Hull v. Alexander
Hull v. Alexander
Opinion of the Court
It is clear that Mr. Hull had no right to deduct his debts from the valuation for taxation of his national bank shares, during the years 1892 to 1895, both inclusive, and that the state of Ohio during said years did not recognize such right, and did not accept the case of Whitbeck v. Mercantile National Bank, 127 U. S., 193, as deciding that such right existed, but on the contrary held that such right did not exist, and in such holding the state has been upheld by the Supreme Court of the United States. Niles v. Shaw, 50 Ohio St., 370; Chapman v. Bank, 56 Ohio St., 310; Bank v. Chapman, 173 U. S., 205; and Bank v. Ayers, 160 U. S., 660.
There has therefore been no change in the judicial holdings in this state as to the taxation' of shares in a national bank' for the years in question, and while some county auditors may have followed the rule supposed to be laid down in the Whitbeck case, tlie subsequent case of Bank v. Chapman, 173 U. S., 265, shows that there was an erroneous construction of the Whitbeck case: and an erroneous construction of a former decision will not serve to protect those who have acted under and in pursuance of such error, and can not serve as stare decisis because such decision, when properly construed, never stood, and does not now stand. It is urged that Mr. Hull could have enjoined this tax under the Whitbeck case, but that this is not so, is shown by the fact that Mr. Niles failed in his case, as did also Mr. Chapman in his, and both relied upon the Whitbeck case.
It is therefore clear that at the time of these two settlements Mr. Hull owed the' full amount of taxes then standing on the duplicate against him. Whether the first settlement had sufficient validity to bar a further collection may well be doubted, but it is clear that it induced the auditor to omit the unpaid portion of the taxes from all subsequent duplicates. The taxes of 1895 did not become delinquent until June 20, 1896, and were not included within the authority of the resolution of the commissioners of August 6, 1895, because that resolution only covered taxes due and unpaid on the fifteenth day of September, 1895. It would seem, then, the treasurer had no authority to make the settlement of December 30, 1896; but he did make it, and received the money from Mr. Hull, and gave him a receipt
If the county treasurer could maintain an action on such old duplicates, which had been thus settled, and from which he had been discharged from liability, it must be by virtue of some statute; because an officer, as a general rule, can maintain an action in his official capacity for the collection of public funds, only when authorized by statute.
By Section 2855, Revised Statutes, the county auditor is required to make a delinquent tax list or duplicate, immediately after the August settlement, and deliver the same to the county treasurer on the fifteenth day of September, annually.
By Section 2856, Revised Statutes, the treasurer is required to proceed forthwith to collect the taxes and penalty on said duplicate by any of the means provided by law, which would include a collection by civil action. But in the ease at bar the civil action was not founded on “said duplicate,” that is the delinquent duplicate, but upon certain old defunct duplicates no longer in the hands of the treasurer for collection. The action was therefore not authorized by said Section 2856.
