United States ex rel. Ranger v. New Orleans

27 F. Cas. 131, 2 Woods 230
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1876
StatusPublished

This text of 27 F. Cas. 131 (United States ex rel. Ranger v. New Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States ex rel. Ranger v. New Orleans, 27 F. Cas. 131, 2 Woods 230 (circtdla 1876).

Opinion

BILLINGS, District Judge.

I think the proposition cannot be questioned that this court is without authority to direct a levy of a tax unless it be in accordance with the provisions of some law which makes it the duty of the city common council to levy the same. In other words, that this court cannot create, but can only enforce a clear legal duty.

Mr. Justice Bradley, in Heine v. Levee Commissioners [Case No. 6,325], whose decision was affirmed by the supreme court, says: “The power of taxation belongs to the legislative branch of the government. The judicial department has no general power over the subject. If the officers who are charged with the duty of levying or collecting taxes refuse to perform their functions, the courts, in a clear ease of failure, and at the instance of the party directly interested, can, by the [132]*132prerogative writ of mandamus, compel them to perform acts which are ministerial, as distinguished from those which are judicial or discretionary. This is all the judicial department can do on the subject, unless the legislature has expressly conferred upon it further powers.” The question is, has the duty or power to levy this tax been committed by the legislature to the city administration?

It is urged by the counsel for the relators that prior statutes, namely, those of 1S35 and 1886, gave this authority, and that the power to levy and collect a tax may be fairly deduced from the permission to contract the debt. The act of 1S35 (section 6) provides: “The said mayor and city council shall have power to raise by tax, in such a manner as to them may seem proper, upon the real and personal estate within said city, such sum or sums of money as may be necessary to supply any deficiency for the lighting, cleaning, paving and watering the streets of the said city; for supporting the city watch, the levee of the river, the prisons, workhouses and other public buildings, and for such other purposes as the police and good government of the said city may require. It seems to me that subscriptions to works of internal improvement are excluded from all the purposes here specified. The act of 1S36 (page 31, § 4) continued to the several municipalities into which the territory of the old city was then divided, the powers of the old corporation, and those powers were again continued when the different municipalities with additions were consolidated. But there is here no power given to levy this tax.

This brings me to consider the second and principal point urged by the relators’ counsel, viz: -That the legislature, by authorizing the incurring of the debt, authorized the levy of the tax to pay it. The decisions of the courts of last resort of several states were cited, which it is not necessary for me to consider, because they depend upon the statutes of these states; nor need I, upon this point, refer to more than one decision of the supreme court of the United States. The result of what it has said upon the general subject may be summed up in this: It has held that the collection of judgments of the United States courts may be aided by mandamus whenever there is a refusal or failure on the part of the officers to perform any ministerial act clearly imposed by law; it has treated the repeal of laws in force at the time of the issuance of the bonds, and which carried with them substantial rights, as void; and, generally, has given in behalf of parties obtaining judgments in the courts of the United States, the same aid to which parties similarly situated would have been entitled in the courts of the state in which the cause of action arose; but it has never assented to the unqualified proposition that legislative permission to issue bonds carried with it t-he authority to tax.

The principle upon which alone such a deduction is maintainable is. with its appropriate restrictions, clearly stated by Mr. Justice Miller in the case of Loan Association v. Topeka, 20 Wall. [ST U. S.] 055. The question was as to the validity of certain interest coupons upon which an ordinary suit had been brought. The defense was that taxation could only be invoked for purposes distinctively public, and that permission to issue the coupons carried with it the right to a tax to pay them, and that as the purpose for which these coupons were issued was not a public one, the statute authorizing them and the obligations themselves, were void. He had said that ordinarily the debt of municipal corporations had to be paid by means of taxation. He adds (page 660): “It is therefore to be inferred that, when the legislature of a state authorizes a county or city to contract a debt by bond, it intends to authorize it to levy such taxes as are necessary to pay the debt, unless there is in the act itself, or in some general statute, a limitation upon the power of taxation which repels such an inference.”

I think it to be indisputable that the absence of any permission by the legislature for a tax, and the substitution of some other means of payment which was deemed fully adequate, would as completely repel the inference that a resort to taxation was intended, as would a restriction upon the power of taxation itself.

Now, it is urged by the counsel for the city, that the statute by which these bonds-, were authorized shows that the legislature intended that the principal should be paid by means other than taxation. An examination of this statute has convinced me mat the belief of the legislature was that the principal sum could, and its intent was that the principal sum should, be paid out of the stock and its revenues. The act pledges in perpetuity the stock for that purpose; it gives the right to the bondholder to convert his bond into stock; it provides that all dividends derived from the stock above six per cent, should be devoted to extinguish the principal; and while providing with extreme rigor for the payment of the interest, in case dividends from the stock should not be altogether sufficient, and, while providing that until the ordinance levying this yearly tax to pay the interest had been passed by the common council, no valid resolution could be adopted, it is profoundly silent as to any tax to pay the principal. The implication is that the legislature intended the bondholders should, for the collection of the principal sum, look to the stock, at least to the exclusion of taxation.

But, among the statutes of the state, with reference to the city of New Orleans, and among the general statutes of the state, are-found acts that give the absence of any particular means of payment in a city ordinance creating a debt a special significance. The [133]*133act of 1852, No. 51, entitled “An act to consolidate the city of New Orleans and provide for the government,” etc. (section 37, p. 54), contains the following provision: “And no ordinance (of the city of New Orleans) creating a debt or loan, shall be valid, unless for some single object, or work distinctly specified therein, and unless such ordinance shall provide ways and means for the punctual payment of running interest during the whole time for which said debt or loan shall be contracted, and for the full and punctual discharge at. maturity of the capital borrowed or the debt incurred.”

The act of 1853 (No. 258, p. 234) provides “that the police juries of the several parishes of this state, and the constituted authorities of incorporated towns and cities in this state, shall not hereafter have power to contract any debt or pecuniary liability without fully providing, in the ordinance creating the debt, the means of paying the principal and interest of the debt so contracted.”

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Related

United States v. New Orleans
98 U.S. 381 (Supreme Court, 1879)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 F. Cas. 131, 2 Woods 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-ranger-v-new-orleans-circtdla-1876.