Court Opinion

ID: 7193470
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 16:59:42.242867+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:16:15.109568
License: Public Domain

The opinion of tlio Court was delivered by
Eennek, J.
In 1872, tbe Legislature of the State passed Act No. 60 of that year, by which it established the Luzenberg Hospital iu this city as the exclusive hospital for small-pox and further provided that “ all indigent cases of small-pox, or other diseases reported contagious, in want of or making application for hospital aid or care, shall be sent to the hospital designated in this act, at the expenso of the city of New Orleans, as usual and at the usual per diem.”
Acting under this direction, the city entered into a contract with Dr. Anfoux then in charge of said hospital by which he was to receive and treat such patients at a stipulated compensation of thirty-five dollars per case. During tlio year 1873 he received and treated a large number of cases, for xvliieli tlio amount due by the city under the contract was $19,670.
In 1878 suit was brought and judgment recovered against the city on the foregoing cause of action and for the amount above, stated, with interest and costs,
Tlio judgment thus rendered was duly registered July 5th,' 1878, pursuant to the provisions of Act No. 6, of 1870. 'Phis registration has produced no results; tlio judgment has not been paid ; and the evidence makes it manifest that under the city’s construction of its duties under the Act No. 5, and under its modes of execuliou thereof, many years must elapse before any payment will be made upon this judgment.
The reason why this debt remains, and promises to remain, unpaid, is that the city construes her power and duty of taxation to be governed and limited by the provision of the Constitution of 1879 to a tax of ten mills on the dollar, in so far as provision for such judgments is *17concerned, and that the requirements for her alimony leave, out of the receipts from this tax, nothing or little to bo appropriated to the satisfaction of judgments.
To this the creditor answers that he is a creditor by contract; that, at the date of his contract, the city possessed, by law, a power of taxation for “ current city expenses exclusivo of interest and schools ” only limited to one and one-quarter per cent; that quoad this contract obligation and so far as necessary for its satisfaction, this power of taxation still exists unaffected by subsequent legislative or constitutional provisions; that, under the Act No. 5 of 1870, it is the duty of the city authorities to provide for the payment of his registered judgment by setting apart in the annual budget a sum for that purpose, and that, in order to execute this duty, the correlative duty is imposed of exercising the power of taxation vested in the city by law to the extent necessary to raise the means to make such provision.
In pursuance of these views, the present suit was instituted for a mandamus directing the city authorities to execute and perform the duties imposed by the Act No. 5 of 1870; and, in accordance therewith, to set apart in the next annual budget sufficient money to pay such judgment; and further directing them to provide in said budget, by taxation for current city expenses, in excess of the amount, allowed by law for the alimony of tire city but not in excess of one and one-quarter per ceai., the means of revenue necessary to pay relator’s said judgment, and so to do, in all succeeding annual budgets, until the same be paid.
From a judgment making the mandamus peremptory, the ci£y has appealed.
We lay down the following propositions of fact and law viz:
1st. The judgment was founded on a contract entered into in 1872.
2d. At the date of the contract, the citv possessed a power of taxation for ■ general expenses “ exclusive of interest and schools,” of twelve and one-half mills par annum. See Act No. 73 of 1872, Sec. 15.
3d. Under the consistent jurisprudence of the Supreme Court of the United States and of this Court, the power of taxation existing at the date of the contract is read into the contract and continues to exist, so far as necessary for the enforcement of the obligations of the contract, irrespective of any subsequent, legislation or constitutional enactments restricting the power of taxation, State ex rel. Moore vs. City, 32 Ann.; State ex rel. Dillon vs. City, 34 Ann. 477; State ex rel. Carriere vs. City, 36 Ann.; Von Hoffman vs. Quincy, 4 Wall. 535; Wolff vs. New Orleans, 103 U. S. 358; Nelson vs. St. Martin, 111 U. S. 720.
*184th. This Court lias long since held that the prohibitions against the issuance of the writ of mandamus against officers of the city of New Orleans contained in Act No. 5 of 1870, apply only to the cases therein specially designated and that, for the performance of the duties imposed by that act itself, the writ of mandamus was a proper remedy. State ox rel. Carondelet vs. New Orleans, 30 Ann. 129.
5th. In the same case it was held that, under Act No. 5 of 1870, it is the “ plain duty ” of the city authorities “to provide for the payment of registered judgments in the only mode in which judgment creditors of the city are permitted to collect their judgments. This requires the action of the Mayor and Administrators, in their aggregate capacity as a municipal government; the adoption of the annual budget; the levy of the necessary taxes; ■ and a setting apart of a sufficient amount to pay this and other registered judgments. * * The duty of the city to make this provision is not discretionary as to time or manner. The law imperatively requires that it shall he in the next annual budget, and by setting apart, appropriating a sufficient amount out of the aunual revenues.” State ex rel. Carondelet vs. New Orleans, 30 Ann. 129.
This duty, we have held, however, is subordinate to the higher and absolute duty of first providing, out of the revenues applicable to that purpose, for the necessary alimony or support of the city. State ex rel. Moore vs. City; Saloy vs. City.
6th. In the DeLeon case we held that the duty to appropriate and set apart money in the aunual budget for particular purposes, “ involved necessarily the duty to levy such tax (within the power of taxation possessed, at the time, by the corporation) as will render possible the performance of the duty.” State ex rel. DeLeon vs. City, 34 Ann., p. 477.
7th. The relator herein claims and is entitled to no special tax. He is simply entitled to payment out of the revenues arising from the collection of taxes provided for the general expenses of the city. Ha simply asks that the power of taxation conferred by law for that purpose shall be exercised to the extent necessary to furnish the means out of which his judgment may ho paid.
