Lee Treasurer v. Roberts

41 P. 595, 3 Okla. 106
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 7, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 41 P. 595 (Lee Treasurer v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee Treasurer v. Roberts, 41 P. 595, 3 Okla. 106 (Okla. 1895).

Opinion

*108 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Bierer, J.:

This case presents one question, and that is, whether Robex-ts is entitled to make payment of his liquor license, and whether .the county treasurer was required to receive the same, in outstanding warrants of said county, and which had been registered and not paid for want of funds, and where there were many thousand dollars in amount of other county warrants outstanding and entitled to payment in advance of those tendered.

It is claimed by Roberts that, under the law, he can make payment of his liquor license in such county warrants, while the county treasurer contends that such license is payable only in cash, or in county warrants, which are equivalent to cash.

Section 3141, of the statutes, provides that a liquor seller is entitled to a county license to engage in such traffic upon doing certain things, and “upon payment into the county treasury the sum of two hundred dol-. lars for each license.” This language is equivalent to saying that the sum of two hundred dollars in money must be paid as a condition precedent to the procuring of a license, and there would be no doubt upon the question, were it not for the language contained in § 5639, which is as follows: “Whenever the treasurer x-eceives axiy money, wax*rants or orders on account .of licenses, fines or any other account, except taxes charged on the tax roll, he shall make out and deliver to the person payixxg the same, duplicate receipts, one of which receipts said person shall forthwith deposit with the county clerk, in order that the tx-easurer may be charged with the amount thereof. The treasurer shall then enter the same in his cash book, as in case of money x*eceived for taxes, but in a sepax'ate and distinct series of numbers of receipts issued therefor; axxd xio pex-soxx shall receive such license or be discharged fx*om obligatioxi by reason of such *109 fine on account until lie shall have so delivered such duplicate receipt to the county clerk, and the treasurer shall so inform the person making the payment at the time of payment."

It is the language of this latter section that is the cause of this controversy, and without it, undoubtedly, there would be no question for dispute, and there would be no contention but what this license charge must be paid in money. Public charges, such as taxes, are payable in money unless some other provision is made by statute. (Cooley on Taxation, page 12; Amenia v. Stanford, 6 Johns. 92; Judd v. Driver, 1 Kan. 455.) And this rule .is as applicable to licenses as to taxes.

In the case of Blake v. Commissioners of Johnson County, 18 Kan. 266. the supreme court of that state, in a decision rendered by Justice Brewer, held that, under two sections of the statute, one providing that all fines, penalties and forfeitures should be paid into the county treasury, to be applied to the support of the common schools, and the other, requiring that the county treasurer should collect all moneys due for school purposes from fines, forfeitures, etc., the county treasurer was directed to collect a judgment of forfeiture, in money, and said that the treasurer, ••having authority to collect, if he receive anything other than money, in full satisfaction and discharge of the judgment, he renders himself liable for the amount thereof.” In this case the bond of the county treasurer, who had received scrip instead of money, was held liable for the amount of the judgment.

It cannot be disputed that, in the absence of a statute clearly making other provisions, taxes, fines, forfeitures, licenses and similar charges due the public, are payable in money, and the language of the liquor license law is clearly in accord with this general proposition, and, manifestly, intends that the license shall be paid in money, and the liquor license charge *110 must be so paid, unless the legislature has clearly made other provision for its payment. Does § 5639, when read and construed with all the other provisions of the revenue law, show clearly a different purpose in the mind of the legislature with inference to the manner of the payment of liquor licenses, than that expressed by their language when legislating' upon that particular subject? That its language is not in harmony with a purpose that liquor licenses shall always be payable in money, is quite apparent, but when is it that they may be received by the treasurer in warrants? . Is it all the time, or only when he may receive them as cash, because they are entitled to be immediately paid in cash?

In answering, the question, we must arrive at the legislative intent, for that is the true meaning of all statutes, and to do this its various provisions must be read and construed together. (Sampson v. Clark, 2 Okla. Rep. 82.)

Section 5633 of the revenue law, provides as follows:

“Territorial warrants are receivable for the amount payable into the territorial treasury on account of the general territorial tax, the county warrants are receivable at the treasury of the proper county, for the amount of county tax payable into the county treasury, except when otherwise provided by law; and city warrants shall be receivable for city taxes; and school warrants shall be received for school taxes in the district where such warrants are issued; but United States treasury notes, or their equivalent, only, are receivable for such taxes as are, or may be, required by law to be paid in cash.”

This is the provision of the statute which provides for the use of warrants as a medium of payment, and it only provides for their use in liquidation of taxes. The language is specific and authorizes their use only in payment of taxes, and not in liquidation of any other account or charge due to the public, and the *111 county warrants, under its terms, may be used in payment of the county taxes, except when otherwise provided by law, and this exception does not indicate that it was made in favor of, or in anticipation of, extending the cases in which warrants could be used as cash in discharge of public charges due the county, but it was a limitation upon the general terms of the section giving the right to use warrants in payment of county taxes, and this limitation clearly appears in the latter lines of the section which makes United States treasury notes, or their equivalent, the only medium for the payment of such taxes as may be payable only in cash. The exception referred to in the language with reference to the use of county warrants as payment for county taxes was evidently intended to provide for cases in which they could not be so used, and a limitation upon their use rather than to permit other and addittional cases where they could be used. Had it been the intention of the legislature to authorize the use of all county warrants in payment of licenses, it would have been very easy indeed for the legislature to have expressed such an intention in framing the language' of this section. It was in enacting this section that the legislture had pai'ticulariy in mind the matter of making' provision for the use of warrants instead of money in making payments to the public, and they authorize them to be used only when paying taxes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 P. 595, 3 Okla. 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-treasurer-v-roberts-okla-1895.