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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
DAVIDSON v. CITY OF NEW ORLEANS, 96 U.S. 97 (1877)
96 U.S. 97
DAVIDSON
v.
NEW ORLEANS.
October Term, 1877
ERROR to the Supreme Court of the State of Louisiana.
On the 7th of December, 1871, the petition of the city of New
Orleans and the administrators thereof was filed in the Seventh
District Court for the Parish of Orleans, setting forth an assessment
on certain real estate, made under the statutes of Louisiana, for
draining the swamp lands within the parishes of Carroll and Orleans;
and asking that the assessment should be homologated by the judgment
of the court. The estate of John Davidson was assessed for various
parcels in different places for about $50,000. His widow and
testamentary executrix appeared in that court and filed exceptions to
the assessment; and the court refused the order of homologation, [
Davidson v. City of New Orleans
96 U.S. 97 (1877)
and set aside the entire assessment, with leave to the plaintiffs
to present a new tableau.
On appeal from this decree, the Supreme Court of Louisiana reversed
it, and ordered the dismissal of the oppositions, and decreed that the
assessment-roll presented be approved and homologated, and that the
approval and homologation so ordered should operate as a judgment
against the property described in the assessment-roll, and also
against the owner or owners thereof. Mrs. Davidson then sued out the
writ of error by which this judgment is now brought here for review.
Mr. James D. Hill and Mr. John D. McPherson for the plaintiff in
error.
The legislation of Lquisiana, under which the judgment below was
rendered, deprives the plaintiff in error of her property without due
process of law. The jurisdiction of this court is, therefore,
established. Bank of Columbia v. Okely, 4 Wheat. 244; Loan Association
v. Topeka, 20 Wall. 655; United States v. Cruikshank,
92 U.S. 542 ; Munn v. Illinois, 94 id. 113; People v. Hurlbut, 24
Mich. 44; Cooley, Taxation, 486, 487.
The legislature cannot impose upon the owner of lands a personal
obligation to pay an assessment which is a charge upon them. Taylor v.
Palmer, 31 Cal 240; Neenan v. Smith, 50 Mo. 525, followed in 56 id.
286, 350.
The legislature, by employing a private corporation to do the
drainage of the city of New Orleans, on account of which the
assessment was made, fixing the price and requiring that warrants
therefor shall be issued and indorsed, compelled the city to make a
contract. This was beyond the legislative power. Atkins v. Randolph,
31 Vt. 226; Hampshire v. Franklin, 16 Mass. 76; Taylor v. Porter, 4
Hill (N. Y.), 143; Brummer v. Litchfield, 2 Greenl. (Me.) 28; People
v. Detroit, 28 Mich. 228; Sharpley v. Philadelphia, 21 Pa. 165;
Washington Avenue Case, 69 id. 362; Sleight v. People, 7 Chic. Leg.
News, 292; The People v. The Mayor, 57 Ill. 18; People v. Salomon, id.
38; People v. Chicago, id. 582; Madison County v. People, 58 id. 463;
Hessler v. The Drainage Commissioners, 53 id. 105; Livingston v.
Wider, id. 302.
The assessment was made before any work had been done.
[96 U.S. 97, 99]
The only ground, however, on which special assessments are
imposed is that the property assessed is benefited. Wright v. Boston,
9 Cush. 232, 241; Schinly v. Commonwealth, 30 Pa. 29, 57; Sharp v.
Speir, 4 Hill, 82; Matter of Opening Streets, 20 La. Ann. 497; Reeves
v. Treasurer Wood County, 8 Ohio St. 338.
In this case, no benefit whatever inured to the plaintiff in error,
and the price was exorbitant.
Mr. Philip Phillips, contra.
The fifth amendment to the Constitution, which declares that no
person shall be 'deprived of life, liberty, or property without due
process of law, nor shall private property be taken for public use
without just compensation,' is a limitation on the powers granted by
that instrument to the Federal government, and not a restraint upon
the States. Barron v. The Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, 7 Pet.
