Boyd v. Randolph

16 S.W. 133, 91 Ky. 472, 1891 Ky. LEXIS 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 16, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 16 S.W. 133 (Boyd v. Randolph) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyd v. Randolph, 16 S.W. 133, 91 Ky. 472, 1891 Ky. LEXIS 75 (Ky. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

JUDGE PRYOR

delivered the opinion of the court.

These two cases involve the liability of two former sheriffs of Christian county, John Boyd and C. M. Brown, and their sureties, for taxes collected of delinquents, whose property had not been assessed or listed by the assessor, or in any other manner as required by law. The cases are similar, and have been considered as one.

The sheriffs, or their deputies, ascertaining that much property in the county had been omitted to [475]*475be listed for taxation, kept memorandum books of tliejr own, in which, they valued this property, collected the taxes, and failed to account for the amount to the Auditor, or in any settlement of their accounts. Boyd, it seems, trusted to his deputy, and in good faith believed that when his quietus was obtained that he had accounted for all the revenue collected either by himself or deputy.

The proceeding was had in the case under section 3, of chapter 93, General Statutes, providing: “That in all cases in which any sheriff or collector has collected revenue on property not listed by the assessor, and charged to him, and has failed to account for the. same, or has collected taxes from delinquents, and failed to account for the same, or in any other way failed to do his duty in regard to the revenue, it shall be the duty of the Auditor’s Agent to report the same to the county court of the county, which court shall issue a rule or summons against such sheriff or collector, and his sureties, requiring them to appear in ten days after service to show cause why judgment should not be rendered against them for the amount claimed to be due; and, upon hearing, if the court is satisfied that such sum, or any part thereof, or any other sums, have been collected and not accounted for, it shall render judgment therefor, with fifty per cent, damages and the costs of the proceedings, and execution shall issue thereon * * returnable in sixty days * *: Provided, That said sheriff, or collector, may pay same at once to the agent of the Auditor and save costs.”

The notice filed by the agent of the Auditor before [476]*476the county judge charged the sheriff with collecting these taxes on property not assessed ior several years, and it also appearing that for each year he gave on his bond different sureties, they were all united in one summons issued by the county judge, and cited, to show cause why a judgment should not be rendered for the taxes collected and unaccounted for, the amount collected being stated with as much accuracy as was possible under the circumstances. The amount, however, collected for each year was ascertained, and the sureties for that year were made liable for that amount and no more.

It is claimed that a separate summons should liave been issued in each instance, and the bond upon which the surety was sought to be made liable or its covenants set forth. The sureties and the sheriffs, or their deputies, were all brought before the court by the summons, and being in court, and knowing the nature of the charges made by both the summons and the report of the agent of the State upon which the summons was based, it seems to us no greater accuracy should have been required. The amount of the revenue collected, or how much, and to what extent, on this property that had never been listed, the county judge did not know, and could not ascertain without recourse to the books of the sheriff in which he had made the entries, or by summoning every tax-payer in the county. When brought before the court, the amount was not only ascertained, but agreed on by the parties. This summons, or the notice upon which it issued, was not required to set forth the nature of the claim with such averments as [477]*477would be necessary in a petition on the bond; but, on the contrary, the court was investigating the charge with- a view' of ascertaining whether any revenue had been collected and unaccounted for, and if so, how much, and in what year collected, and which of the sureties were liable. It may have been more regular /to have issued a separate summons against the sureties . for each year, but a summons against all brought them before the court where the claims.could be settled, and this is authorized by the section of the statute under which the judgment was rendered. The county judge rendered a judgment for the amounts collected during each year against the sureties for that year, and fifty per cent., the damages authorized by the statute, and disallowed the claim of the sheriff for listing and collecting the taxes. The case was appealed to the circuit court, and there heard de novo, and a like judgment rendered. The appeal was properly heard, and required no bill of exceptions, and the circuit judge rendering a judgment in favor of the Commonwealth of Kentucky instead of the Auditor, cured any defect in that part of the proceeding below.

It is insisted that this remedy, provided by section 3 of the Auditor’s Agent act, was repealed by the act of May 17, 1886, title “Revenue and Taxation,” under which the Auditor, where the sheriff, or any other collecting’ officer, fails to account for the revenue, may proceed against him by motion in the Franklin Circuit Court, or any other having jurisdiction, to obtain judgment. The fifth section of that act provides that “all other acts, general and special, and parts of acts, inconsistent herewith, or not in con-[478]*478fortuity herewith, are hereby■ repealed.” There is no penalty annexed to the provision giving to the Auditor this right to proceed in the Franklin Circuit Court, except interest at the rate of ten per cent., or if there is, the act is not inconsistent with the Auditor’s Agent act under which this proceeding was had In the first place the Auditor'has no means of ascertaining that any defalcation has been made in a case like this. With the tax-books in his office, when the sheriff fails to account, he can readily ascertain and know what is owing, and there is no necessity for resorting to the aid of an agent to find out what is due the State, and this being the case, he can proceed, and such is the proper remedy, in the courts designated by the general revenue law, that is, the Franklin court, or any other court having jurisdiction. The case presented is where neither the tax-books, or any report made by the sheriff, or settlement, shows that the sheriff has revenue in his hands belonging to the State; and the act under which this proceeding is had was enacted for the very purpose of affording the means and the remedy for collecting by the State this unpaid revenue ; and whether the sheriff has his quietus or not, this settlement upon which the quietus is based applies only to the amount of revenue accounted for to the Auditor, and not to that part of the revenue collected and retained by the sheriff, and of which the Auditor can have no means of information, except by an investigation made by an agent, whose duty it is to proceed to collect it if unaccounted for.

Besides, the very act under which the repeal is claimed provides that the Auditor may proceed in [479]*479any court having jurisdiction, and the county court being invested with the power to render the judgment by this statute, still retains it in a case like the one before us. It is a distinct remedy for official misconduct of a particular character, for the recovery of the revenue and damages for its detention. It is no effort to correct a mistake made by the sheriff.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fuson v. Stewart
126 S.W. 1097 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1910)
Belknap v. Commonwealth
85 S.W. 693 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1905)
State v. . Capps
46 S.E. 730 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1904)
Commonwealth v. Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States
38 S.W. 491 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 S.W. 133, 91 Ky. 472, 1891 Ky. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-v-randolph-kyctapp-1891.