Cox v. Hill

73 Tenn. 146
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 73 Tenn. 146 (Cox v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cox v. Hill, 73 Tenn. 146 (Tenn. 1880).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[147]*147J. A. Branscom was the revenue collector of the -county of Washington from 1868 to 1873 inclusive, and became a ■ defaulter both to the State and county. "The complainants, Cox and Spurgin, were his sureties on each set of bonds for the years 1872 and 1873. The original, amended and supplemental bills were filed to enjoin suits at law commenced by motion by the ■county of Washington against Branscom and his sureties on the bonds for these years, and to recover an alleged overpayment made by their principal to the •county, and an alleged payment of State taxes to the county, with a view to have the recovery applied to the exoneration of the complainants as sureties on the bonds made to secure the State revenue. Without ■any adjudication of the rights of the parties, a reference was made to the master to ascertain and report the amount of county taxes for the years in controversy, and the collections and payments made thereon, and also whether any and what amount of the State taxes for those years was collected and paid to the county. Prom the report made in compliance with this order, after making some modifications on exceptions filed, the- chancellor — and again without any adjudication of rights except by implication — concluded that the county had been overpaid $7,820.49, and gave complainants a decree for this amount, the money, when collected, to be applied to the satisfaction of the taxes due the State.

Branscom, it appears, had a settlement as revenue -collector with the chairman of the county court of Washington county at the end of each year during [148]*148■which he continued in office, except the year 1871. At these settlements, the balances invariably found against him were carried over to his debit at the next settlement. "When the settlement was made on the 31st of December, 1872, for that and the preceding year, the balance brought over from the settlement of the 31st of December, 1870, was $15,627.66, and the balance of debit then found was $24,698.82. At the next settlement, on the 31st of December, 1873, when the account was commenced with this large debit, the balance was reduced to $22,833.64. On the 31st of December, 1874, when the last settlement ¡was made, the balance was still further reduced to $11,804.59, to which the chairman of the county court added $1,583.46 (being, he says, ten per cent, on $15,834.62, the amount uncollectedi May 16, 1874), making the entire indebtedness $13,388.05. It was for this last sum that the motion was proposed to be made at the April term, 1875. At the instance of complainants, the trial of the motion was postponed by the county until the next term, in consideration of $2,786.87 paid by Branscom and complainants, and their promise to apply future collections of taxes as fast as made to the liquidation of the gross indebtedness. Deducting the amount thus paid from the actual sum due as previously found, there will remain, as the entire debt of Branscom, $9,017.72, or, with the ten per cent, penalty added, $10,601.18. And if the payments made are first applied to the taxes of the last three years, there would be no penalty for the period during which the complainants were sureties. [149]*149This result is attained by taking the settlements with the chairman of the county court as correct, and they are not sought to be impeached by the county, and deducting the subsequent payments about which there is no contest.

It will thus be seen that, at the filing of the original bill in October, 1875, the actual defalcation of Branscom for the six years during which he had been in office had been reduced to $9,017.72. The balance found against him on the 31st of December, 1870, and carried forward into the subsequent settlements, was $15,627.66. ITis payments and those of ■complainants had, therefore, been sufficient to pay offi the liabilities for the years 1871, 1872 and 1873, and $6,609.94 of his pre-existing debt. Prima facie, his defalcations were .in the years 1868, 1869 and 1870, and must fall upon the sureties for those years, not •on the sureties for 1872 and 1873. • No doubt it might have been shown by proof that of the payments made after the 31st of December, 1870, more than the sum of $6,609.74 was paid out of the taxes of the previous years subsequently collected, or out of Branscom-’s individual means. In the former case, the county might well insist that the taxes thus collected should be applied to the satisfaction of the liabilities of those years. In the latter case, the doctrine of the application of payments to the oldest items of a running account might apply, in the absence of any direction by the debtor. But there is no such proof. On the contrary, the evidence shows that the greater part of the taxes for 1872 and 1873 were collected, [150]*150and Branscom testifies that he paid to the county trustee all the taxes collected by him for those years, or paid to him by his deputies. There is not the least warrant in the record for the suggestion, nor has it been so argued, that more than $6,609.75, or even, anything like that amount, had been collected from, the taxes assessed before 1871, and paid to the county; The complainants, as sureties on the bonds of 1872 and 1873, are clearly entitled to have so much of the-taxes of 1872 and 1873 as were actually collected and paid to the -county by their principal applied in satisfaction of their liabilities for those years. The direct evidence, as well as the circumstantial evidence-touching the pecuniary condition of Branscom and the pressure upon him during the last years of his official tenure, leaves no reasonable doubt that the collections, of the taxes for the years 1872 and 1873 were paid to the county. In that view, complainants are entitled to the benefit of such payments, as well as to a credit for any collections of those taxes made under the authority of the county since the removal of' Branscom from the office of revenue collector. They are also entitled to a credit for any part of the payment of $2,786.87 in 1875 which was advanced by the complainants, and not reimbursed to them by collection of the taxes for other years than the years 1872 and 1873. Strictly speaking, there should be a decree declaring the rights of the parties, and refer - ing it to the master to take the proper accounts upon the principles settled. If, however, the county of1 Washington is satisfied that, upon the basis of the [151]*151settlements of the chairman of the county court, the report made by the master below, and the proof in the record, the credits to which the complainants would be entitled on the liabilities of 1872 and 1873 would' exceed those liabilities, the complainants may take a decree for the perpetual injunction of the suits on the bonds of these years, with the costs of the court below.

The complainants insist, however, that they are further entitled to a recovery from the county of the excess of the payments made by them and their principal over the liabilities on the bonds of 1872 and 1873. ’ The only payments made by the complainants to the' county consist of $2,206.37, part of the sum of $2,786.87 paid in consideration of the continuance of the motion made at the April term, 1875. Leaving that sum out of consideration for the moment, all the other payments were made by Branscom. He testifies that he made them out of the collections of taxes received by him or his deputies.

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73 Tenn. 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-hill-tenn-1880.