243; Withers v. Buckley et al., 20 How. 84; Twitchell v. The
Commonwealth, 7 Wall. 321.
The fourteenth amendment, which operates on the legislation of the
several States, in no wise affects their police power. Commonwealth v.
Alger, 7 Cush. (Mass.) 84; Thorpe v. Rutland Railroad, 27 Vt. 149;
Slaughter-House Cases, 16 Wall. 36; Cooley, Const. Lim. 509; Dillon,
Corp., sect. 598.
The power here in question is of that character, and the mode of
exercising it presents no matter which can be reexamined here.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the court.
The objections raised in the State courts to the assessment were
numerous and varied, including constitutional objections to the
statute under which the assessment was made, and alleged departures
from the requirements of the statute itself. And although counsel for
the plaintiff in error concede, in the first sentence of their brief,
that the only Federal question is, whether the judgment is not in
violation of that provision of the Constitution which declares that
'no State shall deprive any person of life, liberty, or property
without due process of law, the argument seems to suppose that this
court can correct any other error which may be found in the record.
1. It is said that the legislature had no right to organize
a [96 U.S. 97, 100]
private corporation to do the work, and, by statute, to fix
the price at which the work should be done.
2. That the price so fixed is exorbitant.
3. That there may be a surplus collected under the
assessment beyond what is needed for the work, which must in that
event go into the city treasury.
Can it be necessary to say, that if the work was one which the
State had authority to do, and to pay for it by assessments on the
property interested, that on such questions of method and detail as
these the exercise of the power is not regulated or controlled by the
Constitution of the United States?
Of a similar character is the objection much insisted on, that,
under the statute, the assessment is actually made before, instead of
after, the work is done. As a question of wisdom,-of judicious
economy,-it would seem better in this, as in other works which require
the expenditure of large sums of money, to secure the means of payment
before becoming involved in the enterprise; and if this is not due
process of law, it ought to be,
There are other objections urged by counsel which may be referred
to hereafter, but we pause here to consider a moment the clause of the
Constitution relied on by plaintiff in error. It is part of sect. 1 of
the fourteenth amendment. The section consists of two sentences. The
first defines citizenship of the States and of the United States. The
next reads as follows:--
'No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the
privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall
any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without
due process of law, nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction
the equal protection of the law.'
The section was the subject of very full and mature consideration
in Slaughter-House Cases, 16 Wall. 36. In those cases, an act of the
Louisiana legislature, which had granted to a corporation created for
the purpose the exclusive right to erect and maintain a building for
the slaughter of live animals within the city, was assailed as being
in conflict with this section. The right of the State to use a private
corporation and confer upon it the necessary powers to carry into
effect sanitary regulations
[96 U.S. 97, 101] was affirmed, and the
decision is applicable to a similar objection in the case now before
us. The argument of counsel and the opinion of the court in those
cases were mainly directed to that part of the section which related
to the privileges and immunities of citizens; and, as the court said
in the opinion, the argument was not much pressed, that the statute
deprived the butchers of their property without due process of law.
The court held that the provision was inapplicable to the case.
The prohibition against depriving the citizen or subject of his
life, liberty, or property without due process of law, is not new in
the constitutional history of the English race. It is not new in the
constitutional history of this country, and it was not new in the
Constitution of the United States when it became a part of the
fourteenth amendment, in the year 1866.
The equivalent of the phrase 'due process of law,' according to
Lord Coke, is found in the words 'law of the land,' in the Great
Charter, in connection with the writ of habeas corpus, the trial by
jury, and other guarantees of the rights of the subject against the
oppression of the crown. In the series of amendments to the
Constitution of the United States, proposed and adopted immediately
after the organization of the government, which were dictated by the
jealousy of the States as further limitations upon the power of the
Federal government, it is found in the fifth, in connection with other
guarantees of personal rights of the same character. Among these are
protection against prosecutions for crimes, unless sanctioned by a
grand jury; against being twice tried for the same offence; against
the accused being compelled, in a criminal case, to testify against
himself; and against taking private property for public use without
just compensation.
