Board of Commissioners v. Gregory

42 Ind. 32
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 42 Ind. 32 (Board of Commissioners v. Gregory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Commissioners v. Gregory, 42 Ind. 32 (Ind. 1873).

Opinion

Buskirk, J.

This was an action by the appellant against the appellee to recover back the sum of two hundred and eighty-two dollars and sixty cents, which it was alleged had been illegally demanded by the appellee, and wrongfully paid by the appellant, for printing the delinquent list of Warren county.

There was issue, trial by the court, a special finding of facts, with conclusions of law thereon, and exception to the conclusions of law by appellant.

The special finding of facts and the conclusions of law thereon are as follows: “In the autumn of 1870, the defendant, at the request of the auditor of the county, and according to statute, published the list of delinquent taxes of said county, filed his bill before the board of commissioners, and was allowed five hundred and sixty-five dollars and twenty cents, which sum was then paid him.for such services; that defendant performed the work of printing such delinquent list; that there were four hundred and seventy-one lines of descriptions on the duplicate, as furnished by the auditor to the printer; that the printer doubled his columns in his newspaper, and printed four hundred and seventy-one [33]*33lines, double-columned in the paper; that printed in single columns the four hundred and seventy-one lines would have made nine hundred and forty-two lines, and were equal to nine hundred and forty-two lines in the advertising column of a newspaper; that defendant charged according to the number of lines of description in a newspaper column, and not according to the number in the auditor’s duplicate; that the list was printed in smaller type than ordinary newspaper type, and smaller than defendant ordinarily used in his paper; that defendant’s bill, as presented, did not indicate the number of lines he claimed to have published.

“On these facts I find the defendant received no more than he was, entitled to, and therefore find for the defendant.

“ Jno. M. LaRue, Judge.”

The appellant has assigned for error that the court erred in its conclusions of law upon the facts found.

According to the facts as found, there were only four hundred and seventy-one lines of descriptions in the duplicate, as furnished by the auditor to the printer, but the printer doubled his columns in his newspaper, and printed four hundred and seventy-one lines double-columned in the paper, which, if printed in single columns, the four hundred and seventy-one lines would have made nine hundred and forty-two lines, and were equal to nine hundred and forty-two lines in the advertising column of the newspaper.

The real question is, whether the defendant was entitled to charge and receive pay for four hundred and seventy-one or nine hundred and forty-two lines of- tabular description, valuation, and taxes, the solution of which depends upon whether the number of lines was to be computed according to the list as made out by the auditor, or the number of columns as printed in the newspaper.

This involves a construction of sections 142 and 143 of the assessment law, as amended by the act of May 31st, i86r.

Such sections read as follows:

“Sec. 142. Between the first and fifteenth days of Decem[34]*34ber annually, the county auditor shall make out and record, in a book provided for that purpose, a list of all lands returned and remaining delinquent for taxes, describing such lands as the same áre described in such duplicate, and charging them with the amount of delinquent tax, with interest, and a penalty of ten per centum oh such taxes; also, with the taxes of the current year, and shall certify to the correctness thereof, with the date when the same is recorded, and sign the same officially.

Sec. 143. He shall cause a copy of such list to be immediately published, for four weeks successively, once in each week, in a newspaper having general circulation in his county (if any be printed therein), at a cost of not to exceed fifteen cents for each insertion of every line of tabular description, valuation and taxes, in such list, and in case the publisher of such newspaper should refuse to publish the same on the terms herein provided, it shall be the duty of the auditor to have said list printed in handbill form, on the best terms that can be had, three copies of which shall be posted up in public places in each township of his county, at least four weeks before the day of sale, to which shall be attached, and in like manner published, a notice that so much of said land as may be necessary to discharge the taxes, interest and charges thereon, or due from the owner thereof at the time of sale, will be sold at public auction at the court-house in such county, on the first Monday in February next, thereafter.” 3 Ind. Stat. 518.

It is maintained by the appellant, that the true construction of the above sections is, that in determining the number of lines of tabular description, valuation and taxes, reference is to be had only to the list as prepared by the auditor, and that the appellee was only entitled to chárge sixty cents for four insertions of such list as prepared by the auditor.

The appellee insists that a line of tabular description, valuation, and taxes in such list means a line across one column of the newspaper in ordinary type, and if a line in the auditor’s list runs across two columns of the newspaper [35]*35in ordinary type that it would make two lines of tabular description within the meaning of the above sections.

The court below was of the opinion that the construction contended for by the appellee was correct, and rendered judgment against the appellant.

We are required to determine whether the court below erred in its construction of the statute. It is quite obvious to us that the court erred in its construction of the statute in question. The language of the above sections seems to leave no room for doubt as to the true meaning thereof. By section 142 the auditor is required to make out a tabular list, and by section 143 he is required to have such list published, at a cost of not to exceed fifteen cents for each insertion of every line of tabular description, valuation and taxes, in such list. We have thus far construed the above sections as though they stood alone. An examination of other sections of the assessment law will greatly aid in arriving at the legislative intention.

By sec. 13, 1 G. & H. 87, the assessors of real estate are required to make their returns-in tabular form.

By secs. 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, and 80, of said act, the auditor’s duplicate is not only required to be in tabular form, but in lines of tabular descriptions, valuation, and taxes; and the delinquent list, as far as it goes, is but a copy or transcript of the auditor’s duplicate, and it is and must be notonly tabular in form, but must contain the lines of tabular description in conformity to the statute. It seems to us, therefore, that it must necessarily and unavoidably follow that when the legislature provided, that the printer should have fifteen cents for each insertion of every line of tabular description, valuation, and taxes in such list, it was intended that the computation should be made of the lines of tabular description as contained in the duplicate, and had no reference to the number of columns in the newspaper.

By section. 143, the printer is required, when the list is presented to him by the auditor, to determine whether he will print it for the price named. The auditor cannot leave such [36]

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Bluebook (online)
42 Ind. 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-commissioners-v-gregory-ind-1873.