1. Vested rights acquired by a creditor under and by virtue of a
statute of a state granting new remedies or enlarging those which
existed when the debt was contracted are beyond the reach of the
legislature, and the repeal of the statute will not affect
them.
2. Sec. 49 of the Code of Tennessee, declaratory of the law of
that state respecting the effect of repealing statutes, is in
accord with this doctrine.
3. On March 10, 1875, A. obtained a decree against Memphis for
the payment to him of $202,133.47, for materials furnished and work
done under contracts entered into with that city in 1807 for paving
certain streets. Execution having been issued and returned
unsatisfied, the court, on the 22d of that month, awarded an
alternative writ of mandamus to compel the city to exercise the
power conferred by an Act of the legislature passed March 18, 1873,
and levy "a tax, in addition to all taxes allowed by law,"
sufficient to pay the decree. The city answered that said act had
been repealed by one passed March 20, 1875, and that the tax which,
by the Act of Feb. 13, 1854, it was authorized to levy for all
purposes had been levied, and its powers were therefore exhausted.
A. demurred to the answer; the demurrer was sustained, and the writ
made peremptory March 30, 1875. The act passed March 20, 1875, was
approved by the governor of the state on the twenty-third day of
that month.
Held:
1. That the repealing act did not become a law until its
approval by the governor.
2. That prior thereto, A., by his decree and the alternative
mandamus, which was a proceeding commenced by virtue of the Act of
March 18, 1873, had acquired a vested right, which was not defeated
by the repealing act, to have a tax, payable in lawful money,
levied sufficient to pay him, although it required the levy of a
tax beyond the rate mentioned in the Act of 1854.
Page 97 U. S. 294
The facts involved in this case are the same as those in
United states v. Memphis, supra, p.
97 U. S. 284.
The City of Memphis, by whom this writ was sued out, assigns the
following errors:
The court below erred:
1. In holding that the City of Memphis had the power or was
under the duty of levying the tax, as adjudged.
2. In holding that the legislature had no power to repeal the
Act of March 18, 1873.
3. In adjudging that the tax to be levied should be payable only
in lawful money of the United states, as the Act of March 18, 1873,
required the City of Memphis to receive, in payment of the tax
therein authorized,
"any sum or sums, with interest, paid by persons in
satisfaction, or part satisfaction, of said special assessments,
illegally levied and collected as aforesaid."
4. In holding that a new and further tax be laid, sufficient to
pay the entire decree, for $292,133.47, the return to the
alternative writ disclosing that under a former mandate of the
court the city had made a special levy of $302,742.69, for the
purpose of paying the decree; that of said levy $132,742.69 had
been collected and paid over, and the remainder, $170,000, was
being collected and paid over as rapidly as possible.
5. In awarding the writ of mandamus commanding the levy of a tax
sufficient in amount, after making due allowances for all
delinquencies, insolvencies, and defaults, to pay the decree.
6. In awarding the peremptory writ of mandamus.
MR. JUSTICE STRONG delivered the opinion of the Court.
The important question in this case is, whether the law of the
state empowered the City of Memphis to levy the tax which by the
writ of mandamus it was commanded to levy. If it did not, the award
of the writ cannot be sustained, for a mandamus will not be granted
to compel the levy of a tax not authorized by law.
By an act of the legislature passed on the 18th of March, 1873,
it was enacted as follows:
Page 97 U. S. 295
"That where an incorporated town or city has, by virtue of
presumed authority to lay special assessments for specific
purposes, levied and collected taxes or special assessments, the
right to make which levy and assessment was afterwards declared
void by the supreme court of the state, said town or city shall
have the power to levy a tax, in addition to all other taxes
allowed by law to be levied, sufficient to cover the entire cost of
the improvement, with interest thereon, for which said special
assessments were illegally made, and in the levying of such
additional tax authority is hereby given to such town or city to
allow as valid payments on said additional tax any sum or sums,
with interest, paid by persons in satisfaction, or in part
satisfaction, of said special assessments, illegally levied and
collected as aforesaid."
