(After stating the foregoing facts.)
1. Section 5440 of the Civil Code declares: “ All official duties should be faithfully fulfilled; and whenever, from any cause, a defect of legal justice would ensue from a failure or improper fulfillment, the writ of mandamus may issue to compel a due performance, if there be no other specific legal remedy for the legal rights.” Ordinarily the writ of mandamus is a remedy
Under section 1055 of the Civil Code, the owner of property who has omitted to return the same for taxation at the time and for the years the return should have been made is required to do so for each year he is a delinquent, the return to be made under the laws, rules and regulations as they existed during the year for which he was in default. Section 1057 of the Code provides: “When the omitted property is of that class which should have been returned to the tax-receiver of the county, the said tax-receiver shall notify in writing such' delinquent, requiring that he shall make a return thereof within twenty days.” If the delinquent refuses to return his property after notice given him, “it shall be the duty of the tax-receiver to assess such property for taxation from the best information he can obtain as to its value for the years in default and notify such delinquent of the valuation, which shall be final, unless the taxpayer raises the question
2. It is insisted that a proceeding for mandamus, with respect to the power of the court to make parties defendant, stands substantially upon the same footing as a suit in equity. The case of Tarver v. Dalton, 134 Ga. 462, 471 (67 S. E. 929, 29 L. R. A. (N. S.) 183, 20 Ann. Cas. 281), is cited in support of this contention. In the opinion in that case, it was said: “The plaintiff complains that the presiding judge erred in making the Crown Cotton Mills a party defendant, upon the motion of the municipal authorities. The mills were vitally interested in the question as to whether or not the contract between it and the city was valid, and whether or not the latter should proceed against it for the collection of the taxes alleged to be due. In the answer of the mills it was stated: ‘this defendant has. no objection to being made a party defendant to said action, inasmuch as it is interested in the questions sought to be adjudicated by said petition.’ In 26 Cyc. 415, it is said: ‘Individuals or corporations who have a special legal interest in the' subject-matter of 'a mandamus proceeding and whose rights will be collaterally determined by a judgment awarding the writ may properly be joined as parties respondent, and are generally required to be so joined.’ The court committed no error in making the mills a party defendant.” The relator in that ease was a citizen and taxpayer of the city. The mandamus was against the municipal authorities to compel the levy, assessment, and collection of the tax against the property of the Crown Cotton Mills within the municipality. The municipal authorities relied upon the validity of a contract with the Crown Cotton Mills. The city was a party to the contract. The Grown Cotton Mills, the other party thereto, did not object to being made a party defendant to the action. No such issues are raised by the tax-receiver in the present case. Technically speaking, the only proper and necessary party defendant in a
3. Under the Civil Code, § 5443, “Mandamus will not be granted when it is manifest that the writ would, for "any cause, be nugatory or fruitless; nor will it be granted on a mere suspicion or fear, before a refusal to act or a wrongful act done.” The tax-receiver had fully complied with the prayers of the pe
Error is assigned in the judgment of the court taxing the costs against the relators, and in refusing to tax the costs against the receiver. It is insisted that the amount of $250 expended by the relators in going to New York and taking the testimony of the New York bankers should have been taxed against the receiver. If the receiver is liable for costs at 'all, it is needless to say that he is liable only for legal costs. The duties imposed upon the receiver by sections 1057 and 1059, supra, involve some degree of discretion and judgment on the part of the official, as heretofore held. The code does not limit the time in which the receiver is to call upon the delinquent to make a return of his taxes. It was not shown that the receiver had positively refused to require the executor to make a return under section 1057 of the code. Nor can it be said that a gross abuse of discretion in refusing sooner to require the executor to make a return was made to appear. In such circumstances it can not be said that the judge erred in taxing the costs against the relators.
Judgment affirmed.