State ex rel. Boutroue v. Judge of the Third District Court of Orleans

On Rehearing.

DeBlanc, J.

When, of our own motion, we granted a rehearing of this cause, we did so not that we had discovered any error of law or fact in our first decision, but because of the averred and acknowledged-importance of that decision to the city of New Orleans and its taxable inhabitants.

The relator brought suit against the-city, to recover from it the sum of thirty dollars, which he alleges he was compelled to pay and which he did pay, in error and without any obligation on his part, for a license to carry on his business as a retail merchant. That suit originated in and was tried and decided in favor of plaintiff by the Seventh Justice Court for the parish of Orleans. From that decision the city appealed to the Third District Court»

Has that court appellate jurisdiction of that suit, or of any branch of that suit? The seventy-fourth article of the constitution of 1868 *418provides, in terms which, have but one meaning and from which no inference adverse to that meaning can be drawn, that the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court shall extend to all cases in which the legality and constitutionality of any tax shall be in contestation, and we have before us the indisputable evidence that the actual contestation between the city and relator does involve the legality and constitutionality of a tax.

If we have jurisdiction, is it limited — as contended by the judge of the lower court and the city’s counsel — to exclusively the questions of either the legality or constitutionality of the tax ? We believe not: under our legislation, no appeal can ascend by fractions from an inferior jurisdiction to both an intermediate and the highest jurisdiction. The constitution does not provide that we shall have jurisdiction only as to the legality or constitutionality of a disputed tax, but that our jurisdiction shall extend to such a case “ whatever may be the amount of the tax imposed — even, of course, if that amount were so insignificant as not to authorize an appeal from the justice’s court.to the Third District Court. The form and indeed every syllable of article seventy-four of the constitution repels the exceptional interpretation urged by defendants.

The party cast is entitled to but one appeal; that appeal can not be divided, and returned — as to the facts in one jurisdiction, and in another as to the law applicable to those facts. What — otherwise—might be the result? This-court, to pass upon and determine the questions of constitutionality and legality, would — of necessity — have to assume the existence of facts, which — in the other court — might be absolutely contradicted by the evidence; and then how execute the fractional j adgments hatched in two distinct jurisdictions ?

Were we to merely pronounce the illegality or unconstitutionality of a tax, without reversing the judgment already rendered to enforce its levy or payment, what would be — to any one of the litigants — the value of our decision? Were we to reverse the judgment appealed from, we might be told — under defendant’s interpretation of two clauses of the State constitution: your court has exceeded its power, for that power was exhausted as soon as the illegality or unconstitutionality of the tax was by you discovered and declared. If so, what — after that discovery and declaration — shall we do with the balance of the case ? To which court remand it ? Shall it be to the court in which it originated, or to an intermediate one which alone — it is urged — has appellate jurisdiction of the questions of facts ?

The constitution provides — it is true — that the “ Third District Court shall have exclusive jurisdiction of appeals from justices of the peace;” not including — there can be no doubt about this — those appeals which, regardless of the amount involved, are to be sent — in obedience to *419the seventy-fourth article of the same constitution — from the court in which the cases originated, to the Supreme Court.

The article of the Constitution of 1868 differs, in regard to the appellate jurisdiction of this court, from that of the Constitution of 1845; by •the latter, its appellate jurisdiction was limited to questions of law alone In criminal matters and in matters of fines, forfeitures and penalties imposed by municipal corporations — whilst under the former, that of 1868, its jurisdiction — except in criminal cases — extends to both the law and the facts.

Const, of 1845, art. 63 — Const, of 1868, art. 74.

There is — between the two articles cited — another, a marked, an Important difference: the constitution of 1868 provides that, in such cases, the appeal shall be direct from the court in which they originated to the Supreme Court: no such provision is to be found in the constitution of 1845, and, considering the differences which exist between the constitution referred to, the opinion delivered, in 1846, by the eminent jurist who was then the president of this court, is not applicable to this controversy ■and in no way sustains the construction placed by defendants’ counsel on the article of the constitution of 1868.

