Clay County v. Hogan

111 So. 373, 145 Miss. 857, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 162
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1927
DocketNo. 26273.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 111 So. 373 (Clay County v. Hogan) 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
Clay County v. Hogan, 111 So. 373, 145 Miss. 857, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 162 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

ANdeksoN, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellees, F. L. Hogan and B. M. Walker, a partnership using'the trade-name of West Point Oil Mill, brought *861 tills action in the circuit court of Clay county against appellant, Clay comity, to recover the sum of nine hundred sixty-two dollars and six cents, taxes for 1925 paid to the tax collector of said county under compulsion and protest, and recovered judgment for the amount sued for. From this judgment appellant prosecutes this appeal.

The case was tried before the court • sitting as judge and jury, upon agreed facts, which facts were embodied in a written agreement as follows (leaving out the formal parts and the names of the parties signed thereto):

“It is agreed by and between plaintiffs and defendant in the above-styled cause:
“That plaintiffs on the 30ch day of January, 1926, •paid to Dave Cottrell, sheriff and tax collector of Clay county, Miss., the sum of nine hundred sixty-two dollars and six cents for taxes assessed by the board of supervisors of Clay county, Miss., upon forty-seven thousand five hundred eleven dollars and eight cents of cottonseed, the property of plaintiffs. That said cottonseed were all grown in the state of Mississippi during the year 1924 and harvested during the months of September to December, 1924, and January, 1925, and that said forty-seven thousand five hundred eleven dollars and eight cents of cottonseed were owned by the plaintiffs and were all of the merchandise and stock owned by the plaintiffs on the 1st day of February, 1925, except two thousand four hundred eighty-eight dollars and ninety-two cents of cottonseed grown in the state of Alabama, and of merchandise and stock. That the total amount of merchandise and stock owned by plaintiffs on the 1st day of February, 1925, including said forty-seven thousand five hundred eleven dollars and eight cents of cottonseed grown in the state of Mississippi, and said two thousand four hundred eighty-eight dollars and ninety-two cents of cottonseed grown in the state of Alabama, and said merchandise and stock owned by plaintiffs on the 1st day of February, 1925, amounted to fifty thousand dollars, That said fifty thousand dollars of cottonseed, *862 merchandise, and stock was the maximum amount of cottonseed, merchandise, and stock owned by the plaintiffs during the year 1925. That plaintiffs owned no cottonseed during the year 1925 grown in the state of Alabama other than those included in said sum of two thousand four hundred eighty-eight dollars and ninety-two cents above referred to.
“That said assessment of the board of supervisors of Clay county, Miss., on said sum of forty-seven thousand five hundred eleven dollars and eight cents of cottonseed grown in the state of Mississippi for the year 1925, was as follows, to-wit: one hundred ninety dollars and four cents paid under county fund levy of four mills; one hundred ninety dollars and four cents paid under bridge fund levy of four mills; twenty-three dollars and sev^ enty-five cents paid under refunding bonds and interest and sinking fund levy of one-half mill; forty-seven dollars and fifty-one cents paid under county road bonds, interest and sinking fund levy of one mill; forty-seven dollars and fifty-one cents paid under county highway, interest and sinking fund levy of one mill; thirty-five dollars and sixty-two cents paid under general road fund levy of three-fourths mill; ninety-five dollars and two cents paid under agricultural high school levy of two mills; one hundred forty-two dollars and fifty-three cents paid under district No. 2 good roads levy of three mills; ninety-five dollars and two cents paid under district No, 2 road bonds, interest and sinking fund levy of two mills; ninety-five dollars and two cents paid under district No. 2 dirt road levy of two mills. That same appears in Minute Book 10, p. 234 of the minutes of said board. That said payment of nine hundred sixty-two dollars and six cents by plaintiffs to Dave Cottrell, sheriff and tax collector of Clay county, Miss., for taxes on said forty-seven thousand five hundred dollars and eight cents of cottonseed grown in the state of Mississippi was made by plaintiffs to said sheriff and tax collector under compulsion and for the sole purpose of avoiding the seizure *863 and sale of tlie property of said plaintiffs, assessment of penalties and payment of costs. -That said payment of nine hundred sixty-two dollars and six cents to said Dave Cottrell, sheriff and tax collector, was made by plaintiffs under a written protest, a copy of which is attached to the declaration of plaintiffs in said cause and marked Exhibit A. thereto. That said payment of nine hundred sixty-two dollars and six cents was made by check No. 232 of the West Point Oil Mill, and said written protest was attached to said check. That said check was in the sum of one thousand three hundred forty-one dollars and eighty-six cents and included the sum of three hundred seventy-nine dollars and eighty cents paid to the sheriff and tax collector of Clay county, Miss., under state levies of eight mills, in addition to said sum of nine hundred sixty-two dollars and six cents for the ’evies heretofore set out. That the entire payment of one thousand three hundred forty-one dollars and eighty-six cents, including said sums of nine hundred sixty-two dollars and six cents and three hundred seventy-nine dollars and eighty cents was paid under said written protest attached as Exhibit A to the declaration of the plaintiffs in said cause.
“That the plaintiffs on the 1st day of March, 1926, filed their claim for the alleged indebtedness of nine hundred sixty-two dollars and six cents of the defendant to the plaintiffs for said taxes paid under protest, !,as aforesaid, with the board of supervisors of Clay county, Miss., for allowance and payment by said board according to law. That a copy of said claim as so filed, with exhibits thereto, is attached to the declaration of plaintiffs in said cause marked Exhibit D. That said claim' was duly and legally presented to the board of supervisors of Clay county, Miss., was heard and considered by said board on the 4th day of March, 1926, and the board of supervisors of Clay county, Miss., by an order duly and legally adopted on the said date, rejected said claim and refused to allow said claim; that a copy of said *864 order as so passed by the board of supervisors of Clay county, Miss., and as it appears in Minute Book 10, at page 302 of the minutes of said board of supervisors of Clay county, Miss., is attached to the declaration of plaintiff in said cause marked Exhibit E. That the original tax receipts issued by the sheriff of Clay county, Miss., to the plaintiffs for said payment of one thousand three hundred forty-one dollars and eighty-six cents, including said sums of nine hundred sixty-two dollars and six cents and three hundred seventy-nine dollars and eighty - cents, under written protest are attached as Exhibits B and C to the declaration of plaintiffs in said cause.

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

Related

City of Richmond v. Richmond Dairy Co.
157 S.E. 728 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 So. 373, 145 Miss. 857, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clay-county-v-hogan-miss-1927.