City of Galena v. Amy
City of Galena v. Amy
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court, having first stated the case.
Most of the legal principles which are involved in this case, and which must govern its determination, have been settled in other cases decided at this term.
Was there any error in the rulings of the Circuit Court?
The fourth section of the act of 1852 declares that the city coundil, if they believe the public good and the best interests of the city require it, may levy and collect an annual tax of not exceeding one per cent., and that the amount thus collected'shall be kept separate; and that annually, on the 1st of January, it shall be paid over pro rata upon the funded debt of the city, that m'ay be presented by the holders ; and that this section shall continue in force until the principal and interest of the indebtedness is fully paid. -
This power has not been exercised by the city authorities, and they have made no other provision for liquidating.the debts due to' the relator. They have no other means of payment, in possession or prospect. Under such circumstances, the discretion thus given cannot, consistently with the rules of law, be resolved in the negative.
The rights of the creditor and the ends of justice demand that it should be exercised in favor of affirmative action, and the law, requires it. In such cases the power is in the nature of a trust for his benefit, and it was the plain, duty of the
These principles were fully considered in The Supervisors of Rock Island County v. The State Bank, of this term,
This section of the act of 1852 is not repealed-by either the act of 1857 or the act of 1865. There is no express repeal, and we think there is none by implication. The latter is not favored in the law. Repeal hy implication, when the prior and the later act can consistently stand together, is never admitted.
It is conceded that this act was in force when the bonds in question were issued. If so, it was beyond the power of the legislature to repeal it, so far as it concerns the bonds in question, unless some other adequate remedy were substituted in its place.
The third section of the act of 1857 and the twelfth section of the act of 1865 each authorizes the collection of one per cent., to be applied to the payment of the interest upon the city debt. The latter re-enacts the former. The efficacy of this provision is not denied. The order of the Circuit Court with respect to this tax was correct.
The return of the respondents showed no sufficient reason why a peremptory writ of mandamus should not issue, as was ordered. The demurrer. of the relator was properly sustained.
It is insisted that the city owes a large amount of other debts, and that if these taxes are collected the other creditors will be entitled to share in the distribution of the proceeds.
It is not competent for the respondents to make this objection. When any other creditor complains in a proper pro
The counsel for the plaintiffs in error has called our attention, with emphasis and eloquence, to the diminished resources of the city, and the disproportionate magnitude of its debt. Much as personally we may regret such a state of things,'we can give no weight to considerations of this character, when placed iti the scale as a counterpoise to the contract, the law, the legal rights of the creditor, and our duty to enforce them. Such securities occupy the same ground in this court as all others which are brought before us. When clothed with legal validity, it is our purpose to sustain them, and to give to their holders the benefit of all the remedies to which the law entitles them. When invalid, we have not hesitated and shall not hesitate to say so. But we cannot recognize a distinction, unknown to the law, between this and any other class of obligations we may be called upon to enforce.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is
Aeeirmed.
4 Wallace, 435.
McCool v. Smith, 1 Black, 471.
Van Hoffman v. The City of Quincy, 4 Wallace, 535.
Reference
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- 1. Where an act, amending a city charter, says that the city council “may, if it believe that the public good, and the best interests of the city require ” it, levy q tax to pay its funded debt, a mandamus will lie) at the TSuit of a judgment creditor, to make it levy a tax, if it docs not. The Supervisors, &c., v. United States (4 Wallace, 435), approved. 2. Where a city has a power, such as the one above given, it is no return to an alternative mandamus, commanding it to lay a special tax bf one per cent, to pay the principal, and one per cent, to pay the interest and costs of judgments obtained against it for non-payment of its funded debt, or .show cause, &c., that it did, in one year, levy such a tax, and that the funds raised by it are wholly exhausted. Nor is it an argument against -the issuing of a peremptory mandamus, that the city owes a lai'ge amount of other debts, and that if these taxes are collected, other creditors will be entitled to share in the distribution of the proceeds. 3. The acts of the General Assembly of Dlinois passed June 30th, 1857, and February 6th, 1865, amendatory of the act of June 21st, 1852,’ giving by its fourth section the power to tax as quoted in the first paragraph above, do not repeal that fourth section.