Lyons v. Woods
| Court | U.S. Supreme Court |
| Writing for the Court | FULLER |
| Citation | Lyons v. Woods, 153 U.S. 649, 14 S.Ct. 959, 38 L.Ed. 854 (1894) |
| Decision Date | 14 May 1894 |
| Docket Number | No. 267,267 |
| Parties | LYONS et al. v. WOODS et al |
This was a bill filed by James Lyons and others in the district court of the third judicial district of the territory of New Mexico for the county of Grant, August 27, 1885, against Woods and others, being the collector of taxes, the assessor, and the county commissioners for that county, aver- ring that complainants were taxpayers within said county, whose property was referred to and described in the tax list and assessment roll in the hands of defendant Woods, collector, which list and roll were prepared from assessments made by the assessor of Grant county, compiled under the direction of the board of county commissioners, and approved by that board, and received by Woods, as collector, August 13, 1885, said list and roll being, under the laws of the territory, the warrant under and by virtue of which the collector was about to collect, and was collecting, the various sums of money making up the several items of taxation as therein set forth. That among the items of taxation in said tax list and assessment roll for 1885, and upon which each of complainants was therin noted as being taxed, were two items respectively described in said list as 'penitentiary taxes' and 'capitol building taxes,' set down in columns, headed 'Penitentiary Bonds' and 'Capitol Building Bonds,' and levied as taxes upon complainants, and each of them, for the purposes described by said column heading.
The bill then set forth the several assessments of complainants' property, respectively, and the amounts severally taxed thereon, and alleged that the items described went to make up the sums total which the collector was about to collect from complainants, respectively, as the amount of taxes due 'from each for various purposes presented to be warranted by law and pretended to be due and payable for and during the year 1885; that the amounts of money thus in said list pretended to be due and payable upon account of penitentiary bonds and upon account of capitol building bonds and as taxation so levied for and on account of said items are so claimed and levied and included in said list by virtue and under authority of pretended acts of the legislative assembly of said territory pretended to have been approved by the governor of said territory, which said pretended acts so pretended to have been approved are entitled and described, respectively, as follows: 'An act authorizing the building of a penitentiary in the territory of New Mexico, and regulating its management,' approved March 14, 1884, and 'An act to provide for the erection of a capitol building in the city of Santa Fe.' approved March 29, 1884.'
The bill thus continued:
'Your orators further represent that said pretended acts of the legislative assembly entitled, as aforesaid, 'An act authorizing the building of a penitentiary in the territory of New Mexico, and regulating its management,' approved March 14, 1884, and 'An act to provide for the erection of a capitol building in the city of Santa Fe,' approved March 29, 1884, under which said assessment of taxation is made, and by virtue of which said pretended liens against your orators' property are asserted, and by virtue of which said pretended assessment rolls are claimed to have the effect of executions in the hands of the said defendant as sheriff and ex officio collector of said county of Grant, are not, and never have become, valid laws of said territory of New Mexico, for the reason that the same never were introduced and passed through the council of said legislative assembly when a legal quorum of said council was present and participating in the proceedings thereof, and for the reason that a majority of a legal quorum of said council never voted in favor of said pretended laws so as to legally the same through said body; and your orators charge the facts to be that an act of congress of the United States of America was passed and approved on the 14th day of February, 1884, and thereby became a law, which said act of congress, among other things, provided that a session of the legislative assembly of said territory should be held, and said assembly convene, on the third Monday of February, A. D. 1884; and said act of congress declared that the members elected to the territorial legislature of said territory in November, 1882, and all vacancies legally filled since that time, if any, should be the legal members of the legislature by said act authorized, subject to all valid contest.
'Your orators further state that in accordance with said act of congress a pretended session of said legislative assembly was held, commencing on the third Monday of February, A. D. 1884.
'Your orators further state the fact to be, and that the same so appears by the published journal of the proceedings of said pretended sessions of the council of said legislative assembly, that upon the convening of said council on the said third Monday in February, A. D. 1884, only five members appeared who had regularly received certificates of election, and were so shown to be elected by the election returns of the said election held in November, A. D. 1882, to have been elected members of said council, to wit, Jose Armijo y Vigil, of Socorro county; Pablo Gallegos, of Rio Arribi county; W. H. Keller and Andrew Sena, of San Miguel county; and John A. Miller, of Dona Ana, Lincoln, and Grant counties; and that thereupon the said five persons qualified as members of said council by taking the oath of office required by law and signing the roll of members.
'Your orators further allege that by law the said council is composed of twelve members, and that seven thereof are necessary to constitute a legal quorum for the transaction of business.
'Your orators further allege that after said five members had been sworn in, as aforesaid, a motion was unanimously adopted by the vote of said five members only, and no more, that Thomas B. Catron, of Santa Fe county, be declared entitled prima facie to the seat from Santa Fe county, and that thereupon the said Thomas B. Catron took the oath of office as a member of said council, signed its roll, and thereafter acted as a member thereof.
'And your orators further allege that said Catron's seat was claimed by Henry L. Warren, of Santa Fe county, and that said Warren held a certificate of election as a member of said council from Santa Fe county, which said certificate was the first certificate of election issued by the county commissioners as evidence of the election of members of said council from said county at said election held in said month of November, A. D. 1882; but that afterwards said county commissioners, acting under protest, and compelled by an order of the district court in said county of Santa Fe, issued a certificate of election to said Thomas B. Catron.
'Your orators further allege that they are not informed as to whom the election returns on file in the office of the secretary of the territory show to have been elected as a member of said council from the said county of Santa Fe at said election.
'Your orators further allege that afterwards, while said council was composed of the said five persons as aforesaid and the said Thomas B. Catron, and no others, a motion was therein introduced by the said John A. Miller to the effect that Charles C. McComas and Jose Manuel Montoya be declared entitled prima facie to the seats from Bernalillo county, subject to the right of contest; and that said motion was unanimously adopted by the vote of the said six members, and no more, who were then acting, as aforesaid, as members of said council.
'Your orators further allege that said Charles C. McComas and Jose M. Montoya held no certificates of election whatever as members of said body, but, on the contrary, Charles Montaldo and Francisco Perea held the certificates of election to the seats therein of the members from said county of Bernalillo, and that all the election returns of the election held in said month...
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...requires that [a matter] shall be entered on the journal." 143 U.S. at 671, 12 S.Ct. 495. Subsequently, in Lyons v. Woods, 153 U.S. 649, 14 S.Ct. 959, 38 L.Ed. 854 (1894), the Supreme Court applied the enrolled bill rule of Marshall Field to determine whether legislation of a U.S. territory......
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