State ex rel. Nelson v. Police Jury

33 La. Ann. 1122
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 15, 1881
DocketNo. 1124
StatusPublished

This text of 33 La. Ann. 1122 (State ex rel. Nelson v. Police Jury) 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. Nelson v. Police Jury, 33 La. Ann. 1122 (La. 1881).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Bermudez, C. J.

The relator applies for the levy by mandamus of a special tax, by the defendant, to pay a judgment in his favor for $4500, and interest, against the parish of St. Martin.

Several times has the relator already submitted his grievances to this Court. 28 An. 578; 30 An. 1103; 32 An. 884.

The case was before us at last term. We found the relator in presence of the defense, that the law under which he sought relief had been repealed, and that the proceeding was unwarranted. To this attack he replied that the repeal was inoperative, as his judgment rested on a contract, shielded by the Constitution of the United States, which protects the obligations thereof from all impairment.

There was no allegation of a contract in the petition. Still, with a view to afford the relator an occasion to amend, we thought it our duty < «in furtherance of the ends of justice, to remand the case, in order that the relator may have an opportunity of establishing that his judgment is founded on a contract, if such be the case, and that the defenda nt [1124]*1124may adduce such further evidence and make such other defenses as the nature of the suit may require,”. 32 An. 888.

We did not mean or say, that the case in which the judgment relied upon was rendered, should be reopened, and that the issues involved and determined should be tried de novo. We would have been powerless to do so. We merely intended to permit the relator to allege and prove a material fact, in support of the present proceeding, viz: a protected contract. ‘

On the trial, on the remandment, he, however, assumed to prove, in the absence of averment, the existence of the contract invoked, not only by the record in which the judgment was obtained, but also by supplementary evidence, to the introduction of which objection was made, the propriety of which we deem it unnecessary to pass upon.

Conceding arguendo, that the relator has averred that his judgment is predicated on a contract; that the record in the case mentioned and the additional proof establish a contract (questions upon which we express no opinion), we are irresistibly driven to the inquiry, whether the relator, under his judgment and under the contract, is entitled to the special tax which he demands, over and above the constitutional limit, if a transgression be necessary.

The judgment rendered has become definitive. It constitutes res judicata, and can no longer be impugned, as to issues involved and determined. Whatever issues it settles, are irrevocably conclusive upon the parties to it; but what is it, that was at issue; what is it that it adjudicates; what is it that it is based upon ?

The question presented for solution was: shall the plaintiff recover judgment for the amount claimed, and shall a tax be levied to pay such judgment ? The issue was not, whether the claim was based on a contract or not; there was no contention on the subject; and the judgment does not pass upon any such question. It is true that the defendant might, if a contract existed, have resisted the prayer for the levy of a special tax, and thus raised an issue as to the existence and validity of such contract. The defendant did not do so, and no issue was formed and determined on that subject. The plaintiff and the court which rendered the judgment, acted, no doubt, under the impression -that the law then in existence required that a provision should be made at the time plaintiff’s claim was liquidated, — for its payment by the levy of a tax. R. S. Secs. 26, 28, 29, 30, 47, 48 and 49.

The judgment, therefore, was simply for a sum of money and for a tax to pay it. ■ It would have necessarily been the same, had the suit been one for damages, founded on no real contract at all.

We, therefore, remanded the case for information as to the consideration of the judgment, in order to enable us to determine the [1125]*1125question of impairment of the obligation of a contract, raised by the relator.

But, were it not so, the right of the relator to a tax has been by himself submitted, as res nova, for determination.

By the judgment rendered in 1873, liquidating his demand, a tax was ordered to be levied to pay it, at a sufficient rate per cent, upon the assessment of the current year.

It is manifest that this judgment has not been satisfied by payment or executed by the levy of the tax directed, otherwise why the present proceeding ?

By the lapse of time and the force of circumstances, it is clear that this judgment, as regards the levy of the tax, has ceased to be executory, and has passed out of existence, inasmuch as the defendant cannot, under its terms, be required to do nunc, in 1881, what it directed to be done tunc, in 1873.

By the present proceeding and by his course in the lower court, in adducing evidence other than the record in the case in which the judgment was rendered, the r.elator has admitted his legal inability to have that portion of the judgment for the tax, vi terminis, executed, and its consequent caducity. He has abandoned all pretensions to its enforcement, and seeks now at the hands of the Court another and different judgment, allowing him a tax of -- per cent, on the property of the parish, according to the assessment rolls thereof for the current year, to pay his judgment of 1873. He has thereby reopened the question of his right to such a tax, and of the existence, validity and extent of his claim under the contract.

The judgment of 1873 fixed no percentage rate of assessment, and so was not executory, as it left the quantum of the rate within discretion. The judgment appealed from is definite, and directs a levy of ten mills, if necessary, over and above the quantum of taxation, limited by article 209 of the Constitution.

As the relator has undertaken, not only to show a specific contract, but also the nature and extent of that contract, he has opened the door to the defendant, to establish that, under the terms of such contract, he is not entitled to the remedy sought by him.

What is the evidence now before us on the subject?

We gather from the record, as it is now presented, that the judgment was obtained on two notes or bonds or obligations signed by the president of the police jury of the parish of St. Martin, on the 5th of October, 1868, purporting on their face to have been issued in pursuance of authority delegated by a resolution of that body, adopted on the 16th of July previous, and identified with a notarial act of even date with them.

[1126]*1126The resolutions authorized the president of the police jury to draw on the parish treasurer warrants in favor of the municipal authorities of the town of New Iberia, for $4500, for the building of a bridge over Bayou Teche, within the limits of the corporation, payable, to the extent of $1000, out of a special appropriation on the tax of 1866, and for $3500, out of any surplus funds in the hands of the treasurer, the proceeds of the taxes of 1865, 1866,1867 and 1868.

It was not until the 5th of October following, that an act was passed between the president of the Police Jury and the town authorities of New Iberia on the subject, and that the warrants, under the form of

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33 La. Ann. 1122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-nelson-v-police-jury-la-1881.