the complainant, but denies that such proceedings are illegal; and claims that Act No. 77 of the year 1880, passed by the Louisiana Legislature, is in no respect null and void.

*268 On final bearing a decree was passed wherein “the court decrees and declares that tbe/act of the Legislature (No. 77 of the acts of 1880), so far as it imposes a tax upon the capital stock of the complainant, or upon the shares of the stock held by the shareholders of the complainant, is in conflict with article 5, S 1, of complainants charter, found in Act No. ■ 25 of the acts of 1868, and therefore impairs the obligation of a contract and is yokl. The court further decrees and declares, that, under the provisions of said charter as adopted as a cop-tract by the Constitution of 1879, the capital of the complpim. and, both in the aggregate and as .held by its shareholders, is exempted from all taxation of every kind, excepting the annual payment of forty thousand dollars. Thei‘court further decrees that the defendants herein be enjoined and restrained in manner and form and to the extent prayed for in the bill of complaint herein.” ' .

- It is objected to this decree, in the first place, on behalf of the City of New Orleans, that that municipality was not properly in court by due service of process, but the objection does not seem to be well founded in fact. There was service-of process upon the mayor, which is conceded to be the statutory method of serving process in such'cases, and the city actually appeared by attorney and answered.

The principal question, however, arises upon the terms of article 167 of the Constitution of the State of 1879. That clause is as follows: “ The General Assembly shall have authority to grant lottery.charters or privileges; provided each charter of privilege shall pay not less than forty thousand dollars per annum in money into the treasury of the State; and 'provided further, that all charters shall cease and expire on the first of January, eighteen hundred and ninety-five, from which time all lotteries are prohibited in the State. The forty thousand dollars per annum now provided by law to be paid 'by the Louisiana State • Lottery Company, according to the provisions of its charter granted in the year j.868, shall . belong to the Charity Hospitgi- of New Orleans,, and the charter of said company is recognized as a contract binding on the State for the period therein specified1,■ fexcept its monopoly *269 clause, which is hereby, abrogated; and all laws contrary to the provisions of this article are hereby declared null and void; provided said company shaE file a written renunciation of all its monopoly features .in the office of the Secretary of State within sixty days after the ratification of this Constitution.”

It appears that by an act of the Legislature of Louisiana, which took effect on the 31st of March, 1879, Act No.

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Bluebook (online)
119 U.S. 265, 7 S. Ct. 198, 30 L. Ed. 411, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1986, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-orleans-v-houston-scotus-1886.