Gay v. Jenkins County
Gay v. Jenkins County
Opinion of the Court
The commissioners of roads and revenues of Jenkins County issued an execution against Jesse M. Gay, a former tax-collector of said county, as principal, and the Consolidated Indemnity and Insurance Company of New York, as surety, for the principal sum of $4535.98, for an alleged failure to turn over to the county that amount of tax money collected by the defendant in execution. The execution was levied on certain property of the defendant, and he filed his affidavit of illegality, denying that he had defaulted in any amount. On the trial the judge directed a verdict for $4198.62. Gay made a motion for new trial, which was overruled, and on this judgment he assigns error. The testimony adduced by the defendant in execution did not raise any issue of fact, as to the material and controlling issues, that required submission of the case to a jury. While the mere contentions and conclusions of the defendant in execution to the effect that he was not short with the county were at'variance with some portions of the evidence, the undisputed proved facts demanded the verdict directed in favor of the county. ■ The evidence shows that according to the defendant’s own records he had collected from 54 taxpayers of the county taxes which he had not turned over to the county. The defendant admitted that he could not show where he had paid this money to the county, admitted to the county commissioners that he was short, and asked for time to raise the money. The evidence shows that when the defendant would remit collected taxes to the county he would file in the office of the county commissioners a “settlement sheet.” There was one settlement, on February 2, 1935, for which he filed no settlement sheet, but for this settlement he was issued a receipt which was included and considered as a settlement sheet in the trial. He also kept a “cash-book” showing collections made. According to the settlement sheets and the cash-book (both his own
While the evidence showing that the defendant in execution was indebted to the county is too voluminous to quote, the following excerpts therefrom will suffice to show that the verdict was demanded: Gay, the defendant in execution and now the plaintiff in error, testified: “I started in my office as tax-collector on January 1, 1929, and I was removed from office by the Governor in 1935, along about the summertime. . . Those are the names I entered on the cash-book [indicating], beginning with Mrs. E. B. Aycock Sr., January 29, 1935. I put all those names on there, showing those taxes had been paid. . . On that date I had 54 names on that file. Those names appear on pages 31 and 32. . . I entered those names on that book. . . Mr. Smith [the auditor] suggested that we go down and talk to Mr. Gray [a county commissioner]. He claimed I was short on the books the amount of those 54 tax items. . . When I got down to Mr. Gray’s office I told Mr. Gray that it appeared that way. . . My explanation as to why I did not put those names on my record at the time I collected them some two or three months before they were entered is, I did not enter them on the book because I did not have time to put them there. . . After I had this talk with Mr. Gray and with Mr. Smith in Mr. Gray’s office, that night I went to the home of Steve Godbee, one of the county commissioners in this county. I told Mr. Godbee that Mr. Smith had checked me short. I do not remember whether I asked it, or he requested or suggested it, that we go to the home of Mr. Jones, the chairman of the board of county commissioners, that same night. Anyway we went there. . . I asked Mr. Jones to call a meeting of the board the following day. . . I asked time to adjust it. . . It is true that they said it would not be of any benefit to me to indulge me for thirty days unless the State would do likewise, and they would hold it in abeyance and find out from Atlanta if the State would indulge me. . . As to whether I will state that [I said], 'Gentlemen, I am not saying this for the
Edgar Daniel, clerk of the board of county commissioners, testified: “I heard what Mr. Gay had to say . . with reference to property, raising the money and so forth. He offered to raise it with his car and house and lot, and [said] that his brother Ed would put up certain of his farm property. . . If he had made a denial I would have known it. He did not make any denial. When those settlement entries were, made from time to time by Mr. Gay, during the time he was tax-collector, there was something that was filed in our office, the commissioners’ office, . . a sworn settlement sheet. . . With respect to the 54 taxpayers whose names appear partly on page 31 and the balance on page 32, below the words ‘collected prior to December 20, 1934/ there was no settlement entry made on the cash-loolc nor toas there any settlement sheet 'filed with us ly Mr. Gay as tax-collector with respect to those 5If names. . . He never made any settlement sheet or filed any settlement with the board of county commissioners showing he paid the taxes over to the county from
