delivered the opinion of the court.
This cause was heard in the Circuit Court upon demurrer to the bill of complaint. The principal question discussed in this court was the dissolution of the municipal corporation of the city of Fernandina. The view we take of the case fenders it unnecessary to examine that question! There is no equity in the bill, and consequently the decree of the Circuit Court dismissing the bill was correct. There are three questions presented by the facts set up in the bill. These questions are:
Fi/rst. Will a court of equity enjoin the collection of taxes by a municipal corporation from the property of its creditor, until the debt due by the corporation to such creditor is paid ? Will it set off such debt against the tax ?
Second. Will a court of equity enjoin the sale of property for taxes on account of irregularities in the matter of notice of time and place of sale ?
Tim'd. Will the failure to recover a debt through the ordinary legal remedies justify a court of equity in devising some method to accomplish that end ?
*382To the first question: The amount which the citizen pays to the government through taxation is not regarded as the settlement of a simple contract or matter of indebtedness, capable of being accurately estimated in value in the same manner as an ordinary indebtedness existing be-. tween individuals. A public use, a public benefit to all ' and to each, is one of the essential • ends sought to be obtained through such taxation. The public good, through •the instrumentality of local municipal governments, exercising political, governmental and civil powers and functions, is the object sought to be attained, and the power of taxation is an essential means given to reach this end. A court of equity should not assume such powers as would, in any event, embarrass the attainment of these ends by the corporation. To enjoin the collection of municipal taxes due upon property owned by individuals, to the extent that there is a debt from the city to- such individuals,- is the exercise of a power of appropriation and interference with public trusts and the exercise of delegated sovereign pow-. ers which has not received the sanction of any court. The amount of the tax is not strictly a debt due by the person. Its collection is enforced without suit, and in many other respects there is a difference. (7 Wall., 80.) It is a burden imposed upon property, the return for which it is presumed the tax-payer receives in the matter of benefit ■ through police regulations and other results incident to municipal government. The exact amount of benefit which each citizen receives from the exercise of such powers is not the subject of precise calculation. Taxes and public revenues are not subject to executions against municipal corporations. Upon the same principle, salaries due officers of a municipal corporation are not, in general, subject to garnishment. As a matter of abstract right and morality, it is unquestionably true that all the property and funds ox a debtor, whether it be a corporation or an individual should be subject to compulsory process at the suit of the' *383creditor, and this is the general theory of the law. Even this rule, however, is subject to many exceptions, su'ch as exemptions allowed from motives of public policy. In the, matter of municipal revenues and taxes, the rule at law is that they are exempt from execution, unless by statute they. are made so liable. The same principle which exempts, them at law w'ould not permit a court of equity to allow. a creditor to set off his debt against his-taxes. To this'ex-, tent a court of eqrrity would be administering the general revenues of the corporation and assuming municipal discretions. There is no lien upon the fund to be enforced; and there is no trust in connection with the debt, unless the general abstract power and duty to tax to. pay debts is itself a trust. This is no more a trust than the duty and power of every individual who has funds to pay debts is a trust.
In treating of the matter of set-off and taxation, the Su-. preme Court of New Jersey remark : “ Debt is the subject-matter of set-off, and is liable to set-off; a tax is neither. To hold that a tax is liable to eet-off would be utterly subversive of the power of government, and destructive of .the very end of taxation.” 2 Dutcher, 399; 3 Met., 526; 26 Vmt., 486.
The next question is, will a court of equity enjoin the sale of property for taxes on account of irregularities in the matter of notice of time and place of sale ? If the tax is due — and that such is the case is not here denied — the party should pay it. A court of equity will not aid him in resisting the just and legal demands of the government. It will not step in, for such reasons, and protect‘d, party in not paying a tax which he admits is due. This is a very familiar principle, obtaining in all- of the States.
The only other question remaining is, will a court of equity, on account of the failure of the mcmdamus proceeding, devise some method to.enforce payment of the debt?
Substantially, this proposition was considered by the Su*384preme Court of the United States in the cases of Rees vs. The City of Watertown, (19 Wall., 107,) and the'case of Heine " vs. The Levee Commissioners, (19 Wall., 658.) It is held in these cases that the failure of the ordinary legal remedy does not confer any jurisdiction upon the court of chancery. Because the proceeding has not been used at law with sufficient success by the plaintiff to secure his débt, cannot justify a court of equity in devising some method to accomplish that end.
The judgment is afiirmed.