State ex rel. Board of School Directors v. Mayor

Howell, J.

The relators have appealed from a judgment refusing a writ of mandamus to compel the Mayor and”Administrators of the city of New Orleans to levy and collect a tax sufficient to realize the sum of $350,000 fixed by the said relators for the purpose of maintaining the free public schools in the city of New Orleans during' the current year, in accordance with the provisions and requirements of act No. 8 of the Legislature of 1871, entitled “An Act to amend an act entitled an act relative to public education in the State of Louisiana and the city of New Orleans, aiid to raise a revenue for that purpose,” approved February 25, 1871, the seventh section of which is in the following words: “The Board of School Directors for the city of New Orleans shall, immediately upon their organization, and also at the commencement of each year thereafter, ascertain the amount of funds necessary to carry on the schools under their charge ior the current year and report the same to the Board of Administrators of the city of New Orleans, who ijiall, at such time as they may deem necessary, levy the amount on the taxable property of the city, and direct the same to be collected in tbe manner and at tbe time by them deemed most desirable, hut the time shall not exceed six months from the date of their notification of the amount required.”

*359Among other reasons to justify .their refusal, the respondents aver that section seven of the act No. 42 of the Legislature of 1871, entitled. “ An Act to provide a revenue, to levy and collect taxes, to grant and collect licenses, etc.,” approved March 3, 1871, prohibits the City Council of New Orleans, the respondents, from levying any tax upon the property situated in said city, listed for taxation, to a greater amount than two per centum of the cash value thereof, and that there have already been levied upon said property taxes to the amount of two and five-eighths per centum of the value thereof, and the taxpayers are protected by said law from the payment of any other or iurther sum, unless by vote of the citizens entitled to vote in said city, and no such vote has been had on this question.

Section seven relied on reads as follows: “That no city or municipal corporation shall levy a tax for any purpose which shall exceed two per centum on the assessed value of all property therein listed for -taxation; nor shall the police jury of any parish levy a tax for any purposes, during any year, which shall exceed one hundred per centum •of the State tax for that year, unless such excess, whether levied by village, city or parochial authorities, shall first he sanctioned hy a vote of a majority of the said voters of said village, city or parish, at an election held for that purpose. No per capita tax, except the poll tax authorized by the State Constitution, shall be assessed or collected in this State.”

It is suggested by counsel for the relators that this act (No. 42) became a law subsequent to the school bill, and does not, therefore, affect or impair the right of the city authorities to act under the provisions of said school bill. If there be any force in this, the successful reply to it is that the same provision existed, as to cities, in the revenue law of 1870, and the prohibition, therefore, existed at the date of the passage of the school bill, aud was simply continued or re-enacted in the act of 1871, the repealing section of .which repealed only such laws or parts of laws as are contrary to or inconsistent with said act. See 22 An. 273.

It is next suggested that this section violates article 114 of the Constitution of the State, as it is not covered by the title to the revenue .act, wherein it is found. In this view wo can not concur. The phrase in the title “to levy and collect taxes,” is direct and comprehensive ■enough to embrace the provisions of section seven, which relates unequivocally to the subject of levying taxes, cities, municipal corporations and parishes, subdivisions of the State, being prohibited from levying taxes beyond a certain per centum. And furthermore, it is a well established rule of legal construction that “ the title of a law is not to be strictly construed; if it state the object according to the understanding of reasonable men, it satisfies the Constitution.” 6 An. -605; 21 An. 752. Nor is it necessary that the title should define or *360specify tlie particular provisions of each section — a rule which would malee the title as long as the law, or would be the law, less the enacting wordS\Only. The title is sufficient.

But it is said the court will rather prefer to harmonize the provisions of both laws, to do which it is only necessary to apply the limitation, not to the aggregate of taxes which it may be necessary for the city to assess, but to the dimensions or amount of any one single tax of the several taxes which it is and was known the city required as the consolidated loan tax, the railroad tax, the park tax, the Metropolitan Police tax, etc. It is not difficult to perceive that this construction would totally destroy all limitation, and leave the law without a rational object; for, upon this theory, the city authorities might levy any number of specific taxes for particular purposes, provided each one did not exceed two per centum of the value of the taxable property. Such a construction is not allowable.

The law is free from ambiguity, and is manifestly enacted in the interest of the taxpayers and intended to limit, as it does, the taxing power of all municipal and parochial authorities to the will of the voters as to any and all taxation on property beyond two per centum of its value. If, however, such authorities deem an additional amount necessary for the public good, they have under this law only to submit the question to the legal voters of the respective localities for their decision.

Although judges are not to be controlled in their action by a consideration of the consequences which may flow from their exposition of laws, we can very properly say that we are unable to perceive the disastrous consequences which seem to be apprehended by counsel from the operation of this law. If the people of New Orleans desire the-public schools in the city to bo maintained by special taxation on their property, they will doubtless give their sanction to the levying of the additional tax necessary for such a laudable purpose, whatever may bo the comparative importance of the objects for which the limit of taxation has already been attained. It is certainly not within the province of the courts to set aside the law for the purpose of sustaining even the free public school system.

Our conclusiou is that a writ of mandamus can not properly íssueTm this case to compel the Board of Administrators to levy and collect a tax sufficient to realize the sum called for by the relators. The seventh section of the revenue act of 1871 has clearly limited the taxing power of the municipal government, and that power has already been exhausted; but said section has also provided a mode for raising any necessary tax beyond the prescribed limit, and that mode is not the one resorted to in this proceeding.

It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the district court be affirmed, with costs.