5 Tex. 418

Bryan v. Sundberg, Collector.

Bryan scrip is not receivable for taxes under the revenue laws enacted since annexation.

“Affirmative words in a Statute do sometimes,” and it is believed where the public is concerned in the performance of official duties, they do always “ imply a negative of what is not affirmed.”

"Where a subsequent statute, although not repugnant in all its provisions to a prior one, is clearly intended to prescribe the only rule which should govern, or where it revises the subject-matter of a former one, and is evidently intended as a substitute for it, or where it is framed from another, some parts being omitted, the subsequent statute must be construed to repeal the prior one.

A construction which repeals former statutes by implication is not to be favored; and statutes in pari materia and relating to the same subject are to be taken and construed *210together, because it is to be inferred that they had one object in view, and were intended to be considered as constituting one entire and harmonious system. But when the new statute itself comprehends the entire subject, and creates a new, entire, and independent system respecting that subject-matter, it repeals all previous laws respecting the same subject-matter. (Note 73.)

Statutes which prescribe and limit the exercise of official duty ought to receive a strict interpretation in respect to the powers conferred and the manner of their exercise; and those powers are not to be enlarged by construction.

Hosner v. De Young (1 Tex. K., 704) and League v. De Young (2 Tex. R., 497) cited and confirmed.

Appeal from Galveston. The appellant filed, his petition in the District Court, praying for a mandamus to compel the assessor and collector of Galveston county to receive, in payment of taxes for the year 1847, two certificates— one issued under a joint resolution of the Congress of the Republic of Texas, approved on the IGth of January, 1843, making the certificates issued agreeably to its provisions, of which the present is one, receivable for all dues to the Government; the other issued under a joint resolution of the Republic, approved on the 18th of December, 1844, making it receivable in payment of direct taxes.

There was a demurrer to the petition sustained; the case was dismissed, and the petitioner appealed.

Phillips, amicus curiœ.

I. The act of 1846 to provide for the assessment and collection of taxes does not create a new office. The same office, under a different name, existed under the Republic. The last act regulates the general duties of the officer as to the future; but he is bound bjr the law, not by the act of 1846 alone. Had the act of 1843 been included in the act of 1846 as a proviso or an exception to the 23d section of the latter, what authority would it confer? The drafts would be received by the officer. An independent enactment can operate as a proviso or an exception to a general rule as well as though it were included in the same act. It has the same authority; it emanates from the same source. A previous assessor might, with the same propriety, have refused the drafts because he was not elected and qualified under the law creating the exception. It seems to be admitted that such a construction, under the old law, could not be maintained; but it is contended that the law of 1846 is not supplementary to or connected with any previous enactment on the same subject, and therefore the same reasoning does not apply. But what connection lias the law of 1843, for the relief of Wm. Bryan, with'an act to raise a revenue by direct taxation ? The subject-matter of the former is the audiling of a claim and its payment; that of the latter the raising of revenue. The special law of 1S43 is as much connected with the law of 1846 as it was with the, general law on the same subject in force before that time; and there is no more reason why it should operate as an exception in the one ease than in the other.

II. The law of 1846 shows, by its caption and all its provisions, that it was intended by the Legislature to provide for the assessment and collection of taxes. This is its general subject-matter. In this it is a modification of the pre-existing general law on the same subject. It makes no allusion to the joint resolution for the relief of Wm. Bryan. The intention of lawmakers must ho as much considered in the construction of a statute as its letter. (6 Bae. Abr., 384; 1 Bl. Comm., 44.) This intention clearly points to rules of action to be observed in future as to tile particular subject. It does not in this case retrospect in apparent intention nor in its letter; nor ought it to be so construed. (2 Mod. R., 310; 4 Burr. R., 2460.) The very essence of a law consists in tins, that it is a rule for future action. (1 Bay R., 93.) It is not lo be construed to destroy a right. (6 Johns. R., 101.) They should not be construed in a way to endamage any one. (Ooke Lit-t., 360, a.) Here, in the law of 1S43, an appropriation was made, and ¡.he drafts were substituted in accordance with the new contract.

