Seale v. Parish of Madison
Seale v. Parish of Madison
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff sues the Parish of Madison for fees or commissions due him as Parish Attorney for said Parish.
The amounts claimed in these suits were over a million of dollars, and the result of the litigation was, that the Parish made a successful defense and had nothing to pay.
The defenses of the Parish to this demand of the plaintiff in this suit are, substantially:
That plaintiff cannot legally charge for defending suits in the United States Courts, or for services rendered out of the Parish of Madison, to which Parish his official functions were restricted by law j that the suits wore not against the Parish of Madison, but against the Levee Board, and that no services -were performed in but two cases by the plaintiff, which were the only cases in which any defense was made, and judgments rendered; and that large sums had been paid to other attorneys as fees in the same cases.
The Court a qua, gave judgment for the plaintiff for $3,214.52, and from that judgment he has appealed, and the appellee has asked an amendment of the judgment rejecting the demand.
The facts of the case, as disclosed by the evidence, are substantially these:
Plaintiff was District Attorney, •pro tem., or Parish Attorney, for the Parish of Madison, from 1871 to 1876, except one year, when his right to the office was in controversy. During that time suits for large amounts, aggregating the sum mentioned, were brought against the Levee Commissioners of the two Parishes named, and which the two Parishes, composing the Levee District, would have had to pay had judgments been rendered in favor of the plaintiffs therein.
The Act of 1868, (Act 120) creating the office of District Attorney pro tenvpore, provided that such officer should be the Parish Attorney, and it was made Ms duty to represent the Parish in any case in which the Parish was interested, and should besides perform such other duties for the benefit of the Parish as might be required by the police jury, and was entitled to receive five per cent, on the amounts involved for defending suits against the Parish. E. S. Sec. 1186.
The police jury of Madison, by several ordinances, recognized the interest of the Parish in these suits, and the privileges and duties of the plaintiff with respect to them, and empowered Mm to employ
The plaintiff com plains of the refusal of the Judge to include in tin* judgment a provision for the levy of a tax to pay the same. His contention is, that at the time his services were rendered and his debt accrued, the law required that whenever a judgment was rendered against a municipal corporation, the judgment at the same time should provide for its payment, by ordering the assessment and collection of a special tax sufficient to satisfy the same, and that this provision of law formed part of the contract under which the indebtedness accrued, which could not be impaired by the subsequent repeal of tbe law (in 1877) inasmuch as it was protected by both the State and Federal Constitution, and that the taking away the remedy for its enforcement wa s an impairment of the contract within the intendment of the law. We do not concur in this view of the subject. In tlie first'place, tlie argument is based on false premises. We do not find that tbe plaintiffs claim was based upon a contract. A contract implies a convention between two or more parties, from which an obligation arises in favor of one or both of the parties. • There was no such convention in this ease. His claim does not grow out"of any con tract made with tire police jury of Madison, but out of a legal provision allowing him a certain compensation for services rendered tbe Parish iii Ms official capacity, and which it was made his duty to render, and the compensation would he due him with or without the action of-the parochial authorities. Before the Aet of 1869 was passed, there was a remedy to enforce the payment of a judgment against anranicipal corporation. A remedy for the enforcement of such a right exists to-day, and were the debt' claimed founded on a contract, it would by no means follow that the abrogation of the special remedy provided by the Act in question, to-wit: ordering the levy of the tax in the judgment itself, was unconstitutional. 32 A. 884.
This precise question came up in the case of Carnes vs. Parish of Red River, 29 A. 608, which was a suit by a sheriff for his fees. The Court held that in view of the repealing Act of 1877, the order for tlie levy of a tax to pay the debt was properly refused. We are not prepared to overrule that decision, nor can we concede, as charged by the plaintiff’s counsel, that it is repugnant to the rules of constitutional construction.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment appealed from he amended, by increasing the amount thereof to the sum of seven thousand five hundred and thirty-seven 40-100 dollars, with legal interest from judicial demand, and as thus amended, it be? affirmed, defendant to pay tbe costs of both Courts.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.