It is urged, however, that the action is authorized by Section 2859, Revised Statutes. That section is as follows:
“When any personal taxes, heretofore or hereafter levied, shall stand charged against any person, and the same shall not be paid within the time prescribed by law for the payment of such taxes, the treasurer of the county, in addition to any other remedy provided by law for the collection of such personal taxes,*638 is hereby specially authorized and empowered to enforce the collection by a civil action in the name of the treasurer of such county against such' person for the recovery of such unpaid taxes; and it shall be sufficient, having made proper parties to the suit, for such treasurer to allege in his bill of particulars or petition that the said taxes stand charged upon the said duplicate of said county against such person, that the same are due and unpaid, and that such person is indebted in the amount appearing to be due on said duplicate, and such treasurer shall not be required to set forth in his petition any other or further special matter relating thereto, and said tax duplicate shall be received as prima facie evidence on the trial of said suit ■of the amount and the validity of such taxes appearing due and unpaid thereon, and of the non-payment of the same, without setting forth in his bill of particulars or petition any other or further special matter relating thereto; and if, on the trial of the action, it shall’be found that such person is so indebted, judgment shall be rendered in favor of such treasurer so prosecuting such action as in other case's; and the judgment debtor shall not be entitled to the benefit of the laws for stay of execution or exemption of homestead, or any other property, from levy or sale on execution in the enforcement of any such judgment. ’ ’
This section was originally passed March 31, 1877, and was entitled, “An act to secure the collection of delinquent taxes.” It was slightly amended May 11, 1878, and carried into the Revised Statutes of 1880, and has remained the same ever since. It will be noticed that it provides for the collection of personal taxes which were levied either before or after the passage of the act,- and stand charged against any person, and not paid within the time prescribed by law — delinquent personal taxes. When personal taxes stand charged against any person, means charged upon some duplicate in- the hands of the treasurer for collection, and not upon some old defunct duplicate. This clearly appears from what follows, “and the same shall not be paid ■within the time prescribed by law for the payment of such taxes.” This implies a charge against a person which can be .discharged by simple payment without invoking any other process or requirement; and the only charge against a person in favor of the treasurer that can be so paid is a charge upon the 'current duplicate or delinquent list in his hands for collection. .This is made clear by Sections 1084 and 1085, Revised Statutes. Section 1084, after requiring the treasurer to keep on account of all moneys received and paid out by him, provides that, “no
It is made clear by this section that payment of taxes standing •charged on the duplicate of the current year can be made to the treasurer direct without warrant or draft from the county auditor, because the duplicate is his warrant for receiving the same; and it is further clear that payment of taxes standing charged on the delinquent duplicate can be made direct to the treasurer until the return by the treasurer of the delinquent list, but that after the return of the delinquent list payment can be made only upon the warrant or draft of the county auditor; because after the return of the delinquent list the treasurer has no warrant or duplicate in his hands for collection, and in case payment of taxes should then be made to him, the auditor would have no account thereof; and therefore in order to keep the proper charge against the treasurer, the statute -requires that he have either a duplicate or draft from the auditor authorizing him to receive the money; and such duplicate, whether of the current year or of delinquent taxes, and such draft, enable the auditor to have in his office at all times a charge against the treasurer for all money paid to him.
In all our tax legislation the only duplicates mentioned are the duplicate of the current year and the delinquent duplicate, and all charges of taxes are required to be kept on one or the other of such duplicates; and nothing is provided as to collections or actions on old duplicates of former years, and therefore the words “said duplicate” in Section 2859 must be construed as referring to the duplicate of the current year or the delinquent duplicate.
Again, the county treasurer is strictly a collector of taxes, and not a tax inquisitor or taxing officer. He performs his whole duty when he collects the money charged upon the tax duplicate and delinquent list delivered to him by the auditor for collection,
When people have so arranged their taxes, either by payment or otherwise, as to have the charge removed from the duplicate, the place to begin to have such taxes again placed on the duplicate and made a charge against such person, is in the office of the auditor; and the treasurer has no authority to revive, sue for, or collect such taxes, until again placed on the duplicate by the auditor.
It is therefore clear upon the conceded facts in this case, that the treasurer had no power or authority to bring or maintain this action; that the court erred in admitting the old duplicates in evidence; and erred in overruling the motion of defendant to arrest the testimony from the jury, and for' judgment in his favor.
' The judgment of the circuit court, and also that of the common pleas, will be reversed, and the said motion of the defendant below will be sustained and the petition dismissed.
Whether at this late -day the auditor can place the unpaid portion of Mr. Hull’s taxes on the duplicate so as to enforce their payment, is not involved in this case, and is not here decided. No attempt has been made by the auditor to again place said unpaid taxes on the duplicate. Should such attempt be made, it will then be proper to decide the question. The question is not now before us. Neither is the .validity or invalidity of said settlements decided. The treasurer not having the power to bring the action on the old duplicates, he could not in any unauthorized action test the validity of the settlements.
Judgments reversed and judgment for plaintiff in error.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Hull v. Alexander, Treasurer
- Status
- Published