HI. If the act of 1846 can he regarded as a repeal by way of substitution of *211all former laws upon the same subject-matter, it must be confined to the subject-matter of the laws repealed. It ought not by implication to be extended beyond what was contained in the original, the place of which it supplies. As a general substitute for the law to raise a revenue by direct taxation, it can have no bearing on an act for the relief of Wm. Bryan. The fact that the new Constitution establishes a new basis of taxation, and that the law of 1846 was intended to carry out the principle, is an additional argument why the latter should not by implication be construed to repeal an act for the payment of a debt. It is not within its purview. Such implication would extend beyond the general purpose of the act.

Although the political power may, for its own preservation, in which all are equally interested, suspend or postpone the rights of the subject, yet it is not to be presumed to do so without an express declaration to that effect. We conclude then that the assessor is bound by the law as a whole system, when applicable, and not by one act only. -

Harris, for appellee.

I. The collector being a creature of the statute, he'must conform to its provisions.

II. Having enumerated in 23d section (Acts of 1846, p. 355) what shall be received in payment of taxes, this would exclude the idea of receiving anything else. (Gordon's Digest, sec. 1712.)

III. Before the passage of this law, the liabilities mentioned in the plaintiff’s petition and the exchequer bills were alike receivable in payment as taxes. The above section still says the exchequer bills shall be receivable, and omits to mention these liabilities. IIow can this be explained?

Wheeler, J.

At a former term an opinion was pronounced reversing the judgment in this case. But a rehearing having been allowed, the ease was taken under advisement, and its reconsideration has resulted in a different conclusion, by a majority of the Court, from that adopted in the first instance.

The liabilities sought to be enforced against the Government by this proceeding were created before the change of Government effected by annexation. After the change of Government and the adoption of the State Constitution, the office of assessor and collector was created, and the duties of the officer prescribed by the act of the 13th of May, 1846. (Acts of 1846, p. 347.) The 23d section of the act declares in what the officer shall collect the taxes, as follows : “ The assessors and collectors of taxes in the State of Texas shall receive in payment of all taxes and revenue imposed according to law, all coins made current by the laws of the United States, and the exchequer bills of the Republic of Texas.”

The question to be decided is, was the assessor and collector authorized to receive in payment of taxes the certificates in question? Or was he authorized to receive any other liabilities of the former Government than “exchequer bills” specified in the act? We think not. This is, we think, a case in which the expression of one thing was intended to be the exclusion of another. It is-the ease of an affirmative which implies a- negative of all that is not expressed. The sole object of the provision must have been to give a preference to and provide for the payment of those liabilities of the former Government., denominated “ exchequer bills; ” for, without any express provision upon the subject, “all coins made current by the laws of the United States” would have been receivable for taxes. Had there been no express direction as to what should be received, the question would be different. But when the Legislature have undertaken to enumerate what shall be received, the enumeration must, we think, be taken to include all that was intended, and consequently to exclude all that is not included in the enumeration. When they have undertaken thus affirmatively to prescribe the particular currency in which the takes shall be. received, we must conclude that it was their intention that nothing else should be received. By selecting from among the liabilities of the former Government. *212this particular class, it evidently was intended to discriminate in its favor; and where the legislative intention is clear, if not inconsistent with the Constitution, it is the duty of the courts to give effect to that intention. The statute referred to is entitled “An act to provide for the assessment and collection of taxes.” It was intended to contain an entire system upon that subject. It creates the office of assessor and collector, and prescribes and defines the duties of his office. It affirmatively directs and enumerates what shall be received by him for taxes, and thereby, in our opinion, evidences the intention of the Legislature that nothing- else should be received as certainly as if it had super-added an express prohibition to that effect.

