Commonwealth v. Helm

173 S.W. 389, 163 Ky. 69, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 23, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 173 S.W. 389 (Commonwealth v. Helm) 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
Commonwealth v. Helm, 173 S.W. 389, 163 Ky. 69, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 207 (Ky. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll.

Affirming.

This proceeding is an attempt by the Auditor of the State to vacate a judgment of the Hardin County Court assessing the appellee, Helm, with omitted property. [71]*71The case presents some rather novel features and comes up in this way: The record shows that in November, 1913, T. W. Hart, sheriff of Hardin County, filed a petition in the Hardin County Court in the name of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, by Hart, Sheriff of Hardin County, against John L. Helm, in which he set up that Helm was a resident of Hardin County for the years 1908-1912, inclusive, and that he was in each of those years the owner of “notes, cash in banks, bonds., stocks in foreign corporations and other credits of the fair cash value of thirty thousand dollars, ’ ’ all of which it was alleged was omitted from assessment for each of said years. He asked that the property be assessed for taxes for the years mentioned and that Helm be required to pay the taxes thereon, together with the penalty. It appears that summons, on this petition issued against Helm and at a term of the Hardin County Court held on November 17, 1913, the following judgment was entered:

“Came parties and announced ready for trial, and it appearing to the court that a former proceeding was had against the defendant, John L. Helm, to assess his alleged omitted property as. of September 1st, 1908 and 1909, for the taxes for the years 1909' and 1910, and that a judgment was entered in said proceeding, it is adjudged that said proceeding is a bar to so much of this proceeding as attempts to assess said property as of said dates. It is further agreed that on September 1st of each of the years 1910, 1911 and 1912, the defendant, John L. Helm, was the owner of stocks in foreign corporations, notes, bonds, cash and cash on deposit in bank, and other credits of the fair cash value of ten thousand dollars, that were not assessed for taxation, and same were at said time subject to assessment for taxation in Hardin county, Kentucky, and that said Helm was a resident of Hardin County, Kentucky. It is. adjudged by the court that defendant’s said omitted property be and it is assessed at ten thousand dollars, as of September 1st of each of the years 1910, 1911 and 1912, and it is ordered that said assessment be certified to the proper officer for collection of the taxes thereon.
“It is further adjudged that the defendant pay to T. W. Hart, sheriff of Hardin County, the penalty of 20% of the amount of said taxes, and that he pay the cost of this proceeding. John W. Boyd, county attorney of Hardin County, appeared in open court in per[72]*72son and consented to this judgment, and also filed his written consent thereto, and he is allowed 15% of the taxes herein assessed and collected.”

On December 4,1913, a petition styled Commonwealth of Kentucky, by T. "W. Hart, sheriff of Piar din County, against John L. Helm, was filed in the Hardin 'County Court. The body of this petition reads in part:

“Now comes the plaintiff, Commonwealth of Kentucky, by Henry M. Bosworth, Auditor of Public Accounts of the State of Kentucky, and files, and makes this his motion in his official capacity to vacate the judgment entered in this, proceeding, and to dismiss the statement filed by T. W. Hart, sheriff of Hardin County, and for grounds therefor charges and alleges that on the 4th day of November, 1913, T. W. Hart, sheriff of Hardin County, filed in the Hardin County Court a statement against the defendant, John L. Helm, alleging that the said Helm * * *." Then follows a statement of the petition of Hart referred to. The petition then proceeds to aver that “no answer was filed by the defendant, but on November 17, 1913, a judgment was entered” — setting out the judgment. It was then averred that the defendant “had actual knowledge that a proceeding’ was about to be instituted under Section 2, Chapter .116, of the Acts of 1912, to assess him with 3,322 shares of United States Steel of the value of $80 per share, and 300 shares of the preferred stock of said company of the value of $110 per share, and having knowledge thereof procured T. W. Hart, who had no knowledge of his ownership of said property, to institute this proceeding against him, and the said suit in its filing and the entry of the said judgment herein was a fraud as against the Commonwealth of Kentucky and Hardin. County, and the defendant could not have procured the entry of said judgment had the.sheriff of the county and the county attorney actually have known of defendant’s ownership of said property; and the said defendant caused this suit to be instituted and judgment by confession to be entered therein to bar the Commonwealth in a proceeding to have his stocks, cash and bonds assessed against him.”

Then follow averments setting out specifically the character and value of the bonds and stocks owned by Helm at the assessing period in the years 1909-1912, and which it was averred he omitted from assessment. The [73]*73prayer of the petition was that the judgment of the Hardin County Court in the proceeding instituted by Hart be vacated.

To this petition a special demurrer was filed by Helm upon the grounds that Bosworth as Auditor had no authority to file the suit, which motion was sustained and the petition dismissed.

The record further shows that on January 9, 1914, there was filed in the Hardin Circuit Court, under the style of “Commonwealth of Kentucky, by &c., v. John L. Helm,” a transcript of the orders of the county court, which transcript included all of the foregoing matter. When the appeal came up' for hearing in the circuit court Helm again filed a special demurrer, which was sustained, and the proceeding was dismissed, to which order, it appears, Bosworth as Auditor excepted and prayed an appeal to this court.

The statement filed with the record in this court shows that, Hart refusing to take the appeal to the circuit court, Bosworth as Auditor prosecuted an appeal from the county court to the circuit court, and from the circuit court to this court.

The first question arising is, can a proceeding like this be brought in the name of the Commonwealth without a relator, and if it cannot, and a relator is necessary, can it be brought in the name of the Commonwealth on the relation of the Auditor of the State? If, in proceedings like this, the Commonwealth can proceed only on the relation of some authorized person and the Auditor is not such an authorized person, then this is an end to the matter and the judgment should be affirmed.

We state it in this way because the record shows that all the proceedings in the county court and the circuit court, as well as in this court, subsequent to the proceeding’ by Hart, sheriff, and the judgment therein, were made and taken in the name of the 'Commonwealth by Bosworth as Auditor. It does not appear that the county attorney of Hardin County or the sheriff of that county or any revenue agent was a party to any of these proceedings.

. This view of the question also makes it unnecessary to consider the right of appeal by the Auditor from the county court judgment in the suit of Hart, further than to say that that judgment was a consent or compromise judgment agreed to by parties who had the right to do [74]*74so under Section 4260b of the Kentucky Statutes, and, being an agreed judgment, neither of the parties to it nor any one else could prosecute an appeal from it. Duncan v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 S.W. 389, 163 Ky. 69, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-helm-kyctapp-1915.