Philadelphia & R. R. v. Kenney

19 F. Cas. 484, 18 Int. Rev. Rec. 92, 30 Leg. Int. 281, 9 Phila. 403, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1737

This text of 19 F. Cas. 484 (Philadelphia & R. R. v. Kenney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Philadelphia & R. R. v. Kenney, 19 F. Cas. 484, 18 Int. Rev. Rec. 92, 30 Leg. Int. 281, 9 Phila. 403, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1737 (circtedpa 1873).

Opinion

MeKENNAN, Circuit Judge.

This is an action of trespass vi et armis for the alleged illegal seizure and detention of the goods and chattels of the plaintiff, mentioned in the declaration. The defendant alleges in his plea «that he was justified in making this seizure, because, he says, the plaintiff, on the last day of November, 1870, declared a dividend of 81,570,580.01, on its capital stock, as part of its earnings, income and gains, made and accrued between the 1st day of July, 1870, and the 30th day of November, 1870, which was made payable to its stockholders on the 27th day of December, 1870; that the plaintiff thereby became liable to pay to the United States, a tax of 2y2 per cent, on this dividen(l, amounting to $33,469.75, which was duly entered by the assessor of internal revenue upon the list made out by him accord ing to law, a certified copy of which he furnished the defendant as collector; and that upon the default of the plaintiff, in performance of the duty imposed upon him by law, he made the seizure complained of. To this plea the plaintiff has demurred generally.

Assuming that the authority under which the defendant acted is sufficiently set out in the plea, two questions are presented by the demurrer, upon which the decision of the cause depends. First. Is the action of trespass an appropriate remedy for the alleged wrong? Second. Was the tax imposed upon the plaintiff authorized by law?

An executive or ministerial officer, who acts under the authority of a tribunal of general jurisdiction, is not responsible for an excessive or illegal exercise of its powers, but where a special or limited jurisdiction only is •possessed, such officer is bound to see that he acts within the scope of the legal powers of the tribunal which commands him. This is the rule in England, by which the accountability of ministerial officers is determined. Thus in the Case of Marshalsea, 10 Coke, 76, Sir Edward Coke says: “If the court of common pleas, in a plea of debt, doth award a capias against a duke, earl,' &c., which, by the law, doth not lie against them, and the same appeareth in the writ itself, yet, if the sheriff arrest them by force of the capias, although that the writ be against law, notwithstanding, inasmuch as the court hath jurisdiction of the cause, the sheriff is excused.” And so the law has ever since been held by the English courts. But in the United States the scope of the rule has been extended, so that it is applied broadly to the protection of ministerial officers, who execute the mandates of legally constituted tribunals of every rank or character, having either a general or special jurisdiction of the subject matter to which the process relates. Beach v. Furman, 9 Johns. 230, is a conspicuous illustration of this. It was an action of trespass against a constable for seizing and selling the property of a woman under a warrant commanding him to levy of her goods and chattels, a penalty imposed by law for refusal to work on the highways, from which duty women were expressly exempted. The 00014, Kent, O. J., says: “Now, the overseer of the highways was the person to designate, in the first instance, and to deliver to the commissioners the names of the persons liable to be assessed, and he was also the officer to adjudge what persons were in default, and to demand the warrant. In the exercise of this authority the overseer may have returned the names of persons not liable to assessment, and he may have adjudged persons in default who were not in default * * * It would be against the obvious principles of justice and policy to make the ministerial officers act, in a case like this, at their peril, when they have no right to judge and are required to act. They are only responsible 'as trespassers when they act under the authority of a person who had no jurisdiction in the case, or when they exercise that authority irregularly.” In Savacool v. Boughton, 5 Wend. 170, Mr. Justice Marcy discusses the subject fully, and shows that the doctrine of Beach v. Furman is in harmony with the leading American cases and with the principles of justice and reason.

The same rule is settled as the law of Pennsylvania by the repeated decisions of its supreme court. Moore v. Alleghany City, 6 Har. [18 Pa.] 53; Cunningham v. Mitchel, 67 Pa, St. 81. In the last, of these cases, Mr. Justice Agnew says: “In the case of public [485]*485officers, an inferior acting within the scope of his warrant, when apparently regular, is always protected, unless the authority issuing it was without jurisdiction. It has been a question how far this authority extends, when the superior authority acts irregularly and illegally. But now the doctrine appears to be settled, as it should be, that even in such case the inferior has to look only to his warrant.” Although there is an apparent inconsistency in the cases arising from the application rather than the statement of the rule, as in Thurston v. Martin [Case No. 14,-018], and others, the discussion must be considered as ended by the recent judgments of the supreme court of the United States, in accordance with the doctrine of the cases above referred to. “It is well settled now,” say the court, in Erskine v. Hohnback, 14 Wall. [81 U. S.] 616, “that if the officer or tribunal possess jurisdiction over the subject matter upon which judgment is passed, with power to issue an order or process for the enforcement of such judgment, and the order or process issued thereon to the ministerial officer is regular on its face, showing no departure from the law or defect of jurisdiction over the person or property aifected, then, and in such cases, the order or process will give full and entire protection to the ministerial officer in its regular enforcement against any prosecution which the party aggrieved thereby may institute against him, although serious errors may have been committed by the officer or tribunal in reaching the conclusion or judgment upon which the order or process is issued.” This was reaffirmed in Hafin v. Mason [15 Wall. (82 U. S.) 671], and it was held that the duties of a collector of internal revenue in the enforcement of a tax are purely ministerial, and that the assessment certified to him is his authority to proceed, and, like an execution to a sheriff, regular on its face, issued by a tribunal having jurisdiction of the subject matter, constitutes his protection. The rule by which the liability of ministerial officers is to be determined is thus clearly defined, and firmly established. They are not accountable for the erroneous judgment of the tribunal, whose mandate they are to enforce, or even for an excessive or illegal exercise of its powers. Where they are bound to act they are responsible only for their own errors. But the protection afforded them is not without limit or qualification. It is an essential condition that the tribunal, whose order is executed. should have jurisdiction of the subject matter of its judgment. This is distinctly held in all the cases. If payment of a tax is enforced, there must be legal authority to impose it. and this the executive officer must see to at his peril.

The distinction between the said assumption of power to impose a tax, where a ministerial officer will not be protected, and an illegal exercise of it. where he will, is well illustrated in Moore v. Alleghany City, supra. “Were the authorities of Alleghany destitute of the power to levy taxes, or limited to the assessment of persons only, an attempt, in the first case, to assess and collect the tax, and, in the second, to extend the assessment to property, might be deemed so utterly nugatory as to afford its officer no protection.

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Related

Savacool v. Boughton
5 Wend. 170 (New York Supreme Court, 1830)

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19 F. Cas. 484, 18 Int. Rev. Rec. 92, 30 Leg. Int. 281, 9 Phila. 403, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-r-r-v-kenney-circtedpa-1873.