State ex rel. Newman v. Burke

35 La. Ann. 185
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 1883
DocketNo. 8350
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 35 La. Ann. 185 (State ex rel. Newman v. Burke) 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. Newman v. Burke, 35 La. Ann. 185 (La. 1883).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Fenner, J.

The relator represents that he is holder of warrants on the general fund of the State for the years 1880 and 1881; that under the constitutional debt ordinance of 1879, the interest taxes collected to meet the coupons of the consolidated bonds falling due on January 1st, 1880, were transferred to defray the general expenses of the State, and are now a part of the general fund for the payment of said [186]*186expenses; that the said fund, as thus constituted, is ample.; and much more than sufficient to pay his said warrants, which, under Act 71 of 1880, are lawfully entitled to be paid out of the same; that it'is the ministerial duty of defendants to transfer said monies to the general fund and to pay the warrants held by him out of the same; but that hotwithstanding-due demand they refuse to perform the said duties; and he, therefore, prays for a writ of mandamus to compel, them to do so.

The defendants, viz : the Treasurer, the Auditor and the Fiscal Agent of the State, answer, denying the existence of the ministerial duties charged, and especially averring that in the suits of State ex rel. Hart vs. E. A. Burke, Treasurer, et al., and of S. J. Hart vs. E. A. Burke, Treasurer, et al., a claim is made against them for the payment out of said fund, of interest, coupons on consolidated bonds due January 1st, 1880, to the amount of $75,000, and that an injunction was issued restraining them from appropriating said funds as directed by the constitutional, debt ordinance; and that although, under the decree of this Court in said cases, the claim of said Hart was rejected and the injunction obtained by him was dissolved, yet that said Hart had obtained a writ of error, with supersedeas, from the Supreme Court of the United States to this Court in said suits, and that the same are now pending undetermined in the said Supreme Court of the United States.

P. 0. Fazende, as the holder of certain coupons of interest on consolidated bonds maturing January 1st, 1880, intervened in this suit and prayed for judgment rejecting- the demand of the relator, and ordering the defendants to pay to him, out of the fund referred to, the amount due on his said coupons.

John Elliott and others, citizens of New York, filed another intervention, as holders of similar interest coupons, averring that-they had brought suit in the late Third District Court for the Parish of Orleans, for a mandamus to compel the defendants to pay their said coupons out of the same fund, and otherwise to execute and carry out the funding Act of 1874J which suit was removed to the Circuit Court of the United States, and, after decision' there, was carried by writ of error to the Supreme Court of the United States, where the same is now pending-undecided; and praying for judgment rejecting the demand of the relator, and enjoining- and restraining- the defendants from paying- or applying any portion of said fund to any other purpose than the payment of interest coupons on the consolidated debt.

Upon proper issues formed, judgment was rendered by the lower court in the • following terms: It is ordered that there be judgment in favor of-defendants and intervenors, and that the petition for mandamus made by relator be dismissed.”

[187]*187We are surprised to find from statements iu briefs of counsel, and: indeed from statements in the petitions of appeal filed by the defend-, ants, that this judgment is interpreted as importing a decree in favor of the intervenors and against the defendants, granting the former the relief prayed for in their interventions. We have searched the record, in vain for any other judgment than the one above quoted; which is. accompanied by no written reasons explanatory thereof.

Certainly it does not admit of the interpretation above suggested. No judgment whatever is rendered against the defendants, and on the. contrary, an unqualified judgment- is renderedin theirfavor.

The judgment can mean nothing else than that, while refusing any affirmative relief sought by intervenors, as against the defendants, itis iu their favor as well as in favor of defendants, in so far as they join in resisting the demand of the relator, which the judgment rejects.

Adhering to the views expressed by us iu the case of Hart vs. Burke, 33 An. 498, it is clear that the exception filed by relator and defend1 ants to the intervention of Fa-zende should have been maintained and his intervention should have been dismissed. We there held that Hart, who stood in identical case with this intervenor, could neither-claim judicial enforcement of his own alleged rights upon this fund, nor prevent the- State officers from disposing of them as directed by the State. He has no right to interfere with the disposition of a fund, in which he has no interest susceptible of judicial cognizance or enforcement. The like fate would necessarily attend the intervention of Elliott and others, unless saved by the allegations therein contained touching the pendency of their prior suit to subject the very fund here in controversy to the satisfaction of the claims, set forth in their petition.

This raises a serious and delicate question of comity of courts, identical in character with that presented in the plea of the defendants setting up the continued pendency of the Hart suits under the writ of error from the Supreme Court of the United States to this Court.

So far as the injunction of Hart is concerned, the authorities seem to be quite clear that the writ of error, though operating as'a supersedeas, did not have effect to revive or continue in force the injunction which had been dissolved by our decree. Slaughterhouse Cases, 10. Wall. 274; Wood vs. Dwight, 7 Johns. Ch. 295; High on Inj. § 893 and authorities there cited.

The fact remains, nevertheless, that, in his mandamus proceeding, Hart sought the judicial enforcement of his alleged right to have his coupons satisfied out of the particular fund from which the relator in the present suit seeks to have his own claims paid; and that, although we decided adversely to Hart’s right, our decision thereon is not final, [188]*188but his case has been carried, on writ of error, to the Supreme Court of the United States, where it is still pending, and abides the final determination of that Court.

So, before the institution of the present proceeding, Elliott et al. had brought their suit before a court of competent jurisdiction to subject the same fund to the satisfaction of their claims, and though the Judge of the United States Circuit Court denied their demand, as we did in the Hart case, yet they, in like manner, have appealed to the United States Supreme Court, in which their cause is still pending.

■It is manifest that if we, at the suit of creditors like the relator, should order the payment of this entire fund to them, the effect would be to nullify and destroy the remedial power of the Supreme Court of the United States, and to render its decrees nugatory in controversies upon which its jurisdiction had attached, before the institution of relator’s proceeding. This would operate practically to defeat its jurisdiction and take away the right of these parties to prosecute their suits to any useful or effective purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 La. Ann. 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-newman-v-burke-la-1883.