Relator asked for a writ of mandamus against the police jury of the parish of Webster.
He seeks to have the liquor license in the ward in which he proposes to open a liquor-saloon fixed at $2,500.
The license at this time, fixed in accordance with an ordinance of November 8, 1906 is $5,000, for the year 1907.
Relator urges that a license of $5,000 is-prohibitory, and for that reason illegal.
The judgment appealed from makes the mandamus peremptory and orders the police jury to meet within 20 days and fix the license for the year 1907 at the amount of $2,500.
From that judgment, the defendant parish has taken a suspensive appeal.
On the Exceptions:
There are preliminary questions to the decision of which we will in the first place apply ourselves.
The first is that no legal writ has been issued; that the writ served was signed by Mrs. Dora Dupuy, who is incapable of holding office or of exercising any of the duties of a deputy clerk.
The second of defendant’s propositions is-that the suit is premature because relator did not make a tender of the $2,500, amount of license which he admits is not excessive and prohibitory; and, lastly, relator’s petition discloses no cause of action.
We now return to the first proposition for-decision, to wit, that the writ was signed by a person of the opposite sex.
She, at any rate, had de facto authority sufficient to bind the complaining respondent. She unquestionably qualified by taking the-proper oath. Her appointment had the sanction of the judge. She exercised the duties of the office and signed the writ with some *165claim of title to her position. She acted as a deputy clerk.
Those who bring suit cannot be collaterally prejudiced by any such objection.
It was not shown that the relator, who resides in another parish at some distance from the court of justice of the parish of Webster, knew that a young lady had signed the writ of mandamus.
The validity or the invalidity of the appointment of the female deputy clerk is not a question which should prejudice a third person, and not one in which respondent had any very great reason to be concerned.
The following decisions relate to the binding effect of acts by de facto officers: State v. Sadler, 51 La. Ann. 1397, 26 South. 390; Guilbeau v. Cormier, 32 La. Ann. 930; Succession of Keller, 39 La. Ann. 580, 2 South. 553; Cash v. Whitworth, 13 La. Ann. 401, 71 Am. Dec. 515; Mayor, etc., of Natchitoches v. Redmond, 28 La. Ann. 274.
Moreover, the question, if there is anything in it, is one which should have been urged in limine. It was decided on the merits. The record does not disclose that the respondent made the least attempt to have it considered and decided before the case was decided on the merits by the final judgment of the district court.
Respondent must be considered as having waived the ground urged, if it ever had any merit.
A defendant, under the circumstances above stated, disclosed by the testimony, is presumed to waive an exception. Heirs of Kempe v. Hunt, 4 La. 482; Powell v. Graves, 15 La. Ann. 188; Curé v. Porte, 18 La. Ann. 206; Lewis v. Homer, 23 La. Ann. 255; Tupery v. Edmondson, 32 La. Ann. 1146; Hickman v. Dawson, 33 La. Ann. 438; Ashbey v. Ashbey, 41 La. Ann. 141, 5 South. 546.
But the defendant has been notified. A copy of the petition was served upon it.
“On an application for mandamus all that is required is that the parties in interest should have notice of the application in order that their rights may be protected.” Savage v. Holmes, 15 La. Ann. 334; Code Prac. art. 841.
The mandamus proceedings, because no tender of the license was made to the sheriff, is the point urged next in order by the respondent, on which we will pass at this time.
In January of this year,'relator, through counsel, called upon the police jury to fix the license at the amount of $2,500.
They refused and insisted upon $5,000. It is very evident that a tender of one-half of the amount would not have served any purpose. The sheriff testified that he certainly would not have accepted it. We must say that this ground of exception has no merit. Parties cannot he required to do vain things.
The remaining ground urged by respondent for decision is that the petition discloses no cause of action and no right on the part of relator to prosecute the^suit.
There is a ground of action alleged, although it has been very much diminished by the lapse of time. The year for which the license was asked has nearly elapsed, and relator can now recover only a barren right. That is the right to open the saloon for about one month, which he could open only by paying at the very least a half license, that is, $1,250, a rather large amount to pay to open a saloon at a place in the swamp, as stated by the testimony.
But there is a cause of action. As to the right of action, it appears of record that relator owns 40 acres of land in the ward in which he wishes to become a saloon keeper.
The ground here urged why he has no right of action is that he does not allege that he is a taxpayer.
Having shown that he is a landowner, it follows that he is a taxpayer. The inevitable inference is that property owes taxes.
*167On the merits: In the locality in which the relator proposed to open a liquor saloon (in a brushy swamp, as stated in the evidence) a saloon Keeper could not at the time that the case was tried and the witnesses were heard, and much less now, pay a liquor license of $6,000 and realize the least profit from the sales of the saloon.
The testimony leads to one conclusion, to wit, that the attempt to keep such a saloon would meet with certain failure. Even at $2,600 all the saloons five or six in number save one in the ward were closed because the owners found no profit in the occupation. It is only because these other saloons were closed that the relator here might with any prospect of success at all offer to pay the $2,500.
In view of the number of witnesses that have testified regarding the prohibitory character of the license of $5,000, it must be held that the judgment appealed from should not be set aside.
In the case of the State ex rel. Lisso v. Police Jury of Red River, 116 La. 767, 41 South. 85, this court held that the power to impose the license did not include the power to prohibit.
The license to carry on the saloon business in the Fifth Ward is prohibitory. Under the cited decision, it must be held that it is illegal.
By an election held in the ward it had been decided by the people of the ward at the election that a liquor license would be issued to those who chose to follow the business of selling liquor.
The right acquired by that election may be put an end to by laws prohibiting the sale of intoxicants. It cannot be prohibited by police jury ordinance imposing a prohibitory license as to amount.
For reasons assigned, the judgment is affirmed.