City of Sioux City v. Woodbury County
City of Sioux City v. Woodbury County
Opinion of the Court
J. A. Magoun was treasurer of Wood-bury County during the years 1902 'and 1903, and as such treasurer received mulct taxes from various persons amounting to a large sum. One-half of the amount so received, less three-fourths of one percent thereof, which Magoun retained as a collection charge, was paid,over to the city. This suit was brought to recover of Magoun and the county the amount so retained by Magoun. It was brought more than three years after Magoun went out of office, and for that reason his demurrer to the petition was sustained, and
There is no dispute over the facts in the case. The mulct taxes were paid into the county treasury, and Magoun, in the belief that he had a right to do so, deducted from the amount thereof due the city the collection charge to which we have referred. Section 2M5 of the Code, so far as the same is material here, is as follows: “The revenues derived from the tax provided for in this chapter shall be paid into the county treasury, one-half to go into the general county fund, and the remainder to be paid over to ‘the municipality in which the business taxed is conducted. ... In counties where a tax on the traffic in intoxicating liquors is paid into and belongs to the county treasury, and when there is a surplus in the general fund, the board of supervisors may transfer such surplus, not exceeding the amount of such liquor taxes, to the county road fund, and expend the same upon the roads of the county.” The requirement that such taxes shall be paid into the county treasury is the basis of the appellee’s claim that the entire amount thereof is due and payable to the county, and is not collected in the first instance for the municipality, and, further, that when such taxes are paid into the county treasury in the regular way, the county is bound to pay one-half thereof over to the municipality, and cannot escape liability for the wrongful act of its treasurer. The trouble with the appellee’s position is that only one-half of such taxes ever becomes the property of the county. While the statute requires payment thereof into the county treasury, one-half of the sum so paid belongs to and is the property of the municipality in which the business taxed is conducted. The last clause of the section clearly negatives the right of the county to in any way control the fund belonging to the municipality, for it provides for the disposition of only such part of the tax as belongs to the county. In our judgment no distine
Tbe judgment of tbe district court is reversed.
Reference
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