In re the State

245 N.W. 844, 210 Wis. 9, 1932 Wisc. LEXIS 176
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1932
StatusPublished

This text of 245 N.W. 844 (In re the State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the State, 245 N.W. 844, 210 Wis. 9, 1932 Wisc. LEXIS 176 (Wis. 1932).

Opinion

Fowler, J.

An original action for declaratory relief is brought upon the petition of the state, the state treasurer, Milwaukee county, and the county treasurer of Milwaukee county to have the rights of the parties declared respecting liability for the state’s share of income taxes paid to the county treasurer and deposited by him and frozen in county depository banks in liquidation and in banks operating on the statutory stabilization or moratorium plan.

[11]*11The county treasurer is made the collector of all income taxes, forty per cent, of which are by him payable to the state, fifty per cent, to the local taxing municipality wherein the taxpayer resides, and ten per cent, is retained by the county. Sec. 71.10 (2), Stats.; sec. 71.19, Stats. He is required to account to the state and the local taxing unit for their respective portions of the income taxes collected by him (sec. 71.19 (3), Stats.), and to pay over the same fifty days from the time the taxes are due from the taxpayer. Sec. 74.26 (1), Stats. As the income taxes were paid to the petitioning county treasurer in 1932 he deposited them from day to day to his general account as county treasurer in local banks that had been duly made public depositories by the county board under sec. 2, ch. 1, Special Session Laws of 1931, creating ch. 34, Stats., sec. 34.02 of which relieves him of liability for any loss of public moneys which results from the failure or insolvency of the depository. Before the fifty days for paying over the funds had expired certain of these depositories were taken over by the state banking commissioner for liquidation, and others went under the stabilization or moratorium plan prescribed by sub. (16), added to sec. 220.07, Stats., by sec. 3, ch. IS, Special Session Laws of 1931, which postponed the collection of the deposits for three years. Of the amounts so deposited the portion belonging to the state is $304,976.95. The county or the county treasurer at no time since the closing of these banks has had money in possession sufficient to pay this amount to the state, and the county has been obliged to borrow to meet its current obligations. It has not included in the current tax levy any amount to provide funds with which to make payment to the state.

Sec. 74.66, Stats., makes the county chargeable with “all losses that may be sustained by the default of any county officer in the.discharge of” his duties, and provides that the county board “shall add all such losses to the next year’s taxes of . . . the county.”

[12]*12The statutes contain no express declaration of liability of the county for losses occurring while the funds are in the hands of the county treasurer on deposit in public depositories.

Some other statutes are referred to by counsel as bearing-on the question of the county’s liability. Sec. 74.27 provides that when any county shall fail to pay to the state treasurer the state tax levied upon it at the time required it shall pay to the state treasurer an additional amount of ten per cent, per annum from the time the tax was due. This section is contained, not in the chapter referring to income taxes, but in the chapter covering taxes on property.

Sec. 71.10 of the income tax law assigns to the county the penalties collected by the county treasurer on deferred payments of income taxes; sec. 71.17 (6) makes the county liable to the taxpayer for overpayments of income taxes, and sec. 71.23 provides that the county shall reimburse the county treasurer for refunds, and that the state and municipalities shall reimburse the county for their respective portion of refunds.

Sec. 71.19 provides that the county treasurer shall account for and pay delinquent income taxes collected by him as provided in sec. 74.26 (1), and sec. 71.18 (3) provides that all laws respecting collection and payment of taxes on personal property, excepting compromise and cancellation of illegal taxes, shall apply to income taxes, unless inconsistent with express provisions of the income tax law.

The main contention of the parties hinges upon the construction to be placed on the language of sec. 74.66 above stated covering losses “sustained by the default” of any officer. The state claims that the mere failure to pay over moneys at the time specified constitutes a “default,” while the county claims that the default covered by the section is an unlawful act, — some misfeasance or malfeasance in office, — some omission or breach of official duty by the [13]*13county officer, — and contends that as the county treasurer’s deposit of the money was lawful there was no default on his part. This court has not heretofore construed this section. Obviously the word “default” has the two meanings. One is in default when he does not for whatever reason pay money at the time required, and he defaults when he converts or misappropriates money belonging to another. The word itself applies to either or both situations. The question is what does it mean in the statute? The statute in practically the same terms occurs in R. S. 1858 as sec. 164, ch. 18. It doubtless was taken over from the Michigan statutes, and the Michigan statute which occurs to the same effect in R. S. Mich. 1846, p. 119, ch. 20, sec. 120, was construed in People ex rel. Att’y Gen. v. Supervisors, 30 Mich. 388, subsequent to the time it was taken over by Wisconsin. The Michigan opinion contains the statement that the language “is very broad and would seem intended to cover all possible losses that may arise from the county treasurer’s default,” but a later statement in the opinion referring to the provision “as precisely similar” to the one “to protect the county against the defaults and dishonesties of township treasurers” points to the interpretation that dishonest conduct of the treasurer, some breach of duty on his part, is what the statute was intended to protect against. The opening paragraph of the opinion states that the action was mandamus to compel county officers “to spread upon the tax rolls of their county for the current year a sum lost by the state in consequence of the failure of the late treasurer of that county to account for the moneys received at the regular tax sales for the year 1865.” Examination of the Michigan statutes in force at the time the decision was rendered, sec. 858 et seq., Comp. Laws of 1857, discloses that the sale of land for taxes was made by the state through the county treasurer and the moneys received therefrom were required to be paid into the state treasury, except such sum, if any, as was due from the [14]*14state to the county, and for failure to pay for thirty days from the time required the county treasurer was expressly subject to criminal prosecution under a statute penalizing “fraudulent disposition of property by agents” and to punishment on conviction by a fine of not exceeding $2,000 or imprisonment in the state prison not exceeding three years or both. Sec. 876, Comp. Laws Mich. 1857; sec. 36, ch. 154, R. S. Mich. 1846. From the provision last stated it would appear that the defaults of the county treasurer contemplated by the Michigan statute from which sec. 74.66 is derived were acts of conversion or embezzlement, and not mere defaults in paying over money that he was for no fault of his own unable to pay. It is to be inferred that when one is subject to criminal prosecution the acts subjecting him to prosecution are of criminal nature.

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Bluebook (online)
245 N.W. 844, 210 Wis. 9, 1932 Wisc. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-state-wis-1932.