In re the State
In re the State
Opinion of the Court
An original action for declaratory relief is brought upon the petition of the state, the state treasurer, Milwaukee county, and the county treasurer of Milwaukee county to have the rights of the parties declared respecting liability for the state’s share of income taxes paid to the county treasurer and deposited by him and frozen in county depository banks in liquidation and in banks operating on the statutory stabilization or moratorium plan.
Sec. 74.66, Stats., makes the county chargeable with “all losses that may be sustained by the default of any county officer in the.discharge of” his duties, and provides that the county board “shall add all such losses to the next year’s taxes of . . . the county.”
Some other statutes are referred to by counsel as bearing-on the question of the county’s liability. Sec. 74.27 provides that when any county shall fail to pay to the state treasurer the state tax levied upon it at the time required it shall pay to the state treasurer an additional amount of ten per cent, per annum from the time the tax was due. This section is contained, not in the chapter referring to income taxes, but in the chapter covering taxes on property.
Sec. 71.10 of the income tax law assigns to the county the penalties collected by the county treasurer on deferred payments of income taxes; sec. 71.17 (6) makes the county liable to the taxpayer for overpayments of income taxes, and sec. 71.23 provides that the county shall reimburse the county treasurer for refunds, and that the state and municipalities shall reimburse the county for their respective portion of refunds.
Sec. 71.19 provides that the county treasurer shall account for and pay delinquent income taxes collected by him as provided in sec. 74.26 (1), and sec. 71.18 (3) provides that all laws respecting collection and payment of taxes on personal property, excepting compromise and cancellation of illegal taxes, shall apply to income taxes, unless inconsistent with express provisions of the income tax law.
The main contention of the parties hinges upon the construction to be placed on the language of sec. 74.66 above stated covering losses “sustained by the default” of any officer. The state claims that the mere failure to pay over moneys at the time specified constitutes a “default,” while the county claims that the default covered by the section is an unlawful act, — some misfeasance or malfeasance in office, — some omission or breach of official duty by the
We have no doubt that the act of the county treasurer involved in the Michigan case was one of dishonesty and that the word “default” occurring in the statute should be construed as referring to some act of dishonesty. If the word had that meaning in the statute when it was taken over by our state, it has that meaning still.
The county treasurer of Milwaukee county has done no act in violation of statute. If he did any wrong at all it was in keeping the portion of the income tax payable to the state in his general account as county treasurer, instead of depositing it in a separate account designating it as money belonging to the state. The state invokes the rule that where an administrator or guardian or other trustee deposits trust funds in a bank in his own account, instead of designating the account as one in his capacity as trustee, and the bank fails, the loss falls upon the trustee. Williams v. Williams, 55 Wis. 300, 12 N. W. 465, 13 N. W. 274; Booth v. Wilkinson, 78 Wis. 652, 47 N. W. 1128; O’Connor v. Decker, 95 Wis. 202, 70 N. W. 286. But we are of opinion that this rule does not apply to the county treasurer, and if not to the
The state contends that the county is absolutely responsible for the state property tax levied against a county and is subject to the same liability -for that portion of the income tax collected by the county treasurer apportioned to the state by the legislature. That the county is so responsible for the state tax levied by the secretary of state the county does not dispute, and this liability seems to be imposed by sec. 74.27, which specifies the method of enforcing the liability as to include any deficiency of one year in the next year’s state tax levy against the county. The state’s claim that the income tax apportioned to the state is a.like liability is based in part on sec. 71.18 (3) to the effect, so far as here involved, that all laws not in conflict with the provisions of the income tax law applicable to the assessment, collection, and payment of taxes on personal property shall apply to the income tax. It is to be noted that personal property taxes, not the state tax levy against the county, is the subject of this statute. There is no provision in the statutes rendering the county responsible to the state for personal property taxes. The responsibility of the county for the state tax is for the amount of
Originally the income tax was collected by the local tax collectors and remitted and accounted for in the same manner that property taxes are remitted and paid, but by ch. 57, Laws of 1925, which may be found as sec. 71.19 (1), Stats. 1925, the legislature expressly provided that delinquent income taxes were not to be charged to the county nor credited to tire local unit. Afterwards, as income taxes were slower in coming in than property taxes, a special provision as to time of payment of the state’s portion by the county treasurer was added which reads that the county treasurers “shall pay to the state treasurer the amount .of the income taxes charged to their respective counties” under the statutory apportionment provision on or before May 1 of each j^ear, instead of on or before the second Monday of March, as in case of property taxes. This statute, sec. 74.26 (1), now reads as follows:
“The several county treasurers shall pay to the state treasurer, the amount of state taxes charged to their respective counties, on or before the second Monday of March in each year. They shall pay to the state treasurer and to the local treasurers the amount of income taxes collected by their respective counties under the provisions of chapter 71, within fifty days after the first day upon which the same became due and payable.”
