Lott v. Hubbard

44 Ala. 593
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 44 Ala. 593 (Lott v. Hubbard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lott v. Hubbard, 44 Ala. 593 (Ala. 1870).

Opinion

PECK, C. 3.

This case originated in the circuit court of the county of Mobile.

In that court the appellee was plaintiff, and the appellant defendant.

The action was brought to recover money had and received by defendant, to and for the use of the plaintiff.

The cause was tried by the court, upon certain facts stated and agreed upon by the parties, without the intervention of a jury.

Upon the facts stated, as an agreed case, judgment was rendered for the plaintiff, and thereupon, the defendant excepted to the ruling and decision of the court.

The case stated, and agreed on, by the parties, is set at length in the record.

On the case, thus made up by the parties, they agreed, that if the court should be of opinion that plaintiff’s income, therein stated, was not liable to taxation, (by reason of its having been entirely invested in real estate, which was taxed to plaintiff during the period it was earned,) then judgment should be entered for the plaintiff for one hundred and eighty-five dollars, with interest from May 13th, 1868, and costs.

[599]*599But if the court should be of the opinion that said income was “ liable to taxation,” but that the amount of the same was wrongfully and without authority set down by the tax assessor at ten thousand dollars, then the court should determine what deductions were to be allowed on said true income of $6,404, and the plaintiff should have judgment for an amount eijual to the State, county and school tax, on the difference between such reduced income and $10,000, with interest from May 13th, 1868, and costs. But if the court should be of the opinion that said income was liable to taxation, and was legally issued and collected, then judgment should be given for the defendant, with costs.

The real estate referred to in said agreement was a house and premises occupied by plaintiff as a residence, estimated to be worth $10,500, and was taxed as real estate, under Part 2 of § 434 of the Revised Code.

This real estate was purchased by plaintiff, in September, 1865. This property was purchased partly, or wholly, upon a credit, and upon it he had paid the State and county taxes for the year 1866¿

The income of plaintiff, upon which he was assessed, and upon which the tax was paid, under protest, accrued between the 1st day of October 1865, and the 31st day of December, 1866. This income was not realized from the said real estate, but grew out of the business of the firm of Hubbard & Tardy, of which the plaintiff was a member, between the said 1st day of October, 1865, and the 31st day of December, 1866.

This income the plaintiff did not give in to the assessor in writing, or otherwise, as an item upon which he was liable to be taxed, but refused to do so, upon the ground, as he insisted, that said income was not liable to be taxed, because he had applied it in payment of said real estate, so purchased by him as aforesaid. Theieupon, the assesoi5 under section 479 of said Code, after the 1st day of June, 1867, ascertained, from inquiry or otherwise, the amount of said income, to the best of his information and judgment, and assessed the same on the amount so ascertained by him. It is not claimed that the assessor did not act in [600]*600good faith, in determining the amount of plaintiff’s income. If it was set down at too large a sum, he has no one to blame for it but himself.

"We hold, it was his duty, on the request of the assessor, to give in his income, and this he might have done, under protest, if he and the assesor disagreed as to its liability to be taxed, and by so doing, he would neither have lost nor waived any right or remedy he might have had in the premises. He should have known if he refused to give it in, the assessor, if an honest and faithful officer, would ascertain the amount as best he could, in the way the law required, and in doing so, if he fixed the amount at too large a sum, he would have to submit to it, and, moreover, be subject to be assessed a double tax on the same.

In such a case, we are not aware of any remedy to correct a mistake honestly made on the part of the assessor.

The plain letter of the law makes it the duty of the assessor to ascertain the amount, and, as a punishment, assess the delinquent a double tax. — Section 479 of Code.

The plaintiff’s income, so ascertained and assessed, was entered in the assessment book required to be made out by the assessor and delivered to the probate judge, as provided by section 473 of the Code.

This assessment book was afterwards examined, by the court of county commissioners, as provided by section 534 of said Code, and then delivered to the defendant, the tax collector of said county, as his warrant and authority to collect the taxes assessed and set down in said assessment book. As tax collector, he had no authority to alter or change the same, or to increase or diminish the tax of any individual therein named, but it was his plain duty to collect the taxes, as he found them therein stated, and for doing this he subjected himself to no liability to the plaintiff, or to any other person. But, as he has agreed, that if the plaintiff’s said income was not liable to be taxed, for the reason in said agreement stated, to-wit, because the plaintiff had invested the same in real estate, upon which he was taxed between the periods within which the said income accrued, then judgment should be entered against him, &c., as aforesaid ;■ therefore, he must abide by his [601]*601agreement, whether it was by him advisedly or unadvisedly made.

The question thus arises, was the plaintiff’s income, for the time stated, exempted from taxation for the reason mentioned in said agreement ?

We have carefully examined and considered this question, and we feel constrained to decide, that neither the reason given, nor any other reason we are able to discover, exempted said income from taxation.

The said real estate, as property, was taxed under part 2 of section 434 of the Eevised Code, three-tenths of one per cent, ad valorem.

This section gives the subjects and rates of assessment as to property and persons. It provides, that taxes must be assessed by the assessor, in each county, on and from the following subjects, and at the rates following, to-wit: This section is then divided into sixteen parts, in which the persons and the several items, &g., subject to taxation, and the different rates at which they are to be assessed, are specified and stated. These items embrace almost every species and kind of property, including moneys hoarded, or kept on deposit, loaned, or employed in certain business, and on the gross receipts, gross commissions, and gross profits of certain named occupations and employments. The rates of taxation, it is seen, vary from one-tenth of one per cent, to three per cent.

On some items the tax is an ad-valorem tax, on others it is a special tax, and on all the several occupations and employments named, the tax is assessed on the gross receipts, commissions and profits. This fact should be noted, as it will be necessary to refer to it in considering what persons are embraced in the proviso to section 435, which is the section that provides for the assessment of incomes and salaries, dec.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Ala. 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lott-v-hubbard-ala-1870.