Mayor of Brunswick v. Dure
Mayor of Brunswick v. Dure
Opinion of the Court
This was an application for a mandamus, which was made absolute, and the city of Brunswick.excepted.
The only issue made by the city was a certain bill in equity praying for an injunction against Dure, to forbid the enforcement of his judgment'against the city. That issue was a question of law for the court, the bill in equity being all in writing and the sole issue being — is there equity in it %
We think there was none, and have so held at this term in the case of the City of Brunswick vs. Harris, bailiff, et al., not yet reported. The bill alleges nothing against this judgment, no fraud or mistake, or other reason in equity why it should not be paid, except that the City owes other people, and some of them have defrauded her, and hold fraudulent claims against her; but that is no reason why she should not pay this judgment, which is not attacked for fraud or other equitable reason to set it aside. The mandamus nisi asked that the city be made to pay the judgment; the court made it absolute, to come out of the taxes of 1878; the debt is something over nine hundred dollars; it can be and ought to be paid by the city; and we affirm the judgment.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.