This statute, it is true, was not in existence when the
plaintiff's contract with the city was made, but it is confessedly
available for him, unless it was repealed before he acquired any
rights under it. Plainly it was enacted to meet his case, and had
there been no repeal, the question now raised would not be before
us. It is claimed, however, that it was repealed before the circuit
court awarded the mandamus, and what was the effect of that
legislative action upon the power of the court in this case becomes
therefore a very important question. It is an acknowledged
principle that a creditor by contract has a vested right to the
remedies for the recovery of the debt which existed at law when the
contract was made, and that the legislature of a state cannot take
them away without impairing the obligation of the contract, though
it may modify them, and even substitute others, if a sufficient
remedy be left, or another sufficient one be provided. The law is
in effect a part of the contract. But it is not so clear that when
a new remedy is authorized after a contract has been made, that
remedy may not be wholly taken away by the legislature, before any
vested rights have been acquired under it. In such a case, the
parties did not contract with reference to it, and it did not enter
into their agreement. It had nothing to do with the obligations
they assumed. It is, however, no less true that vested rights may
be acquired by the creditor under it and by virtue of it; and when
such rights have been acquired, they are beyond the reach of the
legislature, and the repeal of the law will not affect
Page 97 U. S. 296
them. As to them, the law continues in force, notwithstanding
its repeal.
In this case, the relator recovered his judgment against the
city on the 16th of March, 1875. Into that judgment his contract
was merged, and it no longer had any legal existence. If, as
asserted by Blackstone, the judgment was itself a contract, the
remedies for its enforcement, existing at the time when it was
recovered, could not be taken away either by direct legislation, or
indirectly, by repealing the law which gave those remedies. And if
the judgment may not be considered a contract of record, still the
vested rights it gave to the relator, whatever they were, are
equally secure against legislative invasion.
After the judgment was obtained an execution was issued to
collect the amount of it, and on the 22d of March, 1875, the
alternative mandamus was issued to compel the levy of the tax of
which the city now complains. It was not until after all this that
the Act of March 18, 1873, was repealed. The act repealing it was
approved by the governor on the 23d of March, 1875, and it became a
law only from the time of his approval. Such is the generally
received doctrine. See cases cited in 4 Abb.Nat.Dig. 223. It is
said, however, the rule in Tennessee is different; and it is
contended that as the act passed the two Houses on the 20th of
March, though not approved by the governor until the 23d, it took
effect, by relation, on the day of its passage through the two
House; and we are referred to
Dyer v. states, Meigs
(Tenn.) 237-255, and to
Turner v. Oburn, 2 Coldw. (Tenn.)
460. Those decisions were under the Constitution of 1834, which did
not require the approval of the governor, or a passage of the bill
over his objection, to make a binding statute as the Constitution
of 1870 does. It is true the earlier constitution required the
signature of an act by the respective Speakers of the House. That
was for the purpose of attestation only, and the act was then said
to take effect on the day of its passage. The later Constitution
demands the same signatures, and it demands more, namely, the
approval of the governor. It also ordains that no bill shall become
a law until it shall have received his approval, or shall have been
otherwise passed under the provisions of the constitution -- that
is, as we understand
Page 97 U. S. 297
it, over his refusal to approve. The executive is thus made a
necessary constituent of the lawmaking power. If with this be
considered the declaration of the Constitution, that no
retrospective law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts,
shall be made, the conclusion is inevitable, that the repealing act
had no effect upon anything that was done before March 23, 1875.
But before that day, we think the relator had acquired a vested
right by his judgment and his alternative writ of mandamus to have
a tax levied sufficient to pay the debt due to him from the city --
a right of which he could be deprived by no subsequent action of
the legislature.
We do not deny that it is competent for a legislature to repeal
an act which when it was passed was a mere gratuity, if while it
was in existence, no vested rights have been acquired under it or
in virtue of it. But such, we think, is not this case. Indeed,
there are very strong reasons for holding that the Act of March 18,
1873, never was a gratuity. By the Act of 1866, the legislature
invited contracts with the city for grading and paving, offering to
the contractors the security of assessments upon the owners of
property abutting on the improved streets. No doubt it supposed it
had the power to give such security or such a remedy to the
contractor. No doubt both the city and the contractor thought such
a power existed. It turned out that they were all mistaken. The
contractor, by this mutual mistake, was led into the expenditure of
much labor and money, and the city enjoyed the benefit of the
expenditure. The security promised for reimbursement to him having
failed, the legislature and the city having held forth unfounded
expectations to him, by which he was induced to enter into the
contract, there was the highest moral obligation resting alike upon
the state and upon the city to provide a substitute for the remedy
which had proved to be of no value. This substitute was provided by
the Act of 1873. It was merely adding a legal to a moral
obligation. It should not be considered a mere gratuity. It took
the place of a resort to abutting lot owners, and if the contractor
could not have been deprived of that, had it been authorized by the
Constitution, the thing substituted for it should, in justice and
common honesty, be regarded as equally
Page 97 U. S. 298
secure for his indemnity. But if we are in error in this, it is
still enough that by his judgment and his writ of mandamus he
acquired a vested right to have the tax collected which the writ
ordered.
