The plaintiffs allege that they are property owners in the town of Franklinton; that over and above the legal and regularly levied tax of 7% mills the-town officers have, without right or authority, placed on the assessment roll of said town an assessment of three mills on the dollar; and that said additional tax is in excess of the authorized limit of taxation,, and has never been in fact levied; that, under said unauthorized assessment, the marshal of the town, acting under orders of the-mayor and aldermen of said town, has advertised the property of the petitioners for sale and will sell same unless restrained by-injunction. Wherefore they pray that an injunction issue restraining said town from attempting, through any of its officers, to-collect said illegal assessment; and that said town, through its mayor, be duly cited; and that said assessment be decreed void and' said injunction perpetuated.
[1 ] An exception of no cause of action was filed to this petition, and is said to be based upon the following propositions:
*829“If the petition charges that the tax collector is attempting to collect a tax which was never levied by the town authorities, then it charge» nothing against the town of Franklinton, and the suit would lie only against the tax collector.
“If the petition charges that the tax was levied by the town authorities, but that it was illegally levied, it should have been brought against the tax collector as well as the town, and should have charged why and in what respect the tax was illegal.”
In reply to this, we will say that the town marshal is but the agent of the town, and that, while the suit might have been directed against him alone, there certainly can he .no objection to the principal being impleaded instead of the mere agent.
[2,3] On the merits, the facts are that the tax in question was voted in favor of the New Orleans Great Northern Railroad Company, and that the plaintiffs voted for it, and that they have paid it for three years; but that, having discovered that, although voted for, the tax was never actually levied, they have brought this suit to have the assessment of the present year set aside.
Upon these facts, the defendant contends that the railroad company should have been made a party .to the suit, and that the plaintiffs are estopped from contesting the tax. We do not think so. The actual levy of a tax is an essential prerequisite to its being placed upon the assessment roll for collection. This is elementary. Because the plaintiffs paid this unlevied tax in the past is no reason why they should be compelled to continue to pay it. No tax having ever been levied in favor of the New Orleans Great Northern Railroad Company, there was no necessity of making that company a party to the suit.
It is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the judgment appealed from be set aside, and that the injunction herein be perpetuated at the cost of the defendant.