Bailey, State Tax Collector v. Muse

85 So. 2d 918, 227 Miss. 51, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 654
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1956
Docket39983
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 85 So. 2d 918 (Bailey, State Tax Collector v. Muse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey, State Tax Collector v. Muse, 85 So. 2d 918, 227 Miss. 51, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 654 (Mich. 1956).

Opinion

*60 Ethridge, J.

The State Tax Collector, Mrs. Thomas L. Bailey, brought this suit in the Chancery Court, First Judicial District of Hinds County, against Kenneth and L. N. Muse and seven other defendants, for the purpose of collecting from them the statutory fine and penalty provided by Code of 1942, Sections 2639 and 2640. Six other defendants were joined in attachment and garnishment as debtors of the principal defendants. Section 2639 provides in brief that any person who sells or gives away intoxicating liquor unlawfully shall be subject to pay to the state, county and city where the offense is committed, each, the sum of $500, and that the state, county or city, or the State Tax Collector, may sue and recover civilly each said sum of $500. Section 2640 gives concurrent jurisdiction to the chancery court for such suits, with authority to suppress as a nuisance such places of business.

*61 The chancery court dismissed the bill as to the four women defendants, holding that the evidence was not sufficient to show that they were joint adventurers in this liquor business with the other defendants. The court then rendered a decree for $4,000 against Kenneth and L. N. Muse, and the other three male defendants.

The State Tax Collector appeals from that decree, claiming that the $500 should have been assessed for each separate sale, but it is unnecessary to consider here that contention. Kenneth and L. N. Muse, and the three Hintons cross-appeal from the decree, and one of their arguments is that they were acquired to testify against themselves, and therefore under Code Section 2630 they were immune from assessments of the fines and penalties of the statute. Since that point on the cross-appeal is correct, we shall go directly to that point.

The bill of complaint in considerable detail charged that all nine of the defendants were joint adventurers in the ownership, control and operation of a business for the sale of intoxicating liquors, under the trade name of L. N. and Kenneth Muse; that their business is located at the designated places in Rankin County and in the City of Jackson; and that the defendants purchased federal occupational retail and wholesale liquor dealers permits. Attached to the bill was a photostatic copy of a tax return made by Kenneth Muse as partner to the Internal Revenue Service of the U. S. Treasury Department. This exhibit reflected 282 sales in Hinds, Madison and Rankin Counties for the month in question and for which this suit is brought, January 1954. So the bill asked for the assessment of penalties under Code Section 2639 of $500 for each of the sales, to be recovered by Complainant for the benefit of the state, the Counties of Hinds, Rankin and Madison, and the Cities of Jackson and Canton. The prayer of the bill did not ask that the places of business be abated as nuisances.

The defendants filed motions to strike Exhibit A, the federal tax return. The motions were overruled, but it *62 is -unnecessary to consider them in view of the disposition of this case. Before defendants had filed any answers to the bill of complaint, they presented to the chancery court motions for a rule of court, which averred that this was a suit for penalties and forfeitures, and under Code Section 1291 defendants in chancery are required to answer fully all of the allegations of the bill; and that under Code Section 2630 defendants could not be required to answer any averments of fact in the bill which would tend to incriminate them, unless they were thereby given immunity from liability from the penalties and forfeitures sued for in this action. Hence defendants in this motion asked: ‘ ‘. . . the Court for a rule as to whether, in view of the above mentioned provisions of the statutes and Constitution of the State of Mississippi, they are:

“(a) Required to answer any averment of fact contained in said bill as to which the answer would tend to incriminate them, or subject them to a penalty or forfeiture.
“ (b) If they be so required to answer as to any such averment of fact, whether they thereby become entitled to immunity from the penalties and forfeitures sought by this suit.”

The court overruled these motions. It required defendants to answer the bill fully, and stated that the only immunity to which they would be entitled would be an immunity from criminal prosecution, but no immunity as to the penalties and fines sued for. The decree stated:

“1. The answer of said defendants and each of them shall, in all respects be as is required in respect to answers in the Chancery Court, as provided by Section 1291, Code of 1942.
“2. By so answering as hereinabove provided, if information which may be self incriminating is disclosed the immunity of the defendants and each of them shall be limited to prosecution under the criminal laws of the State of Mississippi. ’ ’

*63 Following this mandate by the chancery court, the defendants Kenneth and L. Ñ. Muse, and J. J. Hinton, filed answers in which they denied that they were joint adventurers. The Muses admitted that they were partners engaged in a business for the sale of intoxicating liquors, admitted that they had purchased the federal permits, described their method of operation, admitted that Exhibit A, the federal tax return was a correct copy of their return, and admitted that they had failed to pay the $500 penalties. J. J. Hinton’s answer denied that he was a joint adventurer with the Muses, but contained admissions similar to those in the answer of Kenneth and L. N. Muse.

The answer of the other two male defendants against whom the final decree was rendered, Q. E. and Glenn Hinton, denied that they were joint adventurers with the other defendants. Q. E. Hinton, however, admitted that he was an employee of J. J. Hinton and of the Muses on a part-time basis, in an illegal liquor business. Glenn Hinton admitted that he is an employee of L. N. and Kenneth Muse in a similar business. The four women defendants, Mrs. Kenneth and Mrs. L. N. Muse, Mrs. J. J. Hinton, and Mrs. J. L. Henderson in their answers denied that they were joint adventurers in such business with the other defendants, and denied that they had anything to do with such business. Complainant offered no evidence to support the charges of these sales in January 1954, other than the federal tax return of the Muses, Exhibit A to the bill, and some invoices from a Louisiana wholesaler. Complainant offered income tax returns, license tag receipts and other documentary evidence as circumstantial evidence of the existence of a joint adventure among all of the defendants. Complainant of course relied also upon the admissions of the five male defendants as set forth in their answers. The final decree rendered a judgment of $4,000 against Kenneth and L. N. Muse, and J. J., Q. E. and Glenn Hinton. The chan *64 cellor correctly found that the evidence was insufficient to show that the four women defendants were joint adventurers in this illegal business, and dismissed the bill as to them.

We need not consider alone the provisions of Mississippi Constitution, Section 26, which provides that: “In all criminal prosecutions the accused . . .

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Bluebook (online)
85 So. 2d 918, 227 Miss. 51, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-state-tax-collector-v-muse-miss-1956.