Robert Garrett & Sons v. City of Memphis

5 F. 860
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 F. 860 (Robert Garrett & Sons v. City of Memphis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert Garrett & Sons v. City of Memphis, 5 F. 860 (uscirct 1881).

Opinion

Baxter, C. J.

The late city of Memphis, a municipal corporation created by a statute of Tennessee, was endowed with the powers usually conferred on such corporations. Among others, it was invested with the capacity to contract debts and to levy and collect taxes for their payment. Availing itself of its power to contract debts, it incurred valid obligations aggregating more than $5,000,000. On some of these, suits were brought and judgment recovered; and on these judgments executions were issued, which, after diligent efforts to collect, were returned unsatisfied. These executions were followed by writs of mandamus, commanding the proper officers of the city to levy and collect taxes sufficient to pay said judgments; but these, like the executions, proved unavailing, and therefore Garrett & Sons filed their bill on the twenty-eighth of January, 1879, in this court, in which they prayed for the appointment of a receiver “to take charge of [861]*861the assets of said city, including its tax books and bills for past-due and unpaid taxes,” and for an order “clothing him with all proper powers to enable him to collect the same.”

This application was predicated on section 3 of the “Act to enable municipal corporations, having more than 30,000 inhabitants, to settle their indebtedness,” of the twenty-third of March, 1877, which provides “that upon the application of any person or persons who are the owners of any past-due and unpaid bonds, coupons, or other indebtedness of a municipal corporation, not less in amount than $100,000, it shall be the duty of the chancery court to appoint a receiver for said municipal corporation, who, as the officer of the court, and not otherwise, should, under the order and instruction of the court, act for such municipal corporation.”

Adopting substantially the language of this enactment, complainants charge that they “are the owners and holders of past-due and unpaid bonds and coupons and other indebtedness of said city to the amount of more than $100,000,” and that “on much of said indebtedness” they had recovered judgments and obtained writs of mandamus to compel payment, etc.; but “that the officers of said city, whose duty it was to levy and collect the taxes assessed, in obedience to said mandamuses, had failed to collect the same, and that the defendant had, through its officers, constantly connived at said delinquency,” thus bringing their case clearly within the provisions of said third section. But on the day succeeding the filing of complainant’s bill, to-wit, on the twenty-ninth of January, 1879, and before any action was had thereon, the legislature passed two acts,—one to repeal the defendant’s charter, and the other to organize the same population and territory into another municipality by the corporate name of “Taxing District.” Now, if the authority to levy and collect taxes for municipal purposes, usual in such charters, had been conferred on the taxing district, the latter municipality might have been proceeded against as the successor of the former, and compelled to assess and collect taxes for the payment of complainant’s judgment. But this point was thoughtfully guarded by the acts in question. The [862]*862first, after repealing the city’s charter and declaring that the population within the territorial limits thereof should be “resolved back into the body of the state,” enacts that “all power of taxation, in any form whatever, heretofore vested in or exercised by the authorities of said (repealed) municipality * * is forever withdrawn and reserved to the legislature.” And in harmony with this declaration, the act creating the taxing district provided that “the necessary taxes for the support of the government therein established (the taxing district) shall be imposed directly by the general assembly of the state of Tennessee, and not otherwise. ” And, as a further means of putting the taxing district beyond the power of the courts, said act declared “that all the officers and agents employed in the administration of said local government shall be the officers and agents of the state, so far as all their official acts, touching said government, are concerned.”

And said act further provides “that the fire-engines, hose and carriages, horses and wagons, engine-houses, public buildings, public squares, parks, promenades, wharves, streets, alleys, engineer instruments, and all other property, real and personal, hitherto used by said government for the purposes of government,” should be transferred to the board of commissioners of the taxing district, to remain, as heretofore, public property for the public use, and that all indebtedness for taxes or otherwise, due to said extinct municipality, should “vest in and become the property of the state, to be disposed of for the settlement of the debts of said municipality, ” as should be thereafter provided by law.

These enactments necessitated an amended and supplemental bill, which was accordingly filed. Other creditors of the city filed similar bills, seeking the same relief, which were, on motion and by consent of the parties, consolidated, and ordered to be heard together with the suit of Garrett & Sons. After being thus consolidated, the application for the appointment of a receiver came on, to be heard on the twelfth of February, 1 j79, when the aforesaid acts were urged in argument as a full and sufficient defence to said motion, [863]*863But entertaining the opinion that these acts, in so far as they sought to divest the jurisdiction of this court regularly acquired before their passage, were in conflict with the national and state constitutions, I disregarded their behests, and appointed a receiver.

Therefore, these statutes were soon after supplemented hy two other enactments,—the first entitled “An act to amend an act entitled ‘ An act to establish taxing districts in this state, and to provide the means of local govemement for the same and the other, “An act to collect and dispose of the taxes assessed for municipal corporations in this state, whose charters have been repealed, or which may surrender their charters, and to provide for the compromise and making settlement of the debts of such extinct municipal corporations respectively. ” The former contained many details, in some particulars modifying, and in other respects enlarging, the corporate powers of said taxing district, not material to the present discussion, while the latter authorized and commanded the govemement to appoint a “receiver and back-tax collector,” to “collect all taxes imposed by said extinct municipalities up to the time of the repeal of their charters.” It was made the duty of such receiver and back-tax collector, when appointed, “to take possession of all books, papers, and documents pertaining to the assessment and collection of taxes” embraced in the act, and to accept payment in the valid debts of such municipalities, with accrued interest, at the following rates: Bonds known as compromise or funded bonds, at par, and all oilier bonds, scrip, certificates of indebtedness, past-due coupons, ledger balances, etc., at one-half their full value, and judgments at 55 cents on the dollar; but forbidding said receiver from coercing payment of more than 20 per cent, of the taxes due in any one year.

The act contained other provisions which need not be recited. Under this act the governor appointed Minor Merriwether receiver and hack-tax collector for Memphis. He accepted, entered on the duties imposed on him, and, in his official capacity, became a party to this suit. His appearance as a party introduced new complications and brought [864]

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Bluebook (online)
5 F. 860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-garrett-sons-v-city-of-memphis-uscirct-1881.