City of Louisville v. Becker

129 S.W. 311, 139 Ky. 17, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 4
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 17, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 129 S.W. 311 (City of Louisville v. Becker) 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
City of Louisville v. Becker, 129 S.W. 311, 139 Ky. 17, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 4 (Ky. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Settle

Reversing.

By this action in equity the appellee, Catherine C. Becker,, sought to recover taxes paid by her to the city of Louisville for the years 1907, 1908, and 1909, amounting in the aggregate to $308.46. It was alleged in the petition that the .taxes were assessed upon notes of which she is the owner, amounting to $6,000, and secured by liens upon real estate situated in the city of Louisville; that for more than five years next before the institution of the action she was a resident of Oldham county, and her notes were not, during the years for which they were assessed and [18]*18the taxes paid by her, either assessable or taxable in the city of Louisville. The appellant demurred to the petition; but the demurrer was overruled. It declined to plead further, and the circuit court thereupon entered judgment in appellee’s favor for the amount claimed in her petition, with interest. The case is now before this court on appeal from that judgment.

The written opinion of the learned special judge so tersely expressed his reasons for sustaining the demurrer that we here insert it: “The assessments complained of in the petition were void under section 2980, Ky. St. [Russell’s St. section 905], and Commonwealth v. Northwestern Life Insurance Company, 107 S. W. 233 (32 Ky. Law Rep. 796), for its situs was in Oldham county, and the payment of a void tax upon a void assessment does not give to the city any right to collect or withhold from the person paying the same the amount paid. Demurrer to petition overruled. ’ ’

The case of Commonwealth v. Northwestern Life Ins. Co., was not an action to recover taxes paid, but one to compel the insurance company, a nonresident, to list for taxation in the county of Jefferson, under section 4241, Ky. St., its notes and choses in action representing loans made by it, secured by mortgages on lands in this state, or by pledge of policies or other collateral owned by persons in this state. In deciding the single question presented, the court held that as the insurance company was a foreign corporation, and the statute did not fix the situs of its notes and choses in action in this state for the purpose of taxation, they were not taxable therein. It does not, therefore, appear to have been held in that case that “the payment of a void tax upon a void assessment [19]*19does not give to the city any right to collect or withhold from the person paying the same the amount paid.”.

So, the question decided in that case is only incidentally involved in the case at bar. It is admitted by the appellant city that appellee’s notes were not legally assessable or taxable in the city of Louisville, and that, if she had resisted the assessment or refused to pay the taxes, the court would have relieved her of paying them. She did not, however, pursue that course, but voluntarily, and in order to obtain the rebate allowed by law, paid the taxes before the city could enforce their payment or impose a penalty for their nonpayment, aqd now seeks to recover them back, upon the ground that they were paid under a mistake of law. In explanation of its alleged action in assessing appellee’s'property and receiving of her the taxes paid therein, the city’s' counsel says that she had previously been a resident of the city, and, as such, from year to year listed the same property for taxation and paid the taxes thereon, and that the city assessor, not being aware of her removal to Old-ham county, continued to assess her property, and the city tax collector to receive the taxes thereon, for the years complained of, believing her to be still a resident of the city and the taxes legally assessed and collectible. This explanation does not affect the legal status of the parties, for, after all is said, the question we are called on to decide is: Can one who has voluntarily and under a mistake of law paid an illegal tax, which the city has paid out and applied to the purposes for which it was assessed and collected, recover it? •

While this court has repeatedly held, as in Ray & Thornton v. Bank of Kentucky, 3 B. Mon. 514, 39 Am. [20]*20Dec. 479, that “whenever, hy a clear and palpable mistake of law essentially bearing upon and affecting the contract, money has been paid without' cause or consideration, which in law, honor, or good conscience was not due and payable, and which in honor or good conscience ought not to be retained, it was and ought to be recovered back,’? it has never committed itself to the doctrine that this rule should be invoked to compel the refunding to the taxpayer of taxes, which he, following an assessment by the assessing officer, had voluntarily paid to an officer of the law charged with the duty of collecting the taxes. Hesitancy in so applying the rule may well be indulged when it is considered that the duty to pay taxes does not arise out of contract, but out of an obligation resting upon every citizen to contribute to the support of the government tó which he owes allegiance. Moreover, taxes are assessed and collected for purposes of government, and while it is a hardship to a citizen to be refused repayment of tax, as in this case illegally collected of him, though voluntarily paid, it must be borne in mind, if the city is required to show on every such complaint its right to retain the tax received, it could never regard the voluntary payment of a tax as a thing settled, or know whether to apply such taxes as it may have collected to the discharge of its numerous obligations and municipal needs.

In view of what has been said as to the purposes of taxation, it can readily be seen that the principles applicable to transactions between individuals do not apply to an action by a taxpayer against the government for the recovery back of taxes paid voluntarily, though paid under -a mistake of law.

[21]*21It is apparent from the averments of appellee’s petition that the taxes for which she snes were voluntarily paid, and this fact bars the recovery sought. Cooley on Taxation, vol. 2, p. 1495, in stating the general rule, “that a tax or assessment voluntarily paid cannot be recovered back, the authorities generally agree,” gives the following reason for its -adoption: “The rule of law is a rule of sound public policy; also, it is a rule as well of good faith, and precludes the courts being occupied in undoing the arrangements of parties which they have voluntarily made, and into which they have not been drawn by fraud, or accident, or by any excusable ignorance of their legal rights and liabilities. All payments are supposed to be voluntary until the contrary is made to appear.” On page 1502 of the same volume an excellent definition of “compulsion” is given: “And it has been said in some cases that, when it is sought to recover back a payment as having been made under compulsion, it should be made to appear that payment was made to release either person or property from the power of the officer. And this may be said to express the general sense of the authorities.” Smith’s Modern Law of Municipal Corporations, vol. 1, section 244, defines “compulsion” as applied to a tax payment as follows: “It is, however, upon the whole well settled that the payment must be made under direct and immediate compulsion, and under such circumstances that the person called on to pay the tax can save himself or his property only by paying the illegal demand. The stringent application of this rule often results in hardship in individual cases; but, for the reasons already stated, the general beneficence of the rule is undoubted.” Baltimore v. Lefferman, 4 Grill (Md.) 425, 45 Am. Dec.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 S.W. 311, 139 Ky. 17, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-louisville-v-becker-kyctapp-1910.