Connolle v. City of New Orleans

149 So. 122, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1874
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1933
DocketNo. 14412.
StatusPublished

This text of 149 So. 122 (Connolle v. City of New Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connolle v. City of New Orleans, 149 So. 122, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1874 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Plaintiffs are the owners of a large number of pieces of real estate in the city of New Orleans.

They allege that Mr. and Mrs. Walter P. Connolle, for and on behalf of themselves as well as on behalf of the other two plaintiffs, paid to the city the taxes due on the said properties for the year 1932, and that there were delivered to them temporary receipts for the said payments, but that later the city claimed that in making said payments Mr. and Mrs. Connolle had made an error -to the extent of $400, and that the clerk who made the said collection had himself fallen into errot in counting the cash which had been received, and had, on discovering the alleged error, prevailed upon Mr. and Mrs. Connolle to surrender the said receipts, and that the said receipts are therefore now in the possession of the city.

Asserting that there was in fact no error, that the city has no right.to retain the said receipts, and that they have paid all said taxes in full, plaintiffs seek, by mandamus, to compel the city to deliver to them the said receipts.

In the district court the writ of mandamus was made peremptory, and the city was ordered to deliver to plaintiffs the said receipts. From that judgment the city of Now Orleans has appealed.

The question presented is solely one of fact. Mr. and Mrs. Connolle claim that they handed to the clerk in the tax office the sum of $1,800 in cash, while the contention of the city is that the amount was only $1,400.

The taxes due amounted to $1,640.56, and when plaintiffs,-Mr. and Mrs. Connolle, called at the clerk’s window to ascertain how much was due, the clerk took the various warrants, there being more than thirty, and added the amounts on an adding machine. He stated that thereupon he showed to Mr. Connolle the adding machine slip which showed a total of $1,640.56, and that thereafter the said Connolle spoke to Mrs. Connolle, who was nearby, and obtained from her a large amount of currency, which he (the said Con-nolle) then handed to the said clerk. The clerk states that he then counted the money, and, believing that the amount was $1,800 gave to Connolle change in the sum of $159.44. He says that when he had given to Connolle the said change and had handed him the receipts Mr. and Mrs. Connolle left the tax office, and that immediately thereafter he realized that he had made a mistake to the extent of $400, and that leaving his cage in the custody of two other clerks, he ran after and overtook the Connolles a few squares away.

He persuaded them to return with him to the tax office and there told them that he had made a mistake.

Plaintiffs maintain that there was no mistake; that the said clerk was given $1,800 and not $1,400, as he asserts, and they declare that when' the cash was given to the said clerk it had been counted twice carefully and was then counted again by the clerk.

The evidence shows to our satisfaction that when Mr. and Mrs. Connolle returned with the clerk and were told that an error had been made they denied that there had been an error, but refused to discuss the matter or, to give any information as to the amount which they had with them when they came into the office, or the various amounts which they had paid out there or elsewhere, and particularly refused to state how much remained in their possession.

We are also well convinced that on the next day, when Mr. and Mrs. Connolle, at the request of the officials in the tax office, returned to adjust the matter, they again refused to discuss the details referred to, and, in fact, did not do so until some time later, when they again returned with their attorney. It is most damaging to plaintiffs’ case that Mr. and Mrs. Connolle were -unwilling to give freely the information in regard to the sum of money which they had in their possession when they arrived at the city hall and that they also refused to state how much was in their possession after they had completed the transaction in question, because it is quite evident that, had they done so, a simple deduction of the amounts expended from the sum originally in their possession would have shown how much should, have remained. Furthermore, it is most remarkable that they left the tax office that evening before having the matter adjusted, and that, although they knew that there was a possibility of their having to pay a further sum of $400, they made no effort at adjustment and, without serious protest, left in the possession of the officials of the tax office the receipts which they now claim plaintiffs are entitled to.

Nor can we lose sight of the fact that they refused to discuss the matter when, on the night of the happening, Mr. and Mrs. Con-nolle were visited at their home by one of the clerks of the tax office who by chance was acquainted with them, and who called on them in the hope that he could, by discussing with them their various transactions, persuade them that they had made a mistake and had actually paid $400 less than they thought they had.

Another damaging fact is that later, when they gave the information which the tax officials had for some time been endeavoring to obtain, that information when analyzed showed that, when the entire transaction was over, according to their own figures, they had in *124 their possession nearly $400 more than they should have had.

Still another circumstance which we have been unable to eliminate from our consideration is that when they first arrived at the city hall they brought with them, if their own figures are correct, nearly $500 more than they expected to need for the various taxes which they intended to pay. They conducted the entire transaction in cash. Nearly $2,700 in currency was carried with Mr. and Mrs. Connolle, although* they needed less than $2,-300, and, even conceding that they thought it advisable to have a little more than necessary so that any small additions to the tax bills might be taken care of, it was very evident to them that they would not need more than twenty-thi-ee or twenty-four hundred dollars at most.

The record convinces us that the clerk discovered the error within a very few moments after the departure of the Connolles, and that he at once ran after them, and that they are mistaken in their statement that they remained for nearly a half hour, and we are also convinced that upon the return of the clerk the cash was checked by one of the officials, and that there was found at least $400 less than there should have been.

The clerk explains to our complete understanding how he made the error and how he immediately realized that he had done so. He states that the money was given him in ten and in twenty dollar bills, and that when he had completed the counting of the ten dollar bills of which there were one hundred he started to count the twenty dollar bills, of which there were twenty, and that as he started to count the twenties “Instead of counting one, two thfee, I counted two, four, six, eight until I had forty; then I doubled it again, which would have made $800.00.” In other words, he stated that when he started to count he counted each twenty as two tens and then, after he had completed the count of the twenties, forgot that he had counted each one as two and then doubled the count again. The human mind is not susceptible of mechanical accuracy and oftentimes makes just such mistakes. Likewise the human mind often makes just such a mistake and then instinctively realizes the mistake.

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149 So. 122, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1874, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connolle-v-city-of-new-orleans-lactapp-1933.