So far as relator’s contract and judgment are concerned, we have already shown that the city possesses a power of taxation for general purposes of twelve and one-half mills. Sbe has, heretofore, exercised, and proposes hereafter to exercise this power only to the extent of ion mills on the dollar, and, as the revenues arising from this tax are appli*19cable to, and required for, the necessary alimony of the city, they leave, as we have said, little or nothing, which can be appropriated for the payment of registered judgments.
From the foregoing statement, it appears that, to the extent necessary for the provision for payment of plaintiff’s judgment, the city possesses a residuary power of taxation of two and one half mills, not exercised and which she refuses to exercise, the revenues from -which would, under no circumstances, be applicable to the city’s alimony, or, indeed, to any other purpose than that of satisfying relator’s judgment and others standing in like case with it. It would be, indeed, an anomaly, if the city could escape from or postpone her clear duty, to provide for the satisfaction of such judgments, by simply abstaining from the exercise of lawful powers of taxation to an extent necessary to provide the means of paying them. Such an anomaly could never be sanctioned by any court of justice, since it would render the payment • of debts no louger obligatory upon municipal corporations, but dependent purely upon their will and caprice.
From the foregoing considerations it would conclusively appear that relators are entitled to the relief which they seek, unless there is something in the nature of their debt, or in the law existing at the date of their contract, which debars it. Legislation subsequent to the contract has, and can have, no effect upon the rights and obligationsarising from the contract.
The learned counsel for the city propounds two special defenses based upon the nature of plaintiff’s debt and the law in existence at the date of the contract.
1st. He contends that, from the very nature and constitution of municipal corporations, they are incapable of creating or contracting a debt for current expenses, in excess of the revenues arising from taxation, within the limitations imposed by law, for the year in which the debt was created; and that such debt, whether created by contract or not, can only demand satisfaction out of the revenues of that year.
If such had been the law of Louisiana, as applicable to the city of New Orleans, in 1873, it is passing strange that, in 1874, it should have been deemed necessary to pass a constitutional amendment establishing the very principles which, it is contended, already existed and were inherent in the very nature of the corporation.
We have rigidly enforced the constitutional amendment of 1874, as applicable to debts created after its passage. Taxpayers vs. New Orleans, 33 Ann. 568.
*20But when we are asked to recognize the principles established by that amendment as existing independent of it and prior to its passage, and as applicable to debts contracted prior thereto, we must pause.
The projiosition is supported bj~ no authority and by no well founded reason. It is contradicted by the entire financial administration of the city prior to 1874, by the uniform current of judicial interpretation which has constantly rendered and enforced judgments upon such obligations without restriction to the revenues of particular years, and by the terms and spirit of the Act No. 5 of 1870 itself.
For what would be the sense of requiring the city authorities to provide in coming budgets for registered judgments, without distinction, if such judgments could only seek satisfaction' out of the revenues of some antecedent year in which the debts were contracted ? We dismiss the proposition as utterly untenable.
Nor is there anything in the nature of the debt which prevents this contract from being protected from impairment under the Constitution of the United States. The protection afforded by that instrument is not restricted to bonds or any particular forms of contract. It covers all contracts. Every lawful contract of a municipal corporation is entitled to satisfaction by the exercise of the power of taxation possessed by the corporation at its date, to the extent necessary, and to invoke the continued and repeated exercise of that power until the debt is satisfied.
Such is the clear and unequivocal doctrine announced by the Supremo. Court of the United States uniformly and specially in the very recent case of Nelson vs. St. Martin, 111 U. S. 716.
2. The city next contends that relator’s claim must fall by reason of failure to comply with the requirements of Section 2786, Revised Statutes, which declares : “ That the constituted authorities of incorporated towns and cijies of the 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 or contract.”
We express no opinion on the mooted point as to whether this law applies to the City of New Orleans. It is sufficient to say that the defence must fail in this case for several reasons :
1. The defence should have been interposed to the original'judgment and comes now too late, and this alone is certainly conclusive.
2. The Section 2726 is a mere legislative act, binding on corporations but not binding on the legislature itself, which might repeal. *21modify, or restrain its application at pleasure. In this case the legislature did not merely authorize, but imperatively required the city to pay the expenses of indigent small-pox patients. The city could not escape from its obligation to pay by failing to provide for it.
3. The debt on which this judgment is founded is for current municipal expenses; and wo have held that debts for such expenses do not fall under the restrictions imposed by the statute referred to. Laycock vs. City, 35 Ann. 479.
This disposes of this point.
We are not called upon to consider the rights of other judgment creditors whose judgments rank that of relators in order of registry. The record does not advise us whether their judgments are based on contracts or whether they rest upon causes of action arising prior to the constitutional amendment of 1874. It may be that none of them can compete with relators in the relief sought. But, at all events, the unexhausted power of taxation is ample to satisfy all; and if they are entitled to like rights with relators and have neglected to exercise them, there is no reason why relators should suffer.
Let it be well understood that the duty to levy an extra tax is not obligatory under this decree. The city may satisfy the debt out of its revenues under the existing rate of taxation. But the insufficiency of such revenues will be no excuse for not satisfying the judgment and, if necessary, and only if necessary, must provision be made by a tax for general expenses above ten mills and within twelve and one-haif mills.
Judgment affirmed.
Rehearing refused.
Bermudez, C. J., and Poclié, J., take no part in this opinion and decree.
Poche, J.
Having been prevented by illness from making a thorough -examination into the many issues presented in this case, and having no desire to retard the announcement of conclusions adopted by the majority of the Court, I prefer to take no part in the decree herein rendered.