Most of these provisions, including the one under consideration,
either in terms or in substance, have been embodied in the
constitutions of the several States, and in one shape or another have
been the subject of judicial construction.
It must be confessed, however, that the constitutional meaning or
value of the phrase 'due process of law,' remains to-day without that
satisfactory precision of definition which judicial decisions have
given to nearly all the other guarantees of personal
[96 U.S. 97, 102]
rights found in the constitutions of the several States and of
the United States.
It is easy to see that when the great barons of England wrung from
King John, at the point of the sword, the concession that neither
their lives nor their property should be disposed of by the crown,
except as provided by the law of the land, they meant by 'law of the
land' the ancient and customary laws of the English people, or laws
enacted by the Parliament of which those barons were a controlling
element. It was not in their minds, therefore, to protect themselves
against the enactment of laws by the Parliament of England. But when,
in the year of grace 1866, there is placed in the Constitution of the
United States a declaration that 'no State shall deprive any person of
life, liberty, or property without due process of law,' can a State
make any thing due process of law which, by its own legislation, it
chooses to declare such? To affirm this is to hold that the
prohibition to the States is of no avail, or has no application where
the invasion of private rights is effected under the forms of State
legislation. It seems to us that a statute which declares in terms,
and without more, that the full and exclusive title of a described
piece of land, which is now in A., shall be and is hereby vested in
B., would, if effectual, deprive A. of his property without due
process of law, within the meaning of the constitutional provision.
A most exhaustive judicial inquiry into the meaning of the words
'due process of law,' as found in the fifth amendment, resulted in the
unanimous decision of this court, that they do not necessarily imply a
regular proceeding in a court of justice, or after the manner of such
courts. Murray's Lessee et al. v. Hoboken Land and Improvement Co., 18
How. 272. That was an action of ejectment, in which both parties
asserted title under Samuel Swartwout: the plaintiff, by virtue of an
execution, sale, and deed, made on a judgment obtained in the regular
couise of judicial proceedings against him; and the defendant, by a
seizure and sale by a marshal of the United States, under a
distress-warrant issued by the solicitor of the treasury, under the
act of Congress of May 20, 1820.
When an account against an officer who held public money had been
adjusted by the proper auditing officer of the treasury,
[96 U.S. 97, 103]
and the party who was found indebted neglected or refused to
pay, that statute authorized the solicitor of the treasury to issue a
distress- warrant to the marshal of the proper district, which, from
the date of its levy and the record thereof in the District Court,
should be a lien on the property on which it was levied for the amount
due; and the marshal was required to collect the amount, by sale of
said property, or that of the sureties on his official bond. It was
argued that these proceedings deprived Swartwout of his property
without due process of law. 'The objections,' says the court, 'raise
the questions whether, under the Constitution of the United States, a
collector of the customs, from whom a balance of account has been
found to be due by accounting officers of the treasury, designated for
that purpose by law, can be deprived of his liberty or property, in
order to enforce payment of that balance, without the exercise of the
judicial power of the United States, and yet by due process of law,
within the meaning of those terms in the Constitution; and, if so,
secondly, whether the warrant in question was such due process of
law.'
The court held that the power exercised was executive, and not
judicial; and that the issue of the writ, and the proceedings under
it, were due process of law within the meaning of the Constitution.
The history of the English mode of dealing with public debtors and
enforcing its revenue laws is reviewed, with the result of showing
that the rights of the crown, in these cases, had always been enforced
by summary remedies, without the aid of the usual course of judicial
proceedings, though the latter were resorted to in the Exchequer
Court, when the officers of the government deemed it advisable. And it
was held that such a course was due process of law within the meaning
of that phrase as derived from our ancestors and found in our
Constitution.