The phrases “charged to their respective counties” and “collected by their respective counties” are the only expressions to be found in the statutes tending in any way to
We are constrained to hold to the view expressed as to the town treasurer’s relation to the county in the matter of collecting and transmitting taxes in Westboro v. Taylor County, 90 Wis. 355, 63 N. W. 287, that the county treasurer acts as the agent of the state in collecting the state’s portion of the income tax. The income tax, like the county tax involved in the Westboro Case, is due from the taxpayer. The state’s portion, as is the town’s portion, is not due from the county but from the taxpayers. As “for the
Counsel for the state criticise the statement in the West-boro Case above referred to and say that it is contrary to the great weight of authority. The decisions of several states are cited as to the contrary of the Westboro decision. Some are cited by counsel for the county as sustaining it. The bearing of these decisions upon the point could only be ascertained by study of the entire body of the taxation statutes of the several states, which would impose a burden we have neither time nor inclination to assume. Some decisions of our own court are cited as bearing upon the question and those we have examined. In State ex rel. City of Sheboygan v. Sheboygan County, 194 Wis. 456, 216 N. W. 144, the city brought certiorari to review the action of the county board in levying a tax for highway purposes. The court held that the city had no interest in the matter and was not entitled to bring the action. In course of the opinion the court makes the statements that “the city was only one of the agencies through which the county collected the tax” and that “the general tax is not a debt against the city.” The last statement is more against the state’s contention than
In State ex rel. Sheboygan County v. Telgener, 199 Wis. 523, 526, 227 N. W. 35, the county brought mandamus to compel the city treasurer of Sheboygan and other city officers to turn over to the county the county highway tax collected by the city treasurer. The county prevailed. In course of the opinion it is stated that “The city had no interest in the fund, and is not properly the custodian of the fund.” This affords no aid to the state’s contention. The whole case goes on the proposition that the city treasurer, not the city, is responsible for the turning over of the fund and that he, not the city, is acting for the county in the collection of the tax.
A case decided November 9, 1932, County of Sheboygan v. City of Sheboygan, 209 Wis. 452, 245 N. W. 87, and State ex rel. Donnelly v. Hobe, 106 Wis. 411, 82 N. W. 336, are also called to our attention, but we perceive nothing in the issues involved or the opinions in those cases that bears upon the proposition under consideration.
The state suggests that as it cannot be sued without its consent the county or county treasurer cannot by counterclaim or setoff relieve themselves from liability for moneys
We are therefore of opinion that the county of Milwaukee is not obligated to pay to the state the amount of the state’s portion of the income tax or any part thereof deposited by its county treasurer in public depositories and there. now impounded, and that the county treasurer of Milwaukee county is absolved from liability for said funds by his deposit thereof in public depositories, until the same or some part thereof be paid back to him by the said depositories or the liquidating officers thereof, when he will become responsible for such funds as are so paid back to the same extent that he was responsible therefor on their collection in the first instance.
By the Court. — Judgment is entered accordingly.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Petition of the State and others (for declaratory relief)
- Status
- Published