State ex rel. Hill v. Judges of the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit

46 La. Ann. 1292
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 15, 1894
DocketNo. 1478
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 46 La. Ann. 1292 (State ex rel. Hill v. Judges of the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Hill v. Judges of the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, 46 La. Ann. 1292 (La. 1894).

Opinions

Application por a Writ op Mandamus.

The opinion of the court was rendered by

Nicholls, O. J.

Relators aver that they, each and severally, own large quantities of swamp land in the parish of St. Landry, situated within the limits and territory comprising the Red River, Atchafalaya and Bayou Bceuf Levee District, as defined and established by Act No. 79 of the General Assembly, approved July 5, 1890, That in the years 1892 and 1893, relators severally and each for himself or herself, filed in the District Court for St. Landry parish, suits before said court in which they declared and averred in substance as follows: That is to say (all of said suits having by consent been consolidated for trial and tried on appeal under such consolidation) . That their lands are by said act, approved July 5, 1890, within a district subject to a system of special taxation, which the board of commissioners of said levee district, are empowered by said act to levy, assess and collect upon all lands in said district benefited by the levee system. That assuming to act under and by virtue of the power and authority granted and conferred upon them by said act, said board of commissioners have caused and directed the assessor of the parish of St. Landry to list all aforesaid property as subject to the special taxation and local assessments provided for in Act No. 79 of 1890, and said property has been carried on the special assessment roll, listing and describing all property which is .alleged and claimed to be subject to the special taxation provided for in said act, and a copy of said assessment has by said assessor been filed in the office of the sheriff and ex-officio tax collector of St. Landry parish, and T. S. Fontenot, the sheriff, is now proceeding to the col[1294]*1294lection of taxes levied and carried on said roll as provided for in Sec. 9 of the act aforesaid, and relator’s aforementioned property is assessed on said rolls filed in the sheriff’s office as follows: At the rate of five (5) cents per acre of said lands, and at the rate of five (5) mills upon the valuation of said lands as fixed by said assessor, and the said sheriff, ex-officio tax collector, unless enjoined will sell the same for cash to pay and satisfy the said alleged taxes or local assessment. Relators further declared in the alternative in said suits in substance as follows: That said Act No. 79, if it purports to authorize the levying and collection of the aforesaid taxes or assessments, is illegal and unconstitutional, because said lands are not protected, reclaimed from overflow or inundation, improved or benefited by the levees built or proposed to be built by said board. That they require no such protection and can derive no possible benefit from said levee, but, on the contrary, said levees will injure their aforesaid lands and in fact detract from their value, and that therefore said assessments are a taking of private property without compensation; that the special averment is made in the petition of John Hill and Mrs. Olementine Phelps, that said acreage tax is further illegal, because it is levied indiscriminately at the same rate upon the cultivated and settled lands on the front, as upon the swamp lands involved in these suits, the latter being worth not more than fifty cents per acre, while the former class of lands are worth not less than eight to ten dollars per acre, as will be seen by copies of the petitions in said suits annexed; that though said averment of nullity is not specially made in the other suits, yet by consent, all the testimony in the John Hill suit in support of that averment, was offered in all the other cases and is to be considered by the court; that relators further averred in the said suits, that the acreage and valuation taxes of five mills upon their aforesaid lands, amounted to, íd the case of each of the relators, a sum exceeding one hundred and under two thousand dollars.

That relator after making the said averments, which are substantially given as made in the said suits, sued out a writ of injunction restraining the assessor and tax collector from proceeding any further in the assessment of said lands or in the collection of taxes thereon until the further orders of the District Court of St. Landry parish, and they prayed for judgment in their favor, each for himself and herself, and against the sheriff and tax collector and said [1295]*1295assessor, asking the perpetuation and maintenance of the injunction sued out in said suits, declaring said tax illegal and unconstitutional, and declaring the assessment of said acreage tax to be illegal, and for judgment further decreeing the property belonging to each of relators severally not to be subject to the aforesaid taxes or local assessments, and ordering the same to be stricken from the assessment rolls and tax rolls of the parish of St. Landry.

That though they use the word “ tax ” in their pleadings they do not wish to be understood as contravening by the use of that term the settled doctrine of the Supreme Court that an acreage tax for special levee purposes is not a tax proper,” but a local contribution, based upon supposed benefits conferred, and therefore not the subject of an appeal to the Supreme Court under Art. 81 of the Constitution of 1879.

Relators further aver that after the filing of the said suits in the District Court for St. Landry, the same were, after issue joined in said suits, duly assigned for trial, and tried pursuant to law, the Board of Levee Commissioners answering in each and every case by pleading the legality and constitutionality of the aforesaid tax or local assessment and the act of the Legislature authorizing said tax or assessment, ánd praying for a dissolution of the injunction sued out by relators respectively, and for a rejection of the demand of relators in said suits. Relators further declare that judgments in each of the aforesaid suits were duly rendered by the District Court of St. Landry, in each and every case, rejecting and disallowing the demands and prayers of the relators in said suits and dissolving the injunction taken out by them in said suits respectively. They aver that they each and severally, prosecuted suspensive appeals from the aforesaid judgments to the court of appeals of the third circuit of the State of Louisiana, sitting in and for the parish of St. Landry, and said appeals were duly filed in said court.

That on said cases coming up for a hearing in said Circuit Court of Appeals, sitting at Opelousas, the counsel for the Board of Commissioners in each and every one of the cases, filed a motion to dismiss the appeals taken as aforesaid, on the ground that said Court of Appeals was without jurisdiction rations materias, for the reason that the constitutionality and legality of the taxes are in contestation, and that therefore said appeal was not legally cognizable by said Court of Appeals. That after the hearing of the said motion to dismiss in [1296]*1296each and every case, the said Court of Appeals sustained said motion to dismiss all and singular the appeals taken in said cases by relators respectively, as would appear by the judgments of dismissal annexed to relators’ petition. Relators, each for himself and herself, aver that in dismissing the appeals taken by relators as aforesaid, and in declining to pass upon the merits of said causes, the Court of Appeals has done an act amounting to a denial of justice to relators respectively, and they aver that the Court of Appeals, under the averments of their petitions and under the evidence, alone had jurisdiction of the cases.

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Bluebook (online)
46 La. Ann. 1292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hill-v-judges-of-the-court-of-appeals-for-the-third-circuit-la-1894.