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Mr. Thomas F. West, Attorney General of Florida, for defendant in error. [243 U.S. 447, 448] Messrs. Frank B. Kellogg, Cordenio A. Severance, Robert E. Olds, Gustavus S. Fernald, and John E. Hartridge for plaintiff in error.
Mr. Justice Day delivered the opinion of the court:
Suit was brought in the circuit court of Leon county, Florida, by the Pullman Company against Knott, comptroller of the state of Florida, to enjoin him and his successors in office from estimating, levying, and assessing a tax on the gross receipts of the Pullman Company, on the ground that the state law authorizing the tax was void under the Constitution of the United States. The circuit court held that the law was constitutional, and dismissed the bill; that decree was affirmed by the supreme court of the state. (70 Fla. 9, 69 So. 703.) The case was then brought here upon writ of error.
It is now before us upon a motion of the defendant in error, by the attorney general of the state, to dismiss the proceeding in this court upon the ground that there is no proper person defendant to stand in judgment in the action. It is averred, and is not disputed, that Knott, the defendant in error, is no longer comptroller of the state of Florida, his term of office having expired on January 2, 1917, and that thereupon he retired from the office of comptroller and has been succeeded by another, who is the duly commissioned and acting comptroller of the state.
The original suit was against Knott; the bill stated that he was the duly elected, qualified, and acting comptroller of the state of Florida. The bill sets forth the duties required of him in that connection in levying the tax against the enforcement of which the injunction was sought by the Pullman Company.
While it is true that the duty required concerns the state, the suit is against Knott as an individual, and he [243 U.S. 447, 449] alone can be punished for the failure to obey an injunction, should one issue, as prayed for in the bill. Whether the court below was right in refusing the injunction and dismissing the bill against Knott is the question presented. In such cases, a long line of decisions in this court has settled that the action abates upon the expiration of the defendant's term of office, and cannot be revived against his successor in office, in the absence of a statute so providing.
We had occasion to review and consider these cases in the case of Pullman Co. v. Croom,
The case upon which the subsequent decisions are rested is United States v. Boutwell, 17 Wall. 604, 21 L. ed. 721. In that case the rule and the reasons for it were stated by the court. That was a suit for mandamus against the Secretary of the Treasury, and involved the right to substitute the successor of the Secretary, his term of office having expired since the suit was commenced. The court held that the right to a writ of mandamus ceased to exist upon the defendant retiring from the office of Secretary, and that, in the absence of a statute, the writ must necessarily abate. The court further held that the duty sought to be enforced was a personal one, and existed only so long as the office was held; that the court could not compel the defendant to perform such duty after his power so to do had ceased; that if the successor in office could be substituted he might be mulcted in costs for the fault of his predecessor, without any delinquency of his own; and that were a demand [243 U.S. 447, 450] made upon him, he might discharge the duty, rendering the interposition of a court unnecessary; and, in any event, the successor was not in privity with his predecessor, nor was he his personal representative. (17 Wall. 604, 607, 608.)
In Warner Valley Stock Co. v. Smith,
In United States ex rel. Bernardin v. Butterworth,
In Richardson v. McChesney,
It is argued for the plaintiff in error that this court has held that former judgments adjudicating rights against the state are binding in subsequent actions; that the mere fact that there has been a change of person holding the office does not destroy the effect of the thing adjudged. New Orleans v. Citizens' Bank,
It is said that this ruling involves great hardship and that official terms will expire so that cases of this sort cannot be reviewed at all in this court. In this case the judgment of the state court was rendered on June 26, 1915; the order allowing the writ of error to this court was filed September 24, 1915; and the record was filed in this court on October 8, 1915. It does not appear that any attempt was made to advance the case, in view of the expiration of Knott's terms of office as comptroller in January, 1917. As the law now stands, we have no alternative except to dismiss the writ of error for want of a proper defendant to stand in judgment.
And it is so ordered.
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Citation: 243 U.S. 447
No. 262
Decided: April 09, 1917
Court: United States Supreme Court
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