Knight v. Harper

279 S.W. 589
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 24, 1925
DocketNo. 1836.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 279 S.W. 589 (Knight v. Harper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knight v. Harper, 279 S.W. 589 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J.

This suit was brought by Knight and Presidio county against George Harper, former tax collector of said county, and the United States Guaranty & Fidelity Company, the surety upon Harper’s official bond. The suit involves the commissions of the tax collector upon the collections made during the month of December, 1922. The money sued for was claimed primarily by Knight, with an alternative prayer for recovery by the county in the event it was held that Knight could not recover.

The facts are undisputed, and, briefly stated, as follows:

At the general election in 1920 Harper was elected tax collector of Presidio county, and qualified as such on December 1st of that year, with his codefendant as surety upon his official bonds. He served as such until January 1, 1923, upon which date Knight, who had been elected as his successor at the preceding election, qualified and assumed the duties of said office, and continued to hold *590 the same until December 31, 1924. During the month of December, 1922, Harper collected in taxes the sum of $13,248.33. Prom January 1,1923, to November 30,1923, Knight collected the sum of $30,077.07 on the 1922 tax rolls, and the further sum of $1,971.29 on the 1923 tax rolls. Harper retained as his commission on his said collections $1,180.-11. He had no deductible expenses. Knight’s commissions on his collections were $1,349.-32; his deductible expenses were $621.90, leaving $727.42 as his net commission. Upon the basis of the 1920 census the tax collector of Presidio county under the Pee Bill was allowed a maximum compensation of $2,250, and one-fourth of the excess above that amount not to exceed $1,200.

This litigation arises out of the adoption of the Act of the Thirty-Seventh Legislature, c. 45 (Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. Supp. 1922, art. 3044a). Prior to the enactment of that law it had been the usual custom of county officers to qualify and assume the duties of their office as soon as possible after the general election in November; their qualification usually closely approximating the close of the fiscal year on November 30th. The act mentioned provided that county and precinct officers should qualify .and assume the duties of their respective offices on the 1st day of January, following the general election, or as soon thereafter as possible.

Article 2444, Complete Texas Statutes 1920, relating to-county depositories, makes it the duty of the tax collector to deposit all taxes collected by him in the county depository pending the preparation of his report of such collections and settlement thereon.

Article 7610b, relating to the collection of taxes reads:

“Provided that except' as to compensation due such tax collector as shown by his approved reports, tax money deposited in county depositories shall be paid by such depositories only to treasurers entitled to receive the same, on checks drawn by such tax collector, in favor of such treasurer.”

Article 7618 provides:

“At the end of each month the collector of taxes shall, on forms to be furnished by the comptroller of public accounts, make an itemized report under oath to the comptroller, showing each and every item of ad valorem, poll and occupation taxes collected by him during said month, accompanied by a summarized statement showing full disposition of all -state taxes collected. Provided, however, that said itemized reports for the months of December and January of each year may not be made for twenty-five (25) days after the end of such months if same can not be completed by the end of such respective months.
“2. 1-Ie shall present such report, together with the tax receipt stubs, to the county clerk, who shall, within two days, compare said report with said stubs, and if same agree in every particular as regards names, dates and amounts, he (the clerk) shall certify to its ■ correctness. * * *
3. The collector of taxes shall then immediately forward his reports so certified to the comptroller, and shall pay over to the sfate treasurer all moneys collected by him for the state during said month, excepting such amounts as he is allowed by law to pay in his county, reserving only his commissions on the total amount collected. * * * ”

Article 7619 provides:

“The collector of taxes shall at the end of each month make like reports to the commissioners’ court of all the collections made for the county, conforming as far as applicable and in like manner to the requirements as to the collection and report of taxes collecte’d for the state. The county clerk shall likewise, within two days after the presentation of said report by the collector, examine said report and stubs, and certify to their correctness as regards names, dates and amounts; for which examination and certificate he shall be paid by the collector of taxes fifty cents each month, which amount shall be, allowed to the collector by the commissioners’ court.
“2. The clerk shall file said report intended for the commissioners’ court, together with the tax receipt stubs, in his office for the next regular meeting of the commissioners’ court.
“3. The collector of taxes shall immediately pay over to the county treasurer all taxes collected for the county during said month, after reserving his commissions for collecting the same, and take receipts therefor, and file with the county clerk.”

In the case of Austin v. Kiser, 277 S. W. 411, recently decided by this court, the foregoing statutory provisions were considered, and it was said:

“Under article 2444, it is the duty of the collector to deposit ‘all taxes’ collected, as soon as collected, in the depository pending the preparation of his report of such collections and settlement thereon which shall bear interest and are secured by the depository bond. This article negatives the idea that the collector may deduct his commission upon taxes as he collects the same and thereby invest the same with the character of private funds of his own. That article, together with articles 7610b, 7618, and 7619, plainly imply that his commissions may not be deducted by him nor paid to him by the depository until his reports of state and county tax collections have been approved by the proper authorities.”

The case mentioned arose upon an entirely different state of facts and issues from that presented here, but the quoted portion of our opinion is here pertinent.

When Harper’s term of office expired on December 31, 1922, all taxes collected by him during that month belonged to the state and Presidio county, and in his settlement with the state and county authorities he was authorized to retain only the compensation for his services as tax collector during December the amount allowed by law. At that time the fiscal year had begun on December 1, 1922.

Article 3896 reads:

*591 “A fiscal year, within, the meaning of this chapter, shall begin on December 1 of each year; and each officer named in articles 3881 to 3886, and also the sheriff, shall file the reports and make the settlement required in this chapter on December 1 of each year.

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Bluebook (online)
279 S.W. 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-harper-texapp-1925.