Fields v. Town of Whitesburg

243 S.W. 930, 195 Ky. 688, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 396
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 6, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 243 S.W. 930 (Fields v. Town of Whitesburg) 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
Fields v. Town of Whitesburg, 243 S.W. 930, 195 Ky. 688, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 396 (Ky. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

By this action in equity tlie appellant, D. D. Fields, sought an injunction to restrain the appellees, Town of Whitesburg, a municipality of the sixth class, and B. T. Frazier, its town marshal, from collecting of appellant, [690]*690or by subjecting’ his property to its payment, a tax or taxes alleged to be due it for the year 1918, amounting to $34.30. Upon the hearing of the ease in the Letcher circuit court, the injunction was refused and the petition dismissed, which resulted in this appeal from the judgment entered in pursuance of those rulings. The taxes attempted to be enjoined were levied for the year 1918, and based on an assessment made as of September 15, 1917'. The grounds alleged in the petition for the injunc1ion prayed were: (1) That there was no valid assessment; (2) that the ordinance of the municipal board of trustees by which the tax was attempted to be levied was void.

The allegations of the petition'were traversed by the appellees’ answer, and those of the latter pleading controverted by the appellant’s reply, and upon the issues as thus made the parties took proof in the form of depositions, all of which were read and considered by the court before rendering judgment.

The appellant’s objection to the assessment is based, in part, on the claim that E. B. Hale, the assessor by whom it was made, was, when appointed assessor, a member of the board of trustees of Whitesburg, by which the appointment was made, and that he continued a member of the board of trustees while acting as assessor, which disqualified him to act in the latter capacity. It is true that neither the resignation from the board of trustees nor his taking of the oath of office as. assessor was shown by any record made by the board of trustees, whose clerk appears either to have neglected to make such record, or, if made, to have lost or mislaid it. But it was shown by the uncontradicted testimony of Hale and others then on or connected with the board of trustees, that he was appointed and duly qualified as assessor and that upon.and following his appointment as assessor he ceased to act as a member of the board of trustees and did not again do so, but continued from the date of his appointment as assessor to act as such and perform all the duties of that office, and in so doing duly assessed for taxation in 1917 all property in Whitesburg, including that’of appellant, upon which taxes were due and collectible in 1918. It was not proved, therefore, that Hale acted at the same time both as a member of the board of trustees and as assessor of Whitesburg.

We agree with counsel for appellees that the case of Springfield v. People’s Deposit Bank, 111 Ky. 105, cited [691]*691by counsel for appellant, throws no light upon the question of the validity of Hale’s appointment and work as assessor. In that case the board of trustees simply consented that one of its members should act as assessor while continuing to act as a member of the board, whereas in this case one of the members of the board upon being appointed or elected assessor by it immediately ceased to be, or act, as a member of the board and did not again do so, and continued to perform the duties of the office of assessor. Whether his appointment was made a matter of record or he took the oath of office as assessor is not material, if in fact he was appointed assessor by the board of trustees and performed the duties of the office; as in such a case, notwithstanding the informality of his title to the office, his act .of making an assessment, will be held valid as that of a de facto officer. In 37 Cyc. 984, it is said:

“In some states it is considered that the principles Avhich support the acts of de facto officers in general liave no applicability to de facto tax assessors. But the general rule is otherwise. Notwithstanding informality or irregularity in the title of the person acting as assessor, if he is in actual possession and administration of the office under color of an election or appointment, so as to be entitled to the character of an officer de facto, the assessment which he makes must be held valid and legal.”

Again, on page 979, same volume, it is said:

“It is generally held that where an assessor of taxes fails to take the oath required of him by the statute, or takes it in an informal or irregular manner, or before one not authorized to administer it, or fails to subscribe it or have it recorded or attached to the assessment roll, any such defect does not vitiate the assessment, for, if otherwise qualified, he is entitled to the character of an officer de facto, and as such his acts are binding. ’ ’

Touching Hale’s appointment to the office of assessor ■by the board of trustees, it is sufficient to say that the effect of his undisputed acceptance of it is thus declared by section 3744, Kentucky Statutes, which provides:

“The acceptance by one in office of another office, or employment incompatible with the one he holds, shall operate to vacate the first.”

In view of the facts referred to and cases above cited, we have no doubt of the legality of Hale’s appointment as assessor by the board of trustees of Whitesburg, as to [692]*692his authority to act as such officer, or of the validity of the assessment made by him of the property in Whites-burg for taxation for the year 1918.

It is also contended by the appellant that the assessment in question is invalid because not made at the precise time prescribed by section 3674, Kentucky Statutes, applicable to towns of the sixth class, which provides, in substance, that all property subject to taxation in towns of that class “shall be assessed as of the 15th day of September of each year,” the list to be made out by the assessor between the 15th of September and the 15th of November. Hale was appointed assessor in the fall of 1917 and after September 15th of that year. He did not, therefore, begin the work of assessing the taxable property in Whitesburg on September 15th or during that month, nor was it completed by November 15th, but it appears from the record that the assessment was completed by Hale before the beginning of the year 1918. It, however, was made as of September 15th, 1917, in the meaning of' the statute, supra, and must be so treated. It will be observed from a reading of the statute that it does not prohibit the making of the assessment at any other time than that fixed by the statute for doing it, therefore, if done later than between September 15 and November 15, it will still be valid and treated as made between those dates. If this were not true, even omitted property would escape taxation because not assessed in the year and within the time fixed by law for its assessment. This question was before us in Anderson v. City of Mayfield, 19 S. W. 598.' In that case, as in this, the assessment was attacked as invalid because made after the time prescribed by the statute, but in rejecting that contention, we said of the statute:

“Such provisions are not regarded as mandatory, in the absence of words importing that the required act shall not be done at any other time than that designated. No such negative words are contained in this chapter. A person should not be allowed to rely upon the mere nonfeasance of an officer when it is not important to that person, and thus escape the performance >of his own duty.

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Bluebook (online)
243 S.W. 930, 195 Ky. 688, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fields-v-town-of-whitesburg-kyctapp-1922.