Wells v. Shoemaker
Wells v. Shoemaker
Opinion of the Court
This was an action commenced by the auditor and treasurer of Bartholomew county for a writ of mandate against the auditor of state. The complaint avers that the auditor of Bartholomew county made out his certificate, as required by the 123d section of the act providing for assessment of taxes (1 G. & H. 102); and that the treasurer of said county presented said certificate to the-
To this answer the appellants filed á demurrer, which was by the court overruled, to which ruling an exception was taken. The appellants refusing to plead further, final judgment was rendered for the appellee. The appellants have assigned for error the overruling of the demurrer to the answer of the appellee. The precise question presented for our decision may be briefly stated thus: Can a county treasurer, under the fee and salary act of February 2ist, 1871, claim any percentage for the collection of taxes on his current duplicate, which taxes had theretofore been returned delinquent, but, not having been collected by the treasurer upon a precept issued to him by the county auditor, for the collection óf delinquent taxes, had been carried forward and placed upon the duplicate for the current year?
The twenty-ninth section of the fee and salary act, after fixing the salary of county treasurers, closes with these words: “And shall have in addition the fees and commissions now allowed by law for the collection of delinquent taxes.” Acts 1871, p. 38I
.The Gase of The Board of Commissioners of Grant County v. Miles, 21 Ind. 438, is clearly in point, and is decisive of the case under consideration. In that case it was directly decided that the treasurer was only entitled to charge the five per cent, and constable’s fees for taxes collected as delinquent, when the same were collected upon the precept issued to him by the auditor; and that when such delinquent taxes are not collected on such precept, they are carried forward and placed upon the duplicate for the current year, and are to be collected and paid for as current taxes.
We do not deem it necessary to gó into a careful and critical examination and comparison of the various sections of the act for the assessment and collection of taxes, for this was done with great accuracy and completeness in the above case. It is to be presumed that section 29 of the fee.
Prior to the passage of the recent fee and salary act, the compensation of county treasurers consisted of commissions upon the amount of taxes collected on the current duplicate, and for delinquent taxes collected upon the precept issued by the auditor for the collection of delinquent taxes; but by the above act they are to receive a fixed salary, and all commissions and fees are taken away, except those allowed by law for the collection of delinquent taxes. It surely was not intended by the legislature to give the treasurer, in addition to his salary, a commission on delinquent taxes which had not been collected on a precept, but had been carried forward and placed upon the current duplicate. The treasurer would have as much right, in justice, to demand and receive a commission on the other taxes on the duplicate as on the taxes which had been returned delinquent, but, not having been collected on a precept, had been carried forward and placed on the duplicate; for the collection of the delinquent taxes occasions no more expense or labor than the collection of the other taxes on the duplicate. But the collection of delinquent taxes on a precept imposes additional labor and expense upon the treasurer; for he is required to call upon, in person or by deputy, every delinquent tax-payer in the county and demand the payment of such delinquent taxes; and upon a failure to pay on demand, he is required, by distress and sale of the goods and chattels of such delinquent tax-payers, to make such taxes, with ten per centum damages and costs. After a levy has been made, the treasurer has to give ten days’ public notice of the time and place of the sale, by advertisements posted up in at least three public places in the township where such sale shall be made. At the time and place named in the notice of sale,, the treasurer is required to attend and sell enough of the property levied on, at public auction, to make said taxes, damages3 and costs.
For these services the treasurer is allowed five per cent, on the amount collected, and the same fees and charges as are allowed by law to constables for making levy and sale of property on execution. See Acts of Special Session of 1861, p. 94. The legislature, in doing away with the commissions heretofore allowed treasurers, very wisely continued in force the law which gave them compensation for collecting delinquent taxes on a precept. The obvious purpose of the legislature was to secure the prompt collection of delinquent taxes, and this purpose would be defeated if county treasurers have the right, when they haVe failed and neglected to discharge their plain duty to collect the delinquent taxes on a precept, to have them carried forward and placed upon the duplicate, and when thus collected to charge and receive a commission thereon. It is our duty to carry into full effect the legislative will, and not to defeat it.
The court below committed no error in overruling the demurrer to the answer.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Wells, Auditor v. Shoemaker, Auditor of State
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- Published