It is not a little remarkable, that while this provision has been
in the Constitution of the United States, as a restraint upon the
authority of the Federal government, for nearly a century, and while,
during all that time, the manner in which the powers of that
government have been exercised has been watched with jealousy, and
subjected to the most rigid criticism in all its branches, this
special limitation upon its powers has rarely been invoked
[96 U.S. 97, 104]
in the judicial forum or the more enlarged theatre of public
discussion. But while it has been a part of the Constitution, as a
restraint upon the power of the States, only a very few years, the
docket of this court is crowded with cases in which we are asked to
hold that State courts and State legislatures have deprived their own
citizens of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.
There is here abundant evidence that there exists some strange
misconception of the scope of this provision as found in the
fourteenth amendment. In fact, it would seem, from the character of
many of the cases before us, and the arguments made in them, that the
clause under consideration is looked upon as a means of bringing to
the test of the decision of this court the abstract opinions of every
unsuccessful litigant in a State court of the justice of the decision
against him, and of the merits of the legislation on which such a
decision may be founded. If, therefore, it were possible to define
what it is for a State to deprive a person of life, liberty, or
property without due process of law, in terms which would cover every
exercise of power thus forbidden to the State, and exclude those which
are not, no more useful construction could be furnished by this or any
other court to any part of the fundamental law.
But, apart from the imminent risk of a failure to give any
definition which would be at once perspicuous, comprehensive, and
satisfactory, there is wisdom, we think, in the ascertaining of the
intent and application of such an important phrase in the Federal
Constitution, by the gradual process of judicial inclusion and
exclusion, as the cases presented for decision shall require, with the
reasoning on which such decisions may be founded. This court is, after
an experience of nearly a century, still engaged in defining the
obligation of contracts, the regulation of commerce, and other powers
conferred on the Federal government, or limitations imposed upon the
States.
As contributing, to some extent, to this mode of determining what
class of cases do not fall within its provision, we lay down the
following proposition, as applicable to the case before us:--
That whenever by the laws of a State, or by State authority, a tax,
assessment, servitude, or other burden is imposed upon property for
the public use, whether it be for the whole
[96 U.S. 97, 105]
State or of some more limited portion of the community, and
those laws provide for a mode of confirming or contesting the charge
thus imposed, in the ordinary courts of justice, with such notice to
the person, or such proceeding in regard to the property as is
appropriate to the nature of the case, the judgment in such
proceedings cannot be said to deprive the owner of his property
without due process of law, however obnoxious it may be to other
objections.
It may violate some provision of the State Constitution against
unequal taxation; but the Federal Constitution imposes no restraints
on the States in that regard. If private property be taken for public
uses without just compensation, it must be remembered that, when the
fourteenth amendment was adopted, the provision on that subject, in
immediate juxtaposition in the fifth amendment with the one we are
construing, was left out, and this was taken. It may possibly violate
some of those principles of general constitutional law, of which we
could take jurisdiction if we were sitting in review of a Circuit
Court of the United States, as we were in Loan Association v. Topeka
(20 Wall. 655). But however this may be, or under whatever other
clause of the Federal Constitution we may review the case, it is not
possible to hold that a party has, without due process of law, been
deprived of his property, when, as regards the issues affecting it, he
has, by the laws of the State, a fair trial in a court of justice,
according to the modes of proceeding applicable to such a case. This
was clearly stated by this court, speaking by the Chief Justice, in
Kennard v. Morgan (
92 U.S. 480 ), and in substance, repeated at the present term, in
McMillan v. Anderson (95 id: 37).
