The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Eenner, J.The plaintiff in this case, under a judgment against the City of New Orleans, caused a writ of fieri facias to issue, and seized thereunder a certain vacant lot belonging to the City.
The City applied for and obtained an injunction resting the application on two grounds:
1. That execution in the manner attempted, by means of the writ of fi. fa. against the City of New Orleans, is prohibited by Act No. 5 of the Extra Session of 1870.
2. That the ground seized is loeuspiiblieus and not liable to seizure.
The plaintiff claims that the provisions of Act No. 5 of 1870, prohibiting the issue of the writ of fi,. fa. against the City of New Orleans, cannot be applied to the ease of a judgment enforcing the obligation of a contract entered into by the City prior to the passage of said Act.
The judgment sought to be executed was rendered after the passage of the Act. This Court has heretofore held, in an analogous case, that *558the law regulating the execution of judgments in force at the time when judgment in a particular case is rendered must govern in that case. Carnes vs. Parish of Red River, 29 An. 608, citing Scott vs. Duke, 3 An. 253 and Com. Bk. vs. Markham, Id. 698.
We think it unnecessary, however, to affirm the principle of those cases ; for our decision here may rest on broader grounds.
The Act of 1870 assumed to divest the courts of power to issue mandamus against the City of New Orleans, and also prohibited tire issue of writs of fi. fa. against her, and substituted for all existing remedies for the execution of judgments a new and peculiar mode of execution. That portion of the Act which took away the judicial power to enforce the satisfaction of judgments by the writ of mandamus compelling the City to levy taxes, within its lawful authority, for that purpose, lias been held by the Supreme Court of the United States and by this Court to be unconstitutional, in so far as it affects judgments rendered on contracts entered into prior to its passage. Louisiana vs. New Orleans, 102 U. S. 203; Wolff vs. Same, 103 U. S. 358; State ex rel. Ranger vs. New Orleans, 34 An. 1149.
This remedy, therefore, remains intact and, such being the case, the question is here presented, whether that part of the Act prohibiting writs of fi. fa. against the City must also be held unconstitutional. Both these remedies co-existed at the date of plaintiff’s contract. The writ of fi. fa., as a mode of enforcing judgments against municipal corporations, is a remedy infrequent, inefficient and rarely applicable. The property of such corporations is usually of a character which exempts it from such process. It is strenuously contended in this very case, and is perhaps a question not free from doubt, that the City of New Orleans is incapable of holding any property which could be subjected to a writ of fi. fa. Dillon Munic. Corp. Sec. 446; Chicago vs. Hasley, 25 Ill. 595.
At all events, in the nature of things, the writ of fi. fa. was a remedy which could only be, rarely and exceptionally, effectual or beneficial.
The usual and ordinary source to which creditors of a municipal corporation look for satisfaction of their debts is the power of taxation. The potent and subsiantial remedy for the enforcement of municipal obligations is to be found in the compulsory exercise of that power within its lawful limitations.
So long as this principal and substantial remedy is left to the creditor, the question is whether the prohibition of the writ of fi. fa. destroys or,-to such an extent, abrades his romedy, as to impair the Obligation of his contract.
We are satisfied that it does not.
“Whatever belongs to the remedy,” says Cooley, “ may be altered *559according' to the will of the State, provided the alteration does not impair the obligation of the contract; and it does not impair it, provided it leaves the parties a substantial remedy according to the course of justice as it existed at the time the contract was made.” Cooley Const. Lim. p. 286 and numerous authorities there quoted.
The case falls squarely under the authority of Mason vs. Haile, 12 Wheat. 374, where the Court upheld, agaiust a prior contract creditor, the constitutionality of á law abolishing the remedy of imprisonment for debt, saying: “ such laws act merely upon the remedy, and that in part only. They do not take away the entire remedy, but only so far as imprisonment forms a part of such remedy.”
This view disposes of the case and renders consideration of other points unnecessary.
Judgment affirmed at appellant’s cost.
Poché, J. I concur in the decree.