Board of Sup'rs of Maricopa County v. Stanford

219 P.2d 769, 70 Ariz. 277, 1950 Ariz. LEXIS 224
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1950
Docket5297
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 219 P.2d 769 (Board of Sup'rs of Maricopa County v. Stanford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona 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 Sup'rs of Maricopa County v. Stanford, 219 P.2d 769, 70 Ariz. 277, 1950 Ariz. LEXIS 224 (Ark. 1950).

Opinion

DE CONCINI, Justice.

On or about September 15, 1949, William E. Stanford, Maricopa County Assessor, appellee herein, presented to the County Board of Supervisors a payroll claim in the sum of $1,689.50 and a claim for the payment of four cash registers in the sum of $8,680.20. The Board of Supervisors, hereinafter called the supervisors, refused to authorize payment of the above claim upon the ground and for the reason that sufficient funds were not present in the special fund set apart for the operation of the License Plate Department of the County Assessor’s office.

Appellee, William E. Stanford, hereinafter called the assessor, petitioned the trial court for a writ of mandamus against the supervisors compelling them to pay the above-mentioned claims. The trial court granted the writ as to the payroll claim but refused to order the payment of the claim for the four cash registers. The supervisors appeal from the order making the writ peremptory.

The facts and issues involved in this appeal are complicated and numerous and the best method of proceeding herein is to set out a brief history of the surrounding facts and circumstances leading up to the problem. The assessor maintains two offices in Phoenix. One office is located in the Maricopa County Court House. The other office, being known as the Automobile License Plate Department, the one with which we are here concerned is located at 1205 West Madison Street in Phoenix.

Each employee of the Auto Department is hired by the assessor with the approval of the County Board of Supervisors and is paid in the same manner as are the other county employees. These employees perform dual duties prescribed by statute. One set of duties is the registration of motor vehicles and the collection of registration fees and license plate fees. The other set of duties is concerned with the assessment and collection of the “lieu” tax imposed by constitutional amendment and by statute. As a practical matter these functions are intermingled and carried out almost simultaneously.

We deem it advisable to set out the particular statutes involved. The portion of the statute governing the collection of registration and license fees is section 66-201(f), A.C.A.1939, passed in 1937. “The assessor of each county is constituted an agent of the division for the performance of acts and duties delegated to him, and the offices maintained by such county assessors are constituted county offices of the division. Fifty cents (50^) of each original registration fee shall be remitted to the county treasurer of the county in which such registration fee is collected, and placed *280 in a special fund for the use of the assessor in carrying out the duties imposed upon him by this act. Claims against said fund shall be allowed and paid in the same manner as claims against the county are allowed and paid. The board of supervisors may order the transfer of all or any unexpended part of said fund received during a previous fiscal year into the fund for the maintenance and construction of county highways. All moneys received from the taxes herein imposed, except the portion retained for the assessor’s special fund, shall be immediately transferred by the collecting officer to the superintendent, and by him to the state treasurer, who shall credit the same to the state highway fund.”

In 1940, article 9, section 11 of the Arizona Constitution was amended in part to read as follows: “ * * * Beginning January 1, 1941, a license tax is hereby imposed on vehicles registered for operation upon the highways in Arizona, which license tax shall be in lieu of all ad valor-em property taxes on any vehicle subject to such license tax. Such license tax shall be collected annually by the registering officer at the time of application for and before registration of the vehicle each year and shall be (a) at a rate equal to the average ad valorem rate for all purposes in the several taxing districts of the state for the preceding year, but in no event to exceed a rate of four dollars on each one hundred dollars in value, and (b) during the first calendar year of the life of the vehicle upon a value equal to sixty per cent of the-manufacturer’s list price of such vehicle, and during each succeeding calendar year upon a value twenty-five per cent less than the value for the preceding calendar year.”' The tax provided for in the above amendment supersedes all other ad valorem tax on motor vehicles and is commonly known and will be hereafter referred to as the “lieu” tax.

Section 66-901, A.C.A.1939, passed by the legislature in 1941 to implement article 9,. section 11 of the Constitution, supra, provided for the distribution of the “lieu” taxes as 'follows: In a county -containing no-incorporated towns, 25% to the state general fund, 37%% to the -county general fund, 37%% to the Board of Supervisors for the benefit of certain school districts. In a county containing one or more-incorporated towns, 25% to state general fund, 25% to county, 25% to Board of Supervisors as above set out, 25% to the incorporated cities and towns in proportion to their population if there is more than one.

The License Plate Department has been operated as a unit separate and apart from the regular operation of the County Assessor’s office in Maricopa County for years. It has been supported solely out of revenues derived from the collection of the registration fees. Under section 66-201(f), supra, 50 cents of each registration fee is-for the use of the county assessor in carrying out the duties imposed upon him by that act. Laws 1937, Reg.Sess. Ch. 67. Up *281 to the date of bringing this action the 50-•cent fee has been sufficient to pay the entire expense of the License Plate Department, including collection and distribution •of “lieu” tax. From time to time the assessor would remit enough funds to the County Treasurer to pay for the operation •of the department. The treasurer would segregate these receipts in a special fund for use in honoring the warrants issued •on behalf of the License Plate Department.

In the 1949-1950 budget adopted by the supervisors $270,920 was budgeted for the •assessor’s office. This sum was broken ■down as follows: $205,920 for the expenses of the assessor proper, which was further itemized to wit, salaries, supplies, etc.; $65,000 for the license plate department. This last item was a lump sum anticipated ■expenditure, and a like sum of $65,000 was estimated as revenue from the operation of the department. The supervisors admit the foregoing, but deny that the $65,000 item was legally budgeted.

The evidence on the trial of this •case showed that the County Assessor deposited the county’s share of each registration fee (to wit, 50 cents), in a separate and private bank account. This practice is contrary to law and such conduct by the assessor must cease because section 66-201(f), supra, clearly and unequivocally provides as follows: “ * * * Fifty cents (50^) of each original registration fee shall be remitted to the county treasurer of the county in which such registration fee is collected, * * * Under this provision the assessor must immediately turn such revenue over to the county treasurer. The fund created by these 50-cent registration fees will hereafter be referred to as the “special fund.”

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Bluebook (online)
219 P.2d 769, 70 Ariz. 277, 1950 Ariz. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-suprs-of-maricopa-county-v-stanford-ariz-1950.