The Code of Tennessee, sec. 49, declaratory of the law of the
state respecting the effect of repealing statutes, is as
follows:
"The repeal of a statute does not affect any right which
accrued, any duty imposed, any penalty incurred, nor any proceeding
commenced under or by virtue of the statute repealed."
Thus has been established a rule for the construction of
repealing statutes. If now the rule be applied to the Act of March
23, 1875, it is manifest that act did not affect any right that had
before its passage accrued to Brown, the relator, under or by
virtue of it, or any proceeding commenced by him under it. But
certainly under his judgment recovered in 1875 he had a right to
have a tax levied sufficient to pay it, so long as the Act of 1873
remained in force, and he had the right in virtue of that act. So
when the alternative mandamus was issued, March 22, 1875, a
proceeding was commenced under or by virtue of the statute. And if
the repealing act affected that proceeding, or took away the right
the relator had in force of his judgment, it was retrospective in
its operation, and it was therefore prohibited by the Constitution.
In
Fisher's Negroes v. Dabbs, 6 Yerg. (Tenn.) 119, it was
said by the court that
"a distinction between the right and the remedy is made and
exists. But where the remedy has attached itself to the right, and
is being prosecuted by due course of law, to separate between them
and take away the remedy is to do violence to the right, and comes
within the reason of that provision of our Constitution which
prohibits retrospective, or, in other words, retroactive, laws from
being passed, or laws impairing the obligation of contracts."
Vide Richardson v. The State, 3 Coldw. (Tenn.) 122.
For these reasons, we think that, so far as relates to the case
of Brown, the relator, the Act of March 18, 1873, remains in force,
and that the City of Memphis has power under that act to levy and
collect the tax which was directed by the mandamus.
The remaining questions in the case are of minor importance. It
is said there was error in adjudging that the tax to be levied
should be payable only in lawful money of the United States.
Page 97 U. S. 299
We do not perceive in this any error. The judgment of the
relator could be paid only with such money, and the tax ordered was
to be sufficient in amount, after making due allowances for all
delinquencies, insolvencies, and defaults, &c., to realize
$125,000 each year for the years 1875, 1876, respectively, and as
much of said sum for the remaining year (1877) as may be required
to pay and satisfy the balance of the decree in favor of the
relator, with interest and costs, not satisfied by former taxes
collected and paid. The meaning of the writ is, that sufficient
money shall be collected. If the city elect to credit in payment of
the levy what the lot owners have paid, the mandamus does not
forbid it; but a sufficient levy must be made and collected to
raise in money the sums ordered to be paid in satisfaction of the
decree in favor of the relator. This was plainly right.
The only other assignment worthy of notice is, that there was
error in holding that a new and further tax be laid, sufficient to
pay the entire decree for $292,133.47, the return to the
alternative writ disclosing that under a former mandate of the
court the City of Memphis had made a special levy of $302,742.69,
for the purpose of paying the relator's decree; that of said levy
$132,742.69 had been collected and paid to the relator, and that
the remainder, $170,000, was being collected and paid over as fast
as possible.
This assignment is manifestly evasive. The former mandate was
not for the satisfaction of the decree of March, 1875. But if it
was, it would make no difference. It is the most the city can ask,
that it be assumed the former mandate had been obeyed, and that all
had been collected that could be collected under the levy. What has
not been, therefore, cannot aid in satisfying the decree, and it is
not averred that any part of the $170,000 can be. Notwithstanding
the mandamus, it is in the power of the city to relieve herself
from its binding force by paying the debt due the relator. If she
can collect any thing by virtue of past levies, to the extent of
the collection she will be relieved from levying additional taxes,
but the debt must be paid.
Judgment affirmed.