The Third District Court has not a concurrent appellate jurisdiction with this Court: if it has jurisdiction of plaintiff’s ease, or. of any of its branches, we have not: if we have, the jurisdiction of the Third District 'Court can not partly attach where ours does, and extends to every branch of the litigation. It was and still is our conviction that we alone -can hear and determine the appeal when — as plainly written in the Constitution — the matter in dispute exceeds $500, and — besides—in any a,nd every case wherein the constitutionality or legality of a tax is contested, whatever may be the amount involved in said case: otherwise, in a suit involving less than ten dollars and the constitutionality or legality ■of a tax — howsoever evident it is that the parties would be entitled to an ■appeal, every avenue to a higher jurisdiction would be effectually closed by defendant’s interpretation, as under the law the appeal could not be taken to the Third District Court, and much less to ours under said Interpretation, unless we conclude that our jurisdiction embraces and reaches only that class of cases, which can not rise to and reach that of •■the Third District Court.

■Were it conceded that — in such cases — our court alone can pass upon the question of legality and unconstitutionality of the tax — and that the decree of the justice’s court is based on the twin facts, that the tax levied was unconstitutional, and that — though not due — that tax was paid under compulsion and protest, the Third District Court could neither reverse, nor affirm the decree — for its authority would end with a decision of the facts as to the payment of the tax and the circumstances *420under which, it was made, and ours commence where the other ended— but, how take and carry the appeal from the district court? That could be done only by ignoring that clause of the constitution which commands that the appeal shall be direct from the court in which the case-originated, to the Supreme Court — or by trying in the district courts the facts which — according to the defence — are triable there, to afterwardsremand the case to the justice’s court, and to then carry it from that, original jurisdiction to ours. If so, the constitutional route leading to the constitutional remedy would be discouragingly long.

As the court in which this case originated is not one of record, it can not avail defendants that, in the petition filed in said court, the ordinance attacked as being unconstitutional, and the article of the constitution alleged to have been violated, are not specially described and designated. In a case like this one, the law expressly provides, that it shall be the duty of the justice — upon application of either of the parties — to make out a record containing — not merely what may be on file in the suit, but a complete statement of the facts which happened during the trial and certify the same to the Supreme Cour-t.

Rev. Statutes of 1870. Sect. 2086.

In that instance, those who represented the city in the lower court-could not have been taken by surprise — for, though plaintiff might have proceeded in the justice’s court without a written petition, he did file-one in which he indicates as the unconstitutional ordinance attacked by him, that under which the tax of thirty dollars was imposed, and we are-bound to presume that he completed — by the production of the assailed ordinance — the perhaps too vague and too general averments of his-pleading.

This, however, is a defence which could be considered, only on the trial of an appeal actually returned in this court, on an exception to-the pleading for its pretended vagueness and duplicity, and not on, it may be, an incomplete record improperly returned to a court wherein the cases brought on appeal from the justice’s court are tried de novo, in the last resort, and without a statement of facts. Besides, that defence, now urged in argument, was not made in the answer to plaintiff’s, action filed by the city in the lower court, nor in that of the district, judge to the writ of prohibition.

Defendants contend that even if plaintiff paid a license without being bound to do so, it was paid under a natural obligation to contribute to the support of the city government, and he can not recover back the amount of said license. If — through error or compulsion — plaintiff paid to the city a license which the city had no right to claim from him —if what he was thus compelled to pay was in excess of the contribution which could have been constitutionally or legally required of him„ *421■the city would certainly be bound to restitute what it may have so received in violation of the constitution and laws of the State; but the •ease in which that defence was presented is not before us — and we are not called upon to decide whether plaintiff has paid and the city received the amount of the license.

It is ordered that our previous decree remain undisturbed.