Adams v. Stephens County

41 S.W.2d 989, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1400
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 10, 1931
DocketNo. 826.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 41 S.W.2d 989 (Adams v. Stephens County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Stephens County, 41 S.W.2d 989, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1400 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

LESLIE, J.

In this case George T. Adams sued Stephens county, alleging that he, as the duly elected tax collector of Stephens county for the years 1921, 1922, 1923, and 1924, collected state and county taxes and by mistake paid to the county $3,389.46 by way of excess fees more than he was due to pay the county for the year of 1921, and that such payment included the sum of $488.50 of his commissions earned in the collection of delinquent taxes, and that by virtue of like mistake he paid into the county for the year of 1922 his commissions for the collection of delinquent taxes amounting to $1,175, all of which it is alleged Stephens County refused to return to him.

Stephens county entered general and special denials, and presented a cross-action against Adams; seeking to cancel a certain warrant in the sum of $5,900.03 issued to him pursuant to an order of the commissioners’ court made December 31,1929, and purporting to be in full settlement with Adams for all claims made by him against the county as arising during his tenure of office. This warrant had been duly registered and for a valuable consideration transferred to the Strawn National Bank, who owned it at the time the suit was filed. Por that reason the county in its cross-action made said bank a party to the suit, and also sought cancellation of the order authorizing the warrant against it.

The county attacked the validity of the order and the warrant on the grounds: (1) That Stephens county did not owe Adams anything at the time of the entry of the order and the issuance of the warrant; (2) that no provision: was made' for the payment of the warrant at the time of its ordering; (3) that the claim by Adams was made and acted upon by the county at a time when both parties knew that the county owed Adams nothing. In other words, it was the county’s view that the order and the warrant were, under the circumstances, void.

Adams and the Strawn National Bank allege that the order of the commissioners’ court directing the issuance of the warrant was res adjudicata of the matters of the existence of the indebtedness to Adams and the amount thereof, and that the county’s efforts to cancel the warrant and order amounted to a forbidden collateral attack upon the same.

The trial was before the court without a jury, and resulted in a judgment denying Adams any recovery, but canceling the warrant and allowing the bank recovery over against Adams for the sum of $5,944, the principal amount paid by the bank for the warrant and the interest thereon. Adams and the bank each duly excepted and gave notice of appeal, but Adams alone has perfected the appeal, and the bank accepts the judgment.

The appellant’s major assignments and *990 ■propositions attack the judgment as being erroneous on the ground that the county’s cross-action seeking to cancel the warrant was an unauthorized collateral attack on the order or judgment of the commissioners’ court approving- the claim and ordering the warrant.

These contentions will be examined in the light of the record, and the facts given a little more extensively.

By plaintiff’s pleadings and proof it conclusively appears that the subject-matter of the suit, the objects of recovery (the $8,389.46 excess fees and the items of $488.50 and $1,-175, alleged to be fees for the collection of delinquent taxes during 1921 and 1922, respectively) passed into and became part of the claims which Adams contends he presented to the commissioners’ court, that were considered by it, and which it undertook to adjust and settle by the issuance of the warrant for $5,900.03, pursuant to the court’s order to that effect. In support of this conclusion we give the following excerpt from the plaintiff’s pleadings, a part of which we italicize:

' “This plaintiff insists that the item of $4&8.50, commissions on collection of delwv-quent taxes for the year 1921, and also the sum of $1175.00, commissions on delinquent taxes for the year 1922, were both included, and considered in a certain voucher for $5900.03, which voucher was dated about Dec. 31st, 192.9, and was payable to tMs plaintiff (Adams) but is now owned by the co-defendant, the Btrawn 'National Bank, who is seeking judgment for said $5900.03 voucher aforesaid. But, if mistaken, that said two items are not included in said voucher aforesaid, and which plaintiff first insists was done, but in the alternative should his only reason be found and held that said commissions on delinquent taxes are not included in the vouch-. er, and if for any reason the same should not be established as a part of said voucher and judgment thereon rendered, then in the alternative only plaintiff insists that he have judgment in this suit for said two items — one for $488.50 which would, therefore, in that event, be included in the claim of $3389.46; and in addition judgment for $1175.00, being the commission aforesaid for the year-1922.
“This last above prayer for judgment for said commission for said two years is strictly an alternative prayer and relief, the plaintiff insisting that the said two items were included and adjudicated and are part of the said $5900.03, and that the Btrawn National Bank is entitled to recover that sum by reason of its ownership of voucher and the additional sums represented by said voucher.”

The plaintiff then follows this with a concluding prayer for judgment for the $3,389.46 with interest, etc., and again in the alternative for the $488.50 and $1,175 with interest; said items alleged to be commissions on delinquent taxes for 1921 and 1922, respectively.

It will also be observed that Adams’ testimony supports his first and primary plea, as above indicated.

About November 25, 1929, the plaintiff Adams presented to the county auditor and the commissioners’ court of Stephens county a claim against the county for excess fees amounting to $5,900.03. The claim was presented in writing and as follows: “Stephens County, debtor, to Geo. T. Adams in the sum of $5900.03 for excess payments to the County Treasurer for said county for the years 1923 and 1924, said payments being erroneously made through mistake under the belief that all county officers of Stephens County were under the Eee system, when in fact they were not under said system,' G. T. Adams, Ex-Tax Collector of Stephens County, Texas.”

Thereafter on the 31st day of December, 1929, said court entered an order allowing the claim, directed the issuance and delivery of a warrant to Adams, payable from the general revenues the following April 1, 1930. It was of the tenor following:

“No. 1919 $5900.03
“State of Texas
“Do Not Cash This Warrant
“The Treasurer of the County of Stephens
“Min. Book 8, page 205. Check will be issued by County Treasurer at maturity of warrant. To be paid April 30th, 1930, at the office of the County Treasurer.
<IT, m . , f bearer the sum “Pay to Geo. T. Adams ori (_order of Five Thousand Nine Hundred and 03/100 Dollars Out of the General Fund, being the amount allowed by the Commissioners’ Court of said County at its December Term, 1929.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.W.2d 989, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-stephens-county-texapp-1931.