Powers v. Mayor of Decatur

MANNING, J.

A demurrer should appear in the record as a part of the pleading in a cause;' and a judgment overruling or sustaining the demurrer ought, as a matter of course, also to appear by the record ; thereupon error might be assigned, without a bill of exceptions, the suit having proceeded to a final judgment. The demurrer and judgment thereon, or a recital of them, ought not to be incorporated, as in this cause it is, in the bill of exceptions. Such a practice encumbers the record and increases costs.

The objection by demurrer to the complaint was, that it did not set forth the names of' the individuals who filled the offices of mayor and councilmen of the town of Decatur. The plaintiff below (appellee in this court,) being created by statute a corporation, is in contemplation of law a person; and like a natural person, may sue and be sued in its proper name. And its suit, in this instance, was correctly brought in the name conferred upon it by its charter of incorporation. The officials in this municipal body were not the individuals who composed it. It embraced the whole community of citizens. The demurrer was, therefore, properly overruled.

It is assigned as error, that the plaintiff below was allowed to maintain its suit upon a due bill made by defendant to it, for a license to retail spirituous and other liquors in the town, The ground assumed is that the due bill was void as ultra vires, not within the capacity of the plaintiff to accept it.

The municipal authorities are expressly empowered by the charter “to provide for licensing and regulating retailers of liquors within the limits of said corporation, and to fix the sum to be paid for the same.” It is not pretended that a license was not granted to appellant, or that the sum for which he gave his due bill was not the amount fixed by the proper officials therefor. The objection is that instead of requiring the cash from him, they accepted his acknowledgement that he owed the money and promised to pay it on demand.

It is said in Dillon on Municipal Corporations (§ 656,) in respect to taxation: “ If the charter gives the power to impose taxes, but is silent respecting the method of their recovery, the corporation may enforce them, or provide by ordinance for their enforcement by due course of judicial proceedings. In such case the authority to collect by suit is clearly im*217plied, being necessary to make tbe ■ power to tax available.” “ In some of tbe States the view is taken that a tax legally levied and assessed,, by a municipal corporation, pursuant to its charter, creates a legal obligation to, pay such tax, and that the city can recover it in an action of assumpsit, and this, although there may be a summary mode of recovery provided for in the ordinance.”—Ib. § 655; Ryan v. County, 14 Ill. 83; Mayor v. McKee, 2 Yerger, 167; Dugan v. Baltimore, 1 Gil. & J. 99.

In some other States this doctrine is not accepted.—Camden v. Allen, 2 Dutch. 398; Pierce v. Boston, 3 Metc. 520; Lane Co. v. Oregon, 7 Wall. 71.

But there is 'certainly much more of the nature of an agreement on which an action ex contractu would lie, in the transaction of voluntarily taking a license to retail liquors, at a known fixed price assessed therefor, than there is in the one-sided proceeding of assessing a tax in invitum. And the acceptance of evidence from the licensee in writing of his agreement to pay the money would certainly enable the corporation to maintain an action for it. We do not admit that the indulgence granted by the city authorities, in not exacting the money before issuing the license, or the failure of the licensee then to pay it, should work a forfeiture of the license money, any more than to exact, or to pay moneys due as taxes proper, should preclude the corporation from afterwards collecting them.

The money was due to the corporation; it had the general power to contract and be contracted with in reference to matters of concern to itself ; it consented to grant defendant indulgence in paying the money, on his executing to it a promise to pay it when demanded. And the law cannot allow him, upon such pretenses, to avoid his just responsibility.

Upon application for a rehearing in this cause : It appears by the bill of exceptions that “ it was shown to the court that H. E. Willard was mayor of the town of Decatur at the time said suit was brought, and thereupon the defendant moved the court to dismiss said suit for want of security for costs, which motion the court overruled, and defendant excepted.” .Overlooking the.particularity in this recital, to which our. attention was not called, and observing that there was no instrument set forth in the record by which any security for the- costs was provided, we supposed, when this cause first came before us, that it was admitted that no security for costs was in fact given, and that only the question of law whether a municipal corporation must give such security in a suit brought by it was intended to be presented; *218as to which,—see Rev. Code, § 2804, and Wharf Co. v. Tuskaloosa, 38 Ala. R. 514.

But it seems that the exception taken is, that Willard being the mayor of Decatur, should not have been accepted as the surety of that town for the costs; a proposition that cannot be sustained. There is nothing to hinder Willard as an individual from being a proper surety for the costs of a suit brought by the town of-which he happens to be an official; and the objection to him as such, on that ground, was properly overruled by the circuit court.

Security for costs is not required to be given in such a manner as that it must necessarily constitute a part of the record of the suit to which it refers, upon an appeal therein to this court. The law provides only that it “must be lodged with the clerk.” — R. C. § 2804; see, also, § 2937.

In Barton v. McKinney’s Adm’rs, (3 Stew. & Port. 274), a bond was filed by which the obligors became bound for the payment of the costs in the suit described in it; and it was held that such bond mnst be set forth as a part of the record in a proceeding for judgment against them (the sureties) for the costs.—See, also, Reid v. Brashier, 7 Port. 448.

But in the former of these cases, it was also said : “ The manner in which a surety shall bind himself for the costs is not prescribed.....I can perceive no objection to the security giving bond.....It certainly is not the only way in which he may bind himself; during term time it may be done, and probably most conveniently in the form of a recognizance or simple acknowledgement of his suretyship on the record. But the act of 1807 evidently contemplates the giving security in the recess, as well as in term time; . . . . and in a case of this kind, there could be no better mode devised, nor probably so good a one as by bond.”

So, in the cause before us, the- security may have been given by a bond filed, and in as much as it does not appear that security for the costs was not given, but rather impliedly that Willard, the mayor, had become surety for them, we cannot hold that the court erred in overruling the motion to dismiss.

Judgment of reversal heretofore rendered is set aside, and the judgment of the court below is affirmed.