S. S. Godbee, county commissioner, swore that Gay “admitted that he was short something like four thousand and some hundred dollars. . . He admitted that he was short with the county, and said he had been short a good deal more, but had reduced it down; . . that it was his red wagon and he was responsible for what was short; that he was the tax-collector and wanted to make good taxes collected by him while he was tax-collector.” R. C. Jones, chairman of the board of county commissioners, testified that Gay admitted to him individually and to the board of commissioners that he was short, and asked for time to get up the money. Robie Gray, county commissioner, swore that Gay admitted being short $4400, and asked for time to raise the money. W. Y. Smith, a certified public accountant who audited Gay’s books, swore that he found the shortage and told Gay “‘Let’s go report it to the commissioners if you collected some money that you have not reported,’ and he said ‘all right,’ and we went to Mr. Gray’s office, and I told Mr. Gray I had found a discrepancy in Mr. Gay’s figures, in his accounts there, for 1934, of approximately $4400. Mr. Gay said he was short that much. Mr. Gay told Mr. Gray he was short that much. Mr. Gray asked him if he owed the county that much money or was short that much money, and Mr. Gay said ‘It is about $4400.’ . . He made a statement about that shortage having at one
There was much more evidence to the same effect as the foregoing. The testimony of the defendant in execution amounted merely to his contentions and conclusions that he was not indebted to the county; but the proved facts showed that, according to the defendant’s own records, he was so indebted. The amount of the verdict directed by the judge was for the smallest amount shown by the testimony, and a verdict for that much was demanded by the evidence. “When, upon a review of all the evidence with the reasonable deductions therefrom, it is manifest that there is but one finding which can be legally supported it is not reversible error to direct a verdict.” Cleveland-Manning Piano Co. v. Stewart, 15 Ga. App. 657 (4) (84 S. E. 174); Gibson v. Hodges, 147 Ga. 789 (3) (95 S. E. 696); Woodruff v. Executive Committee of the Baptist Convention, 173 Ga. 102 (159 S. E. 855). The record shows that after the shortage was discovered, the defendant in execution submitted a bill to the county for $9280.13. There was no evidence in support of this bill. As to it the defendant testified: “Referring to that bill I presented on April 2, 1935, to Jenkins County, . . I presented this bill for $9280.13. . . I will not explain why I presented that bill.
A special ground of the motion for new trial assigns error on the refusal of the court to admit evidence that the defendant “paid out from the Bank of Millen” certain money to different parties including Jenkins County, the court excluding all the evidence except as to Jenkins County. The fact that the defendant once had the money in the bank does not show that he paid it to the county. If this were a criminal case in which the defendant was charged with theft of the money, evidence of what disposition he made of it might be admissible to show that he did not intend to steal it; but since it is a civil case, and the issue was whether the defendant in execution had paid all money due to Jenkins County, any evidence of payments to others was immaterial and inadmissible. Moreover, “a new trial will not be granted solely because of the exclusion of evidence which, if it had been allowed, could not have produced a different result.” Rountree v. Goulden, 123 Ga. 449 (4) (51 S. E. 346). “Errors in admitting or rejecting evidence may be regarded as immaterial, where the verdict is undoubtedly right, and where the result ought clearly to be the same with as without the correction of such errors.” Lewis v. Adams, 61 Ga. 559 (4). “The law presumes, when a fi. fa. is issued against a county tax-collector, that the amount named therein is due by the officer, and the burden is on the tax-collector to show that the fi. fa. is invalid or inoperative in whole or in part.” McDuffie v. Wilcox County, 165 Ga. 164 (4, 5) (140 S. E. 379). Under the above authorities and the facts of this case, there is no merit in the general or special grounds of the motion for new trial; and the court did not err in overruling the motion.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.