1. A public corporation charged with specific duties, such as
building and repairing levees within a certain district, being
superseded in its functions by a law dividing the district and
creating a new corporation for one portion and placing the other
under charge of the local authorities, ceases to exist except so
far as its existence is expressly continued for special objects,
such as settling up its indebtedness, and the like.
2. If, with such limited existence, no provision is made for the
continuance or new election of the officers of such corporation,
the functions of the existing officers will cease when their
respective terms expire, and the corporation will be
de
facto extinct.
3. In such case, if there be a judgment against the corporation,
mandamus will not lie to enforce the assessment of taxes for its
payment, there being no officers to whom the writ can be
directed.
4. The court cannot, by mandamus, compel the new corporations to
perform the duties of the extinct corporation in the levy of taxes
for the payment of its debts, especially where their territorial
jurisdiction is not the same and the law has not authorized them to
make such levy.
5. Nor can the court order the marshal to levy taxes in such a
case, nor in any case except where a specific law authorizes such a
proceeding.
6. Under these circumstances, the judgment creditor is in fact
without remedy, and can only apply to the legislature for
relief.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an application by Barkley to the court below for a
mandamus, to be directed to the Board of Levee Commissioners of the
Parishes of Madison and Carroll in the State of Louisiana, to
compel such of said board as then survived to proceed to assess and
collect a tax for the payment of a certain judgment alleged to have
been recovered by the petitioner against the
Page 93 U. S. 259
said board on the nineteenth day of June, 1872, or, if the court
should be of opinion that the survivors have not such power and
cannot fill vacancies in their body, then that the police juries of
said Parishes of Madison and Carroll should perform that duty and
assess and collect sufficient tax to pay said judgment; or, if the
court should be of opinion that it had not power to make either of
said orders, then that it should order the United States marshal of
the district to assess at once, or by installments, from year to
year, and collect sufficient taxes upon the property subject to
taxation for levee purposes in said parishes, to pay said judgment
debt, interest, and costs, and for general relief.
The petition, amongst other things, states that the suit in
which the judgment sought to be enforced was rendered, was
originally commenced on the 23d of August, 1867, in the District
Court of the Thirteenth District of Louisiana, against the Board of
Levee Commissioners of the Parishes of Carroll and Madison, for
money due on levee warrants or scrip, being evidences of debt for
work and labor done upon the levees in the said parishes, for the
payment of which the laws of Louisiana had provided the assessment
and collection of taxes, and liens and privileges upon all taxable
property in said parishes; that this suit was afterwards removed by
the plaintiff (who was a citizen of Tennessee) into the circuit
court of the United States, and the police juries of said parishes
were made parties thereto; that judgment was entered against the
Board of Levee Commissioners on the date before mentioned for over
$100,000; that the said board, after having acted under prior
statutes, was created a corporation by Act of the legislature March
10, 1859; that in March, 1861, each of said parishes was made a
separate levee district, but the power to assess and collect taxes
to meet their indebtedness was continued in the old board; that
when the suit was commenced, William Sutton, president of the
board, Samuel P. Chambloss, commissioner for Carroll, and the three
commissioners for Madison, were living, but that Sutton and
Chambloss have since died, and no vacancies have been filled by
election or otherwise. The petition further states, that a writ of
fieri facias has been issued on the judgment and returned
unsatisfied, after demand made on the secretary and treasurer
Page 93 U. S. 260
of the board, they, as well as the police juries of the
parishes, pretending that the board was dissolved, and failing to
point out any property belonging thereto. The petitioner further
contends that the two parishes are the really interested parties,
and that if the old Board of Levee Commissioners cannot act, it is
the duty of the police juries to assess and collect sufficient
taxes on the taxable property of the two parishes to pay the
judgment.
A rule was taken on the surviving members of the Board of Levee
Commissioners and on the police juries of the Parishes of Madison
and Carroll to show cause why a mandamus should not issue as
prayed.
The former, by exception and answer, set up various grounds of
defense, the most important to note being that the corporation of
levee commissioners was defunct by resignation and death, only
three (who were not a quorum) remaining alive; also that the
judgment was void because no service of process had ever been made
on the corporation.
The police juries answered that they were distinct corporations
from that of the Board of Levee Commissioners, and were not vested
with power to assess and collect the taxes in question.
After receiving evidence and hearing the parties, the court
below refused the mandamus. Barkley sued out this writ of
error.
We had occasion in the case of
Police
Jury v. Britton, 15 Wall. 566, to explain the
system of making and maintaining the levees in Louisiana which
formerly prevailed, which was that the riparian proprietors were
obliged to keep them up as one of the considerations on which they
held their lands. This duty was executed under regulations made by
the police juries of the several parishes (which are the
administrative officers thereof), and under the direction of
inspectors by them appointed. In some instances, by virtue of
special statutes, the levees were managed by the parish itself or
by a district composed of several parishes through proper officers
appointed by the police juries or otherwise, and the necessary
expenses were raised by means of a tax levied upon the inhabitants.
