Holloway v. Howell County

144 S.W. 860, 240 Mo. 601, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 156
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 29, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 144 S.W. 860 (Holloway v. Howell County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holloway v. Howell County, 144 S.W. 860, 240 Mo. 601, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 156 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

Suit in equity for an accounting ‘ ‘ and for all equitable relief which the facts of the case warrant.”

[607]*607Brought in the Howell Circuit Court in 1908, the regular judge disqualified himself, and Henry D. Green, Esq., of the Howell bar, was selected as special judge. Qualifying, he tried the case. From a decree for defendant, plaintiffs appeal.

According to the proof the individuals in part composing the aggregation of plaintiffs bear the official relations to the Willow Springs special road district indicated in the title of the cause and alleged in the bill. It appears, also, that the real plaintiff, the Willow Springs special road district (for convenience, hereinafter called the “district”), is a special road district six miles square, including Willow Springs, a city of the fourth class, which district was organized in March, 1903, under the Act of March 9, 1895, Laws 1895, p. 253 et seq.

That act was carried forward as article 10, chapter 151, Revised Statutes 1899, and is again carried forward with amendments made in 1903 (Laws 1903, p. 260-1) and in 1909 (Laws 1909, p. 765) and in 1907 (Laws 1907, p. 414) into Revised Statutes 1909, as article 4 of chapter 102. It was further amended in 1911. [Laws 1911, p. 370 et seq.]

The original act apparently gave the commissioners of the district the same power to contract given road overseers. There is, however, by design or inadvertence a remarkable omission, viz., in the act not maldng the district a body corporate or giving it a name or any power to sue or be sued. Its corporate name, body and power to sue and be sued were first given by legislative grant in the Laws of 1909, p. 765. No point is made on such legislative lack of power, and we pass the matter by without inquiring into the legal significance of such omission.

The object of this suit is to have an accounting in equity against the county for an alleged share of the taxes levied and collected by Howell county as “county revenue” in the years 1903, 1904,1905, and 1906. That [608]*608is, the suit travels on the theory the relation of debtor and creditor existed between the county and the district by contract, express or implied, o.r that the obligation to pay arose out of some fiduciary relation between' the two. In no other way could an “account” exist, or the right to an “accounting” spring. The allegation of the bill is that there is ‘ ‘ due ’ ’ the district for 1903, the sum of $389.82; for 1904, the sum of $389.-82; for 1905, the sum of $427.68; for 1906, the sum of $451.50; for which total, with interest, judgment is asked. The proof is of such sort that if any recovery is proper, the total of those sums is the measure of recovery.

It is alleged in the bill that in 1903, the county court of Howell county levied fifty cents to the one hundred dollars of valuation on all property subject to taxation in the district “for county revenue” for the current year; in 1904, forty cents; in 1905, forty cents; in 1906, fifty cents. The proof, as we gather, is that these levies were on property in the whole county, including of course the district in question. The district got no part of those levies and on that fact the right to relief is predicated.

In addition to the fifty cents ’ levy above in 1903, the county court levied a tax on all property in the county of ten cents on the one hundred dollars valuation for “road purposes;” in 1904 in addition to the forty cents’ levy above it levied on property in the district outside of the city of Willow Springs twenty cents “as a road tax;” in 1905 in addition to the forty cents’ levy above it levied on such property in the district twenty cents “as a.road tax;” and in 1906 in addition to the fifty cents ’ levy above it levied twenty cents for road purposes.

■While the record is not quite clear yet the ease seems to have proceeded below on the theory that the district got whatever taxes were collected under these special levies, and its share of the general ten cents’ [609]*609road levy in 1903. On the maxim that public officers are presumed to do their duty (absent countervailing testimony) the case may proceed here on the theory the district got its share of all such taxes collected and put in defendant’s treasury.

In this connection it appears that Howell county has less than six million inhabitants. On the theory (a sound one) that road taxes, in the years in hand, are but part and parcel of the taxes for “county revenue” or for “county purposes” (R. S. 1899, sec. 9283; now Sec. 11423, R. S. 1909; Ibid, sec. 10695, infra), it is suggested by plaintiffs ’ counsel that all these road levies were void as being in excess of fifty cents on the one hundred dollars’ valuation allowed for counties of that size. [Const., art. 10,'sec. 11.] Whether the road tax levies were partly or wholly void as excessive, or for other reason, or whether the infirmity was in the levies for county purposes, we need not inquire. There is nothing in the pleadings or proofs to show that such issue was sprung or threshed out below, nor anything in the record to show that the road levies were not in fact collected by the county and then paid to and used by the district. Under such circumstances it is not apparent how the alleged illegality of these special road levies affects the merits a whit, or why we should go into that question at all.

We pause long enough to remark there is a precept that every man is presumed to know the law. But should not that precept be amended so as to read, every man is presumed to know the law, except the road lato? Certain it is that in some of its features it is a tangled skein of incongruities and ambiguities, if not absurdities. Some of its provisions overlap, they do not make a neat joint with cognate sections and the law needs scientific revision. It would be a. bold court that did not approach the road laws of Missouri with a questioning eye and a modest degree of doubt, Doubt[610]*610less the county court, in the light it had, thought it was tracking the law and dealing fairly by the district in making those special levies, which if taken as separate from the levies for county revenue, overleaped constitutional barriers.

There are two sections of the statutes bearing directly on the subject-matter of this suit, viz.: Sections 10594 and 10595’, Revised Statutes 1909',- both brought forward from the original act of 1895.

Section 10594 reads: “In all counties wherein special road districts may be organized under this article, where money shall be collected as county taxes upon property within such special road district, or as dramshop, pool or billiard table licenses on business within such special road district, the county court shall, as such taxes or licenses are collected, and as the board of commissioners of such special road district shall make application to such county court, draw warrants upon the county treasurer, payable to the treasurer of such board of commissioners, or to such other persons as the board may from- time to time designate, for an amount bearing such proportion to the entire amounts of the year’s taxes so collected upon said property as the amounts annually appropriated or expended for road and.

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Bluebook (online)
144 S.W. 860, 240 Mo. 601, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holloway-v-howell-county-mo-1912.