This proposition covers the present case. Before the assessment
could be collected, or become effectual, the statute required that the
tableau of assessments should be filed in the proper District Court of
the State; that personal service of notice, with reasonable time to
object, should be served on all owners who were known and within reach
of process, and due advertisement made as to those who were unknown,
or could not be found. This was complied with; and the party
complaining here appeared, and had a full and fair hearing in the
court of the first instance, and afterwards in the Supreme Court. If
this be not [96 U.S. 97,
106] due process of law, then the words can have no
definite meaning as used in the Constitution.
One or two errors assigned, and not mentioned in the earlier part
of this opinion, deserve a word or two.
It is said that the plaintiff's property had previously been
assessed for the same purpose, and the assessment paid. If this be
meant to deny the right of the State to tax or assess property twice
for the same purpose, we know of no provision in the Federal
Constitution which forbids this, or which forbids unequal taxation by
the States. If the act under which the former assessment was made is
relied on as a contract against further assessments for the same
purpose, we concur with the Supreme Court of Louisiana in being unable
to discover such a contract.
It is also said that part of the property of plaintiff which was
assessed is not benefited by the improvement. This is a matter of
detail with which this court cannot interfere, if it were clearly so;
but it is hard to fix a limit within these two parishes where property
would not be benefited by the removal of the swamps and marshes which
are within their bounds.
And lastly, and most strongly, it is urged that the court rendered
a personal judgment against the owner for the amount of the tax, while
it also made it a charge upon the land. It is urged with force,-and
some highly respectable authorities are cited to support the
proposition,-that while for such improvements as this a part, or even
the whole, of a man's property connected with the improvement may be
taken, no personal liability can be imposed on him in regard to it. If
this were a proposition coming before us sitting in a State court, or,
perhaps, in a circuit court of the United States, we might be called
upon to decide it; but we are unable to see that any of the provisions
of the Federal Constitution authorizes us to reverse the judgment of a
State court on that question. It is not one which is involved in the
phrase 'due process of law,' and none other is called to our attention
in the present case.
As there is no error in the judgment of the Supreme Court of
Louisiana, of which this court has cognizance, it is
Affirmed. [96 U.S.
97, 107]
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY.
In the conclusion and general tenor of the opinion just read, I
concur. But I think it narrows the scope of inquiry as to what is due
process of law more than it should do.
It seems to me that private property may be taken by a State
without due process of law in other ways than by mere direct
enactment, or the want of a judicial proceeding. If a State, by a its
laws, should authorize private property to be taken for public use
without compensation (except to prevent its falling into the hands of
an enemy, or to prevent the spread of a conflagration, or, in virtue
of some other imminent necessity, where the property itself is the
cause of the public detriment), I think it would be depriving a man of
his property without due process of law. The exceptions noted imply
that the nature and cause of the taking are proper to be considered.
The distress-warrant issued in the case of Murray's Lessee et al. v.
Hoboken Land and Improvement Co. (18 How. 272) was sustained, because
it was in consonance with the usage of the English government and our
State governments in collecting balances due from public accountants,
and hence was 'due process of law.' But the court in that case
expressly holds that 'it is manifest that it was not left to the
legislative power to enact any process which might be devised. The
article is a restraint on the legislative, as well as on the executive
and judicial, power of the government, and cannot be so construed as
to leave Congress free to make any process 'due process of law' by its
mere will.' p. 276. I think, therefore, we are entitled, under the
fourteenth amendment, not only to see that there is some process of
law, but 'due process of law,' provided by the State law when a
citizen is deprived of his property; and that, in judging what is 'due
process of law,' respect must be had to the cause and object of the
taking, whether under the taxing power, the power of eminent domain,
or the power of assessment for local improvements, or none of these:
and if found to be suitable or admissible in the special case, it will
be adjudged to be 'due process of law;' but if found to be arbitrary,
oppressive, and unjust, it may be declared to be not 'due process of
law.' Such an examination may be made without interfering with that
large discretion [96
U.S. 97, 108] which every legislative power has of making
wide modifications in the forms of procedure in each case, according
as the laws, habits, customs, and preferences of the people of the
particular State may require.
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