In 1852 the Parishes of Carroll, Madison, and Catahoula (Catahoula,
however, being soon after excluded) were constituted one levee
district, which,
Page 93 U. S. 261
in the following year, was limited to the alluvial lands in
those parishes (Laws of 1852, p. 234; Laws of 1853, p. 44); and a
tax was directed to be levied for the support of the levees within
the district, the amount and mode of assessing which was from time
to time changed. This tax was directed to be collected annually by
the sheriffs of the respective parishes or by collectors to be
appointed by the commissioners. To carry out the act, three
commissioners were appointed from each parish, and were styled the
"Board of Levee Commissioners," with power to fill vacancies in the
board, appoint officers, lay out the district into wards, with one
inspector to each ward, and order the levees to be repaired and
built. In 1853, these commissioners were made elective, three to be
elected biennially in each parish by the qualified voters thereof
residing in the district or cultivating any portion of the alluvial
lands therein. In 1859, the board were authorized to divide each
parish into three equal portions, each of which was authorized to
elect one commissioner.
The warrants on which the judgment in question was founded were
issued in 1859 and 1860, and the legal provisions then in force
with regard to assessing taxes for supporting the levees and paying
the general liabilities of the board are to be found in the Act of
March 18, 1858, as amended by the Act of March 12, 1859. Laws of
1858, p. 128; Laws of 1859, p. 30. By these acts it was provided
that for the purpose of making and repairing levees in the
district, the commissioners should be authorized to assess annually
a specific tax of ten cents on each and every acre of alluvial
lands situated between the base of the hills west of Bayou Macon
and the levees on the Mississippi River, in the Parish of Carroll,
and between the levees and the western boundary, in the Parish of
Madison, including such alluvial lands only as had theretofore been
held to be within said levee district; and the commissioners were
further authorized to assess an annual
ad valorem tax at
such a percent on the state tax, including the mill tax, on all
property assessed in said levee district (lands included), as might
be necessary to build and repair the levees or to meet and take up
any or all outstanding liabilities of the said board on account of
levees theretofore erected or repaired. It would seem from
Page 93 U. S. 262
these enactments that the specific tax of ten cents on each acre
was intended for current expenses of levees, and that the
ad
valorem tax was intended to meet any deficiency and to pay
prior obligations incurred. These taxes were declared to be a first
lien and privilege upon the property subject thereto, and on return
by the sheriff or collector that it had been demanded and not paid,
the district judge might grant an order of seizure and sale.
Thus stood matters in 1860. But by Acts passed in March, 1861
(Laws of 1861, pp. 96, 110, 118), the levee district of the
Parishes of Madison and Carroll was abolished by the creation of
two new separate districts composed of the said parishes
respectively, and since that time no election of members of the old
board has ever been held, the term of office of the then existing
member having expired in 1862, and the board has been
functus
officio and has for over fifteen years past ceased to have any
duties to perform or any existence whatever except for the purpose
of discharging its old indebtedness. By the death of the president
and the other members from Carroll, only three members survive, and
these were all elected from the Parish of Madison. In 1866, at the
close of the war, an entirely new system, uniform throughout the
state, was adopted, by putting all the levees under the charge of a
single board, called the Board of Levee Commissioners (Laws of
1866, pp. 34, 36), and afterwards under the Board of Public Works
of the state (Digest of Statutes of La., vol. ii., p. 398, tit.
Public Works), and this board has been finally superseded by a
private corporation called the Louisiana Levee Company, which
performs the work by contract with the state.
The question is whether, as matters now stand, a mandamus can be
issued to compel the surviving commissioners of the old board or
the police juries of the Parishes of Madison and Carroll to assess
a tax on the property in the former levee district of said parishes
to pay the judgments in question, or, if not, whether the circuit
court of the United States can direct the marshal to assess such
tax.
In our judgment, neither of these things can be done.
