Kehe v. Blackhawk County

101 N.W. 281, 125 Iowa 549
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 16, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 101 N.W. 281 (Kehe v. Blackhawk County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kehe v. Blackhawk County, 101 N.W. 281, 125 Iowa 549 (iowa 1904).

Opinion

Deemer, C. J.

In December of the year 1901 the county treasurer of Blackhawk county notified plaintiff and his wife that the so-called “ tax ferrets ” employed by the county had made a report showing that they were the owners of moneys, loans, and credits not listed and assessed for taxation for the years 1896 to 1901, inclusive, in various amounts, and that, unless they appeared and showed cause why the same should not be assessed, it would be listed and assessed according to law. It also appears that in January of the year 1902 the county treasurer, in a book known as “ Record of Omitted Taxes,” entered an assessment against plaintiff and his wife for the years 1896 to 1901, inclusive. This was done, however, from slips furnished the treasurer by plaintiff and his wife, showing the amount of property subject to taxation, and the taxes due thereon, as per an agreement between them and the tax ferrets. Plaintiff paid the amount of the taxes shown by these slips to be due for all the. years in question, without objection or protest, and before any entry was made upon the record of “ omitted taxes.” Indeed, it appears that, so far as this record is concerned, it waá a mere matter of bookkeeping, in order to keep track of the taxes páid by those who had failed to list their property for taxation. Nothing was done by the county treasurer, save to give the notices referred to, until after plaintiff had appeared for himself and wife, presented the slips showing the- agreement with reference to the amount of their taxes, and paid the amount so agreed upon. After all this had been done, the entry was made upon the “ omitted taxes ” record book. This action is to recover the amount of taxes paid on moneys and credits for the year [551]*5511896, amounting to something like $200, and for a writ of mandamus commanding the defendant and its officers to refund to plaintiff the amount so paid.

1. Taxation: voluntary payment recovery. The theory on which the suit seems to be based is that these taxes were erroneously and illegally assessed against plaintiff and his wife; that no assessment was ever made against them or their property for the year f $96, and no notice or demand made therefor until December of the year 1901. It is admitted that plaintiff and his wife were owners of moneys and credits, during the year 1896, to the amount shown by the tax ferrets’ report, and that if they had listed the same they would have been required to pay in taxes for that year — at least as much as they eventually paid to the county treasurer. But it is contended that there was no legal assessment of taxes against them by the county treasurer, and that at the time they paid these taxes the county treasurer had no authoi’ity to assess, or to call for any taxes upon, property omitted from taxation for the year 1896, which was more than five years prior to the first Monday- in April of the year 1901; in other words, that the remedies of the county for the recovery of these taxes were barred. There are two sections of the statute which must be considered in reaching a correct conclusion in this case. Section 1874 provides, in substance, that when property is withheld, or for any cause not listed for taxation and assessed, the county treasurer shall, when apprised thereof, at any time within five years from the date at which the assessment should have been made, give notice to the person in whose name it is proposed to assess the same, fixing a time and place where objection to such assessment may be made, and demand of the person by whom the same should have been listed the amount the property should have been taxed in each year the same was withheld; and, upon failure of the taxpayer to pay the same, he shall cause action to be brought therefor. Section 1417 provides, in effect, that the board of supervisors shall [552]*552direct the treasurér to refund to the taxpayer any tax, or portion thereof, found to- have been erroneously or illegally exacted or paid, with interest and costs actually paid thereon.

Some claim is made that the taxes in question were paid under protest, but this is not sustained by the evidence. The most that can be said in this respect is that, when plaintiff went to the tax ferrets to adjust the matter of his taxes, they told him that if others did not have to pay taxes for the year 1896 his money would be refunded. This, of course, does not make a case of payment under protest. Construing section 1374 of the Code, we have held that a county treasurer cannot maintain an action thereunder for taxes on property omitted from taxation for more- than five years from the time they should have been levied and -assessed. Siberling v. Croper, 119 Iowa 420. But this was held in an action which was a direct appeal from an assessment by the county treasurer. In the same case it is held that, under the statute there construed, the county treasurer became the assessing officer, and that he was authorized to make an assessment after notice of all property withheld from taxation during the five-year period. The record shows that the plaintiff waived his right to a hearing before the county treasurer; that he agreed with -the tax ferrets upon the amount of his tax; and that-,.pursuant to this agreement, he appeared before the county treasurer and paid the amount of his taxes so agreed upon, without objection or protest. It also appears.that no assessment was in fact made by the county treasurer, unless the notice sent to plaintiff and his wife be held to be such, and that the entries made by the treasurer upon the county records were not reduced to writing until after the payments had been made, and then only as a matter of bookkeeping, to show the amount collected and from what source. Under this state of facts it is clear that plaintiff has no right to recover, unless it be under section 1417 of the Code, which provides for the refund of [553]*553taxes found to have been erroneously or illegally exacted or paid.

The payments were the result of a compromise,' were voluntary, and without protest. Plaintiff and his wife at all times owed these taxes; their property was wrongfully withheld from taxation; but, by reason of the delay of the county official, there was no legal remedy for their collection. Is section 1411 broad enough to permit one who has so paid taxes a right of recovery? This is the pivotal question in the case, and it must be solved by construing the words “tax found to.have been erroneously or illegally exacted or paid.” This error or illegality manifestly has reference to some mistake or unauthorized action of the officials authorized to assess and levy taxes upon property, and not to error or mistake on the part of the taxpayer. Dubuque Co. v. Supervisors, 40 Iowa, 16. The county . treasurer had the undoubted right, and it was his duty, to give plaintiff and his wife the notices he sent out, and it was plaintiff’s duty to appear before the treasurer and make a showing as to why his property should not be assessed for any year or years. Instead of doing this, plaintiff went before the tax ferrets and agreed with them upon the amount of his taxes, took the ferrets’ word that if others were not assessed for the year 1896 his money would be refunded, walked over to the county treasurer’s office, presented his slips showing his agreed assessment, and voluntarily paid his taxes for the years 1896 to 1901, inclusive, on the property omitted from taxation during those years. Under such a state of facts it was clearly the duty of the county treasurer to take the'money tendered, and to charge himself therewith as so much money collected on back taxes.

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Bluebook (online)
101 N.W. 281, 125 Iowa 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kehe-v-blackhawk-county-iowa-1904.