Harrison & Mercer County Drainage District v. Shumard

103 S.W.2d 539, 231 Mo. App. 678, 1937 Mo. App. LEXIS 57
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1937
StatusPublished

This text of 103 S.W.2d 539 (Harrison & Mercer County Drainage District v. Shumard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison & Mercer County Drainage District v. Shumard, 103 S.W.2d 539, 231 Mo. App. 678, 1937 Mo. App. LEXIS 57 (Mo. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

*679 SHAIN, P. J.

The plaintiff in tbis suit is a municipal corporation. The defendant Shumard was, at the November election, 1928, elected collector of Harrison County, Missouri, and served as such for a term of four years. The other defendants are the bondsmen for the collector.

The plaintiff’s petition is a plain and concise statement of a cause of action to recover from defendants $2036.75 less $40.73 commission for taxes collected and alleged not paid over -to plaintiff. The plaintiff further sues for statutory penalty in the amount of $199.60.

There was a stipulation of facts entered into between the.parties to the suit, the last paragraph of which so closely conforms to the allegations of plaintiff’s petition that we set said paragraph out in full as follows:

“It is further admitted that James W. Shumard in the month of January, 1933, collected the sum of Two Thousand Thirty-six Dollars and Seventy-five Cents ($2,036.75), delinquent drainage taxes and duly issued to J. R. Webb, the party paying said drainage tax, receipts therefor. That of said sum collected, James W. Shumard was entitled to retain for his services two per cent or Forty Dollars and Seventy-three Cents ($40.73), leaving a balance due plaintiff, the Harrison and Mercer County Drainage District One Thousand Nine Hundred .Ninety-six Dollars and Two Cents ($1,996.02); that the same became due and payable on or before the 20th day of February, 1933. That defendant has failed and refused to pay over to plaintiff, The Harrison and Mercer- County Drainage District said sum of One Thousand Nine Hundred and Ninety-six Dollars and Two Cents ($1,996.02), money so collected by him as a deliquent .drainage taxes from said J. R. Webb, in the month of January, 1933. That the penalty thereon would amount to the sum of One Hundred Ninety-nine Dollars and Sixty Cents ($199.60), and that demand was made by plaintiff on the defendant Shumard for the payment of said taxes so collected from said J. R. Webb, and- payment refused.”

The defendants filed an answer an cross-bill asking recoupment based upon an alleged payment to the plaintiff of $2,533.09 by Harrison County, Missouri, which said payment is alleged to have been ■paid by mistake of law.

In defendants’ cross-bill reference is made to, and conclusions drawn from, an opinion handed down by this court at its October, 1932 term. The said case being, Glaze et al., ex rel., Board of Suprs. of Harrison County Drainage District v. Shumard et al., reported in 54 S. W. (2d) 726.

To a clear understanding of defendants’ theory of recoupment, it becomes necessary to briefly refer to issues in and conclusions reached in the above case.

In Glaze ex rel., the parties plaintiff and defendant are substantially *680 the same as in the case at bar and the suit was lor taxes collected on behalf of and! alleged as not paid to the district.

The funds involved in Glaze ex rel. had been deposited by the collector in the Bethany Savings Bank, which said bank had been duly designated and had qualified as the county depository of Harrison County, Missouri..

In the Glaze et al. case, the defendants made two specific defenses; first, that the collector having deposited the money in the county depository and that the depository bank had failed and was in the hands of the Finance Commissioner of Missouri and that under the provisions of the law no liability rested upon defendants for the funds sued for.

It appears that before the depository bank failed the collector had deposited therein $10,396.32 of the funds of the district and $45,-374.71 of county funds and said funds were in the bank when it failed.

The second defense interposed in the above case was that the defendant collector had, prior to the failure of the bank, mailed to the Secretary and Treasurer of the district his check for the full sum of $10,396.32 and that if same had been presented in due course would have been paid and that said funds were lost solely on account of the negligence of the Secretary and Treasurer and hence no liability rested upon defendants.

In the opinion of this court, supra, it is held, as to the first defense, that the drainage district being a municipal corporation the fact that the defunct bank had been designated and qualified as depository of Harrison County funds, did not constitute the said bank the legal depository of the drainage district funds and that the collector in depositing the funds of the drainage district in said bank did so at his peril. However, as to the second defense, this court sustained the judgment in defendants’ favor, rendered in the trial court, on the ground that the check aforesaid had not been presented in due course. The Glaze et al., case was finally determined by this court on the second day of December, 1932, when the mandate was duly certified and sent to Harrison County, Missouri.

It will be noted that the decision in the Glaze et al., case automatically did two things to-<wit: Released the collector and his bondsmen from all further liability touching the $10,396.32 of the district’s money deposited in the defunct bank and further assigned, collector’s check considered, all right, title and interest in and to the money so deposited to the plaintiff in this case.

To a further understanding of defendants’ theory of recoupment it stands admitted that, at a time prior to the decision by this court in the Glaze ex rel. case, the bondsmen of the defunct depository of Harrison County, Missouri, paid into the county, under their obli *681 gation to secure tbe county funds deposited in the county depository, the sum of $13,-600.

It is further shown that the county court of Harrison County, Missouri, acting under the impression that said bond covered the drainage district’s deposit, did it by its orders and act make distribution of said $13,60(1 and prorated to and paid to said drainage district the sum of $2,533.09 out of said payment made by the bondsmen as aforesaid.

For the purpose of clarifying as to defendants’ theory of recoupment and theory of procedure, it is shown by the record that the defendant collector herein, from and after Harrison County had paid aforesaid funds to the plaintiff district, collected back taxes for the plaintiff district in the month of November, 1932, in the sum of $569.58 for which a separate suit is pending. Further, in December, 1932, said collector had collected further taxes in the sum of $376.33 for which a separate suit is pending. Further, that in the month of January, 1933, said collector had' collected further taxes in the sum of $217.75 for which no action has been brought.

The record herein shows that the defendants, before filing answer herein, filed a motion to consolidate the other eases pending between the parties involving taxes collected by the collector for the plaintiff district. This motion was taken up and overruled by the court.

Thereafter defendants filed an answer and cross-bill or counterclaim asking for recoupment.

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103 S.W.2d 539, 231 Mo. App. 678, 1937 Mo. App. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-mercer-county-drainage-district-v-shumard-moctapp-1937.