“Affirmatives in statutes that introduce a new rule imply a negative of all that is not within the purview.” (1 Kent Comm., 5th edit., 467, n.) “Affirmative words in a statute do sometimes ” and, it is believed, where the public is concerned in the performance of official duties they do always “imply a negative of what is not affirmed as strongly as if expressed.” (Ib.) “And where a statute limits a thing to be done in a particular form it includes in itself a negative, viz, that it snail not be done otherwise.” (Ib.) Again, “if a subsequent statute be not repugnant in all its provisions to a prior one, yet, if the latter statute was clearly intended to prescribe the only rules which should-govern, it repeals the prior one.” (3 How. U. S. R., 636.) So a subsequent statute revising the subject-matter of a former one, and evidently intended as a substitute for it, although it contains no express words to that effect, must operate to repeal the former to the extent to which its provisions are revised and supplied. (1 Ashm. R., 179.) And “ where a statute is revised or one act framed from another, some parts being omitted, the parts omitted are not to be revived by construction, but are to be considered as annulled.” (Ellis v. Paige, 1 Pick. R., 43, 45.) These principles are applicable to the act under consideration, considered in reference to the statutes upon the same subject in force prior to the change of Government effected by annexation.

It undoubtedly is true that a construction which repeals former statutes by implication is not to be favored; and it is also true that statutes in pari materia and relating to the same subject are to be taken and construed together, because it is to be inferred that they had one object in view, and were intended to be considered as constituting one entire and harmonious system. But when the new statute in itself comprehends the entire subject and creates a new, entire, and independent system respecting that subject-matter, it is universally held to repeal and supersede all previous systems and laws respecting the same subject-matter. (7 Mass. R., 140; 12 Id., 537, 545 ; 4 Pick. R., 21, 23 ; 10 Id., 39; 1 Id., 452; 1 Id., 43; 9 Id., 97; 3 Greenl. R., 22; 1 Ashm. R., 179.) Such is peculiarly the case with the act under consideration. It was framed under a new Constitution, which reorganized the entire frame of the Government, of which it was a consequence that every person who should thereafter exercise, the functions of any State office must look solely to that Constitution and the laws enacted subject to it for his authority and powers; and it was enacted for the purpose of effectuating an entirely new revenue system upon a new basis and for the support and maintenance of a new Government. We can entertain no doubt, therefore, that it was intended as an entire, complete, and perfect system upon that subject, and as certainly to supersede all former systems and laws upon the same subject as the now superseded the former Government. This view is strengthened by the fact that one of the principal sources of the revenue which existed when those liabilities were created — the duly on importation — was afterwards taken away by the change of Government.

We conclude that when the Legislature directed the assessors and collectors of the State of Texas to receive in payment of taxes “all coins made current by the laws of the United States and the exchequer bills of the Republic of Texas,” they meant these and nothing else, as certainly as If they had subjoined express negative words. Statutes which prescribe. and limit the exercise of official duty ought to receive a strict interpretation in respect to the powers conferred and the'Inanuer of their exercise, and those powers are no* *213to be enlarged by construction. The officer must look to the act by which Ills office is created and its duties are defined to ascertain the extent of his powers and-tho line of his duties; and he is not at liberty to transcend the former or vary the prescribed mode of performance of the latter. The act sought to be enforced in this instance was in effect forbidden; and that a mandamus will not lie to compel an officer of the Government to perform an act forbidden by law has been heretofore decided by this court. (Hosner v. De Young, 1 Tex. R., 764; League v. De Young, 2 Tex. R., 497.) The certificates in question constitute the evidence of demands against the Government, which doubtless are meritorious ana just, and which as such address themselves to the sense of justice of the Legislature, but which the courts, in the absence of a law authorizing their payment, have not the power to enforce against the Government. (Borden v. Houston, 2 Tex. R., 594, 611, 613.)

Note 73. — Lovett v. Casey, 17 T., 594; Cain v. The State, 20 T., 355; Solman v. Wolfe, 27 T., 68.

We are of opinion, therefore, that the judgment be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

Lipscomb, J.

I am constrained to dissent from the opinion of the court in this case. It is not pretended that the law making these certificates receivable in payment of taxes has been repealed directly, nor can 1 perceive any pressing circumstances of State policy from which it can be inferred that it was intended to be repealed. I cannot, therefore, concur in repealing- the statute by implication.

Bryan v. Sundberg
5 Tex. 418

Case Details

Name
Bryan v. Sundberg
Decision Date
Dec 1, 1849
Citations

5 Tex. 418

Jurisdiction
Texas

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