Kimball v. Mobile
Kimball v. Mobile
Opinion of the Court
The defendant asserts that the act of February 16, 1867, by authority of which the harbor board was organized, and contracted with complainants, was in violation of the constitution of the state then in force. This question has been settled in favor of the constitutionality of the law by the supreme court of Alabama, in the case of President, etc., Mobile Co. v. State, 45 Ala. 399. As this is a decision of the highest court of the state upon the construction of the law and the state constitution, it is binding upon this court. But defendant insists that, independent of any prohibition in the state constitution, the act was beyond legislative power. The argument is that the improvement of the bay and harbor of Mobile is a matter which interests not only Mobile county, but also many other counties of the state, and also the people of other states and even of foreign countries; that the improvement of harbors is a matter of national concern, and it is the duty of the general government to provide for it; that while the power of the legislature to authorize the county, if it so elected, to issue bonds for the improvement of the bay and harbor is not denied, yet the power of the legislature to compel the county nolens volens to issue its bonds for such a purpose is disputed. It is insisted that this act of the legislature was not only unjust and oppressive, but that it did not provide for taxation in any proper constitutional sense. It was taking the money of one corporation and giving it to another. It was merely confiscation and robbery under the false name of taxation; that such an act could not be supported under the taxing power, and was beyond the power of the legisla: ture.
In support of this view, counsel have cited Cooley, Const. Lim. p. 214, and note 2; Id. p. 230, note1; Id.pp. 235. 487, 488, 490, 491, 493; Cooley, Tax’n, 482, 483, 487, 495; Hil. Tax’n, pp. 12, 14, §§ 17, 18. So far as the act under consideration is charged to be unjust or oppressive, that is a matter with which this
It is alleged, by way of defense to the bill of complaint that a bill between the same parties as are complainants and defendants in this suit, setting up the same identical cause of action, was dismissed on appeal by the supreme court of Alabama, and that the questions raised by the present bill are res judi-cata and cannot be again litigated. This defense cannot hold: (1) Because it is not set up in the answer; and (2) there is no proof to sustain it On the contrary, it appears that the case here made is different in essential particulars from that made in the case dismissed by the state court, and that the. state court dismissed the bill of complainants without prejudice. They were, therefore, at liberty to bring a new bill against different parties on the same claim, or against the same parties on new or additional facts. It is alleged, and appears to be true, that the present bill does contain material averments, for want of which the bill in the state court was dismissed. For these reasons the defense of res adjudieata cannot prevail.
It is further set up, by way of defense, that there is an adequate remedy at law, and that this court is, therefore, without jurisdiction. If this objection can be maintained, it would be the duty of this court to dismiss the bill. It is, therefore, necessary to consider the question whether the complainants have a remedy at law against the county of Mobile. In the case of Mobile Co. v. Kimball, 54 Ala. 56, the law of February 16. 1867, under which the harbor board was organized, was construed. This court is bound to follow that construction, as much as if it were a part Of the law itself. Mitchell v. Lippincott [Case No. 9,665], and eases there cited. In that case the supreme court of Alabama held: “The harbor board was a body created by the general assembly, and not an agent appointed by the county of Mobile. Its authority, as well as its existence, was derived through the state from the state. It was with this board that complainants made their contract, upon which their suit was founded, and it is not* shown or alleged that the amount of bonds it had received was insufficient to enable it to fulfill its engagements. Manifestly, therefore, their controversy should have been with
This construction of the law by the supreme court shows that the complainants had no contract with the county' of Mobile, for it is decided that the harbor board was not the agent of the county, but of the state. No suit at Taw upon the contract would lie against the county.- The obligation of the county was to issue its bonds on the demand of the harbor board. This obligation was imposed, not by any contract between the county and the complainants, but by the law. If an action at law had been brought against the county on the contract made by the complainants with the harbor board, the county could have answered that it never made such a contract, and the complainants would have been put out of court.
The case is clearly one of equitably cognizance. It is to compel the county to issue and deliver to the complainants its bonds, in conformity, not with any contract, but of an obligation imposed by a law of the state. The contract of complainants was with the harbor board. The compensation was to be made in bonds of the county, to be issued on demand of the harbor board. There is due to complainants six bonds of the county of $1,000 each, for work performed under this contract. The harbor board has been destroyed by an act of the legislature. It cannot, or does not, demand the bonds from the county necessary to pay the complainants’ claim. A court of equity can alone take the place of the harbor board, and require of the county to issue and deliver to complainants its bonds in payment of their claims. It is entirely clear that an action at law against the county would be futile. Judge Story, in his work on Equity Jurisprudence (volume 3, § 1250), says: “Another class of implied trusts, which may be mentioned under this head, is that which arises under contract, or otherwise, by operation of law from a claim which may be directly enforced by law against the party, but to the due discharge of which another party is ultimately liable. In such a case, a court of equity treats it as a trust by the party ultimately liable, which may be directly enforced in favor of the party ultimately entitled to the benefit of it. In other words, a court of equity will render the party immediately liable who is or may be at law or in equity ultimately liable. Thus, if a trust is created for the benefit of a party who is to be the ultimate receiver of the money,. or other thing, which constitutes the subject matter of the trust, he may sustain a suit in equity to have the money or other thing directly paid or delivered to himself.” The text is sustained by the following citations: Forster v. Forster, 3 Brown, Ch. 489, 493; Tew v. Earl of Winterton, 1 Ves. Jr. 451; Sugd. Vend. (7th Ed.) c. 15, pp. 633, 634, § 4; 1 Madd. Ch. Prac. 471, 472.
It seems to me that the present case is an excellent illustration of the principle laid down by Judge Story. The jurisdiction of a court of equity, under the circumstances of this case, appears to me to be undoubted. But it is said that the statute law of Alabama affords a method of relief to the complainants by the prosecution of the claim against the’county, etc. But if the case is one of equitable cognizance, no statute of Alabama can deprive the equity courts of the United States of their jurisdiction over it. Of course, the complainants would be required, if the statute law of the state so prescribed, to present their claim to the board of county commissioners, and to bring then-suit within the time limited by the state law, but having presented their claim, and thus laid the foundation of their suit, if the case was one proper for a court of equity, they had the right, being citizens of a state other than the state of which the defendant was a citizen, to resort to the equity courts of the United States. No law of Alabama, providing another forum or another method of procedure, could deprive the complainants of their rights under the constitution and laws of the United States, or circumscribe the jurisdiction of the equity courts of the United States. Bennett v. Butterworth, 11 How. [52 U. S.] 669; Thompson v. Railroad Co., 6 Wall. [73 U. S.] 134; Case of Broderick’s Will. 21 Wall. [88 U. S.] 503; Noyes v. Willard [Case No. 10,374]; Benjamin v. Cavaroc [Id. 1,300].
The act of February 23, 1800, which is quoted in full above, was an unnecessary enactment. It did not enlaj-ge the rights of complainants, nor add aught to the jurisdiction of this court as a court of equity. The case of complainants is just as good without as with it, and the power of this court to grant relief is not changed by it.
The only question which remains is, whether the complainants have sustained, by proof, the averments of their bill, that after the passage of the act of April 19, 1S73, which repealed the act of February 16, 1S67, under which the harbor board was organized, said board had no money with which to pay complainants, and no bonds of the county of Mobile, except such as had been hypothecated, and that on and after July 29,1S73, said harbor board had no money or bonds with which to pay complainants’ claim, or any part thereof,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- KIMBALL v. MOBILE
- Status
- 000 each. On June 5