Gully v. City of Biloxi

171 So. 698, 177 Miss. 782, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 148
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1937
DocketNo. 32498.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 171 So. 698 (Gully v. City of Biloxi) 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
Gully v. City of Biloxi, 171 So. 698, 177 Miss. 782, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 148 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

*789 Smith, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee exhibited an original bill in the court below against the appellant, the State Tax Collector, and the sureties on his official bond, by which it sought to recover, approximately, fourteen thousand dollars alleged to have been unlawfully paid by appellee to the Tax Collector as commissions on municipal taxes paid direct to appellee by the taxpayers without coercion so to do by the Tax Collector, and for the recovery of two other items which will hereinafter appear.

A demurrer to this bill was overruled, and an appeal was granted under section 14, Code of 1930.

The bill is too lengthy for a complete abstract thereof to be set forth, but its allegations, in substance, are as follows:

In 1934 the City owned land purchased by it at tax sales, the period for the redemption of which had expired; that the City executed quitclaim deeds thereto to several named persons, for stated considerations, on which the City paid the Tax Collector twenty per cent, commission; that the Tax Collector did not, in any way, coerce the making of these payments for the land, and could not legally have done so, “but your complainant *790 would show that when said sales were made, or redemption allowed by the City of Biloxi, that a receipt was issued for the amount of the consideration paid by the purchaser, and said receipt was unlawfully and illegally marked ‘Collected at the instance of the State Tax Collector.’ ”

In September, 1932, and 1933, the City purchased land at tax sales for the collection of taxes due to the City thereon. In 1934, before the period for the redemption of the land expired, the owners thereof paid the taxes due thereon to the City, receiving receipts therefor marked, “Collected at the instance of the State Tax Collector,” on which the city paid the State Tax Collector twenty per cent, commission, although no coercive steps had been taken by him for the collection of the taxes.

In September, 1933, land situated within the City was purchased by individuals at sales thereof for taxes due the City, “they bidding and paying at said tax sale an amount in excess of the taxes, cost and damages due at the time of said sale. . . . After said sale, and before the expiration of the redemption period, redemp-tions were made by the owners of said properties or persons lawfully interested therein . . .” and that “a substituted receipt was issued by the Tax Collector of the City of Biloxi to said person redeeming, and that same was unlawfully and illegally marked ‘Paid at the instance of the State Tax Collector,’ and that thereafter a commission of twenty per cent, on the amount paid by the said persons redeeming said properties was paid to the defendant, State Tax Collector,” although the payment of the taxes was in no way coerced by him.

On September 17, 1934, some of the lands in the City on .which the taxes were due were omitted from the sale then made for delinquent taxes, and were thereafter “by the Tax Collector of Biloxi listed in the tax sales record *791 with a notation that-‘taxes on same were to be collected by M. Adams, Deputy State Tax Collector.’ ”

In November, 1934, taxes on these lands were paid to the City, and “substituted receipts were issued showing a payment of said taxes as in the cases of the redemp-tions of the lands hereinabove referred to.’’ Twenty per cent, commission was paid by the City to the Tax Collec tor on the taxes so collected, although he had, in no way, coerced the payment thereof. In 1934, before the time for the sale of land for delinquent taxes, various persons paid the City the taxes due thereon, on which the City paid the Tax Collector twenty per cent, commission although he had, in no way, coerced the payment of said taxes.

In 1934 taxes were paid to the City on other land for the taxes of 1929 to 1933, which the municipal tax collector failed to sell therefor, and receipts were issued by the City, being marked ‘ ‘ Collected at the instance of the State Tax Collector,’’ who was paid by the City twenty per cent, commission thereon, although he had, in no way, coerced the payment of such taxes.

“In March, 1934, Myrant Adams, a Deputy State Tax Collector, mailed notices to delinquent tax payers of the City of Biloxi, and that the cost of typing said notices, having the forms printed, postage and stationery, amounted to the sum of $483.92, and that although the said cost and expense of sending out said notices, under the law, should have been borne by the State Tax Collector, that he unlawfully and illegally collected the same from the City of Biloxi. Complainant attaches hereto marked Exhibit L., a statement showing the cost of sending the said notices, the warrant number, the date of issuance in payment thereof, the person to whom said money was paid, the services rendered, and the amount of same; . . . included in said schedule is an item of $1.25 which shows the issuance of warrant No. 59,116, on March 25, 1934, to the Brown Printing Company, *792 which complainant avers was in payment of a rubber stamp bearing the legend ‘Collected at the instance of the State Tax Collector.’ ”

The hill of complaint then avers that in several instances, in some of which the Tax Collector was legally entitled to his commission, he was paid, in some, an amount in excess thereof, and in others he was paid twice therefor.

In order to obtain the data on which to institute this suit, the City incurred an expense of one thousand five hundred dollars for the audit of its books, for which a recovery is also sought.

The hill then alleges that, “in addition to the commissions which were unlawfully collected and retained by said State Tax Collector, as hereinabove set forth, and in addition to those which were lawfully paid, collected and retained by him, that numerous other payments were made to him by the City of Biloxi, the validity of which is doubtful to your complainant, and, in many instances, the reason for said payments, that is, what the same were for, is unknown to your complainant and to the City of Biloxi, although due demand has been made by the said City of defendant, State Tax Collector, or his lawful Deputy, for information relative to same. And your complainant would further show that, in other instances, commissions were paid to the said State Tax Collector for which commission had theretofore been deducted by the said State Tax Collector in his settlement with the City of Biloxi, or which had already been paid to the said State Tax Collector by the said City of Biloxi, and for all of which your complainant avers that it is entitled to a discovery as to why the said commissions were paid in cases where the same are unknown, and to the refund of same where the same were-twice paid by the City of Biloxi to the State Tax Collector. Complainant avers that said items will be more specifically set forth hereinafter.”

*793

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Related

United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Rice
185 So. 563 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1939)
City of Biloxi v. Gully
180 So. 821 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
171 So. 698, 177 Miss. 782, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gully-v-city-of-biloxi-miss-1937.