In the first place, we think that the corporation of the Board
of Levee Commissioners of the Parishes of Madison and Carroll
Page 93 U. S. 263
is no longer in existence as a matter of fact. It is true that
the acts of 1861 abrogating the district and creating two separate
districts, one for each parish, did not in terms abolish the old
corporation, but reserved to it the power to levy taxes in order to
meet its outstanding indebtedness. But the creation of the new
districts, providing (as was done) for the election of new and
separate commissioners in the Parish of Carroll, the placing of the
levees in the Parish of Madison under the charge of the police
jury, and substituting an entire new system of levee management in
the parishes, superseded all the functions of the old board and all
provisions for their continuance by election, except so far as may
have been saved by express reservation. Nothing, however, was thus
saved except their power to assess taxes to meet their outstanding
indebtedness. And in fact no elections for members of the board
have ever been held since that time. The term of office of the
commissioners expired in November, 1862, and no provision was made
in the laws constituting the board that the members should hold
over until the election of their successors. It is true, a general
act had been passed in 1856 declaring that all state and parish
officers should, after the expiration of their term of service,
continue to perform the duties of their office until their
successors should be inducted into office. But the members of this
board were neither state nor parish officers, and the laws for
electing others in their stead had ceased to have operation. And
although, in ordinary cases, where an election has been omitted,
officers may continue to act as officers
de facto beyond
their regular term (though not compellable to do so), and their
acts will bind the corporation which they represent, yet where, as
in this case, no further provision is made for any further election
and the functions of the corporation have been abrogated or
superseded, we do not think that any implied power to continue in
office beyond the prescribed period exists. Our attention, however,
is called to the act passed by the provisional legislature in 1867
(Laws 1867, pp. 264-272), by which the corporation is assumed to be
in existence and is authorized to make and issue certain bonds; and
for that purpose it is declared (sec. 10), that
"The Board of Levee Commissioners shall continue in office, with
the power of filling vacancies in
Page 93 U. S. 264
said board, until their successors shall be duly elected and
qualified according to law, and all powers granted to said Board of
Levee Commissioners by any of the acts aforesaid, or by any other
acts, shall and may be exercised by the members of the board now in
office and any members appointed or elected as above
described."
This provision is evidently based upon a false suggestion. It
supposes that "successors" could be "elected and qualified," when
there was no law then in existence for any such purpose. A
different system was in operation, and had taken the place of that
which provided for the election of these commissioners. The act
also declares that the Board of Levee Commissioners shall continue
in office, taking for granted that they were in office when in
fact, as we have seen, they were not. Furthermore, this act was one
of the acts expressly excepted from the operation of the one
hundred and forty-ninth article of the constitution of 1868, which
validated all laws passed since the ordinance of secession in 1861.
This express exception is undoubtedly equivalent to a repeal of the
act.
Our conclusion from the whole case, therefore, is that the
corporation in question no longer exists and that no mandamus can
be issued to it or to the surviving persons who were formerly
members of the board.
The prayer for a mandamus against the police juries of the
Parishes of Madison and Carroll clearly cannot be granted. Those
bodies never had any power to assess the levee tax in question.
There is no law authorizing them to do so. They do not act in
concert, which they would have to do in order to assess a uniform
tax on the whole district, and there is no privity of duty,
interest, or succession between them and the extinct board.
The remaining prayer, for an order directing the marshal to
assess the tax, is equally inadmissible. It is true that in the
case of
Supervisors of Lee County v.
Rogers, 7 Wall. 175, we held that the circuit court
acting in that case, after having issued a mandamus to the
supervisors of the county, commanding them to levy a tax, and they
having refused to obey the writ, was authorized under the Code of
Iowa, which provided for such a proceeding, to issue a writ to the
marshal commanding
Page 93 U. S. 265
him to levy and collect the taxes required. But we have never
gone beyond this case, which depended on the special law referred
to. The marshal is the executive officer of the court, and can only
execute its process, and the court, without some such special
authority as that contained in the Iowa Code, cannot enforce its
judgments for the recovery of a debt in any other way than by
seizing and selling the property of the judgment debtor, or (where
imprisonment for debt is authorized) by seizing and detaining his
person. Where the debtor is a corporation, it cannot seize the
property of its members. This it would do if it should issue a writ
to the marshal commanding him to levy a tax upon the inhabitants of
a municipal corporation or upon their private property. The court
has no more authority in point of law to seize the property of
citizens for the debt of the corporation in which they reside
(except in some of the Eastern states, where a different system
prevails) than it has to seize the property of another corporation.
Its power to issue a mandamus to compel municipal officers to
perform their duty of levying a tax is a distinct power, which
extends to all ministerial acts which officers are legally bound
and refuse to perform. In the recent case of
Rees v.
City of Watertown, 19 Wall. 107, we decided that
the court has no general power to commission the marshal to levy
taxes for the purpose of satisfying a judgment, and we refer to
that case for a more full explanation of our views on this
subject.
Much reliance is placed by the counsel of the petitioner on the
fact that the taxes directed to be imposed by the acts of 1858 and
1859 were made a first lien and privilege upon the property liable
thereto. We do not see how this can affect the present application.
Liens for taxes are very generally created throughout the country,
but it is never supposed that the public creditors, to whom the
money raised by tax is to be paid, have the benefit of such lien.
It is created for the benefit of the public authorities, to enable
them with greater certainty and facility to collect the taxes
without the embarrassment of other pretended claims against the
property taxed.
The truth is that a party situated like the present petitioner
is forced to rely on the public faith of the legislature to supply
him a proper remedy. The ordinary means of legal redress
Page 93 U. S. 266
have failed by the lapse of time and the operation of
unavoidable contingencies. It is to be presumed that the
legislature will do what is equitable and just, and in this case
legislative action seems to be absolutely requisite.
Judgment affirmed.