McClure v. Greene County

11 Pa. D. & C. 256
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Greene County
DecidedJuly 1, 1928
DocketNo. 22
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Pa. D. & C. 256 (McClure v. Greene County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Greene County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClure v. Greene County, 11 Pa. D. & C. 256 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1928).

Opinion

Sayers, P. J.

The case stated is very lengthy, and in order to get a brief and comprehensive view of the facts admitted and the inferences proper to be drawn therefrom it is deemed necessary to make the following general statement of the facts agreed upon.

The plaintiff, surviving executor of the will of his father, knew that his deceased father claimed title to a tract of coal in Dunkard Township, Greene County, Pa., including the forty-two acres of Pittsburgh Vein of coal described in the case stated, and that he had sold the same to one J. E. Barnes in 1900, and that Barnes and his grantees had paid the taxes on said coal, and that it had been assessed to them.

The plaintiff obtained a patent for the forty-two acres of land from the State in 1911, and evidently believed that he had by said patent acquired a paramount title to the forty-two acres of land and coal.

Relying on his belief, he claimed title to the coal lands, and in 1919 he directed the assessor of the township to assess the coal to him, and it was from that time until 1927 assessed to him as owner and he never objected to the assessment, levy or collection of the same, but voluntarily paid all taxes levied on said assessment, including county taxes for the years 1919 to 1926, inclusive. He paid the tax voluntarily, that is, without compulsion, actual, present or potential, and without duress or under threat of any legal process.

It is not admitted that he knew the tax was being paid on the same coal by Barnes and his grantees during the whole time. The plaintiff having dis[257]*257covered in 1927 that as a matter of law he took no title to the coal by virtue of his patent, notified the county commissioners to strike the forty-two acres of coal assessed to him from the assessment rolls and demanded repayment of the sum of $429.95, being the amount of county tax paid by him for the years 1919 to 1926, inclusive. The commissioners did not accede to either of his demands. He thereupon brought this suit, claiming $385.35, the amount of tax paid by him during the six years immediately preceding the date of his demand for repayment.

No fraud or deceit was practiced by any of the taxing authorities. The land was assessed on plaintiff’s demand and the tax voluntarily paid by him. The plaintiff was mistaken as to the legal effect of his grant from the State. Instead of becoming the owner of the coal land in fee, as he supposed, he took it as trustee for the rightful owners: Olewine v. Messmore, 128 Pa. 470.

There is a line of cases that support in part the principles on which plaintiff bases his claim, whereby an action for money had and received can be maintained to recover money voluntarily paid to one under a mistake of fact who, as a matter of equity and right, should not be allowed to retain the same. Durdon v. Gaskill, 2 Yeates, 268; Christman v. Siegfried, 5 W. & S. 400; Clapp v. Pinegrove Township, 138 Pa. 35; where recovery was permitted because plaintiff took no title to lands which he purchased at tax sale under a double assessment.

The plaintiff relies upon the authority of Bredin v. Cranberry Township Road Comm’rs, 87 Pa. 441, as one of the cases that supports his claim, but the suit there was to recover purchase money for lands sold at treasurer’s sales, where the purchaser took no title because part of the lands were out of the county and part were sold on a double or duplicate assessment and levy, the court holding that the rule of caveat emptor did not apply to treasurer’s sales and that the money was obtained by the township through assessments which its ofiicers had no right to make. The mistake in that case was brought about by the wrongful or fraudulent act of the township officer. The mistake in fact and in law in the instant case was that of the plaintiff, who demanded that he be assessed with the coal lands.

In the case of Clapp v. Pinegrove Township, 138 Pa. 35, it was held: “When the plaintiff paid his money to the county by way of redemption and settlement of accruing taxes, he discharged no obligation and he acquired no rights. He simply paid over so much more money under the influence of the unauthorized and illegal acts of the taxing officers. Although in their hands, it was still his. money. They had no claim upon it, and no right in law or morals to withhold it from him. The difficulty with the defense is that the plaintiff is not complaining of a mere irregularity or a neglect of some statutory requirement on the part of the ofiicers against which voluntary payment might relieve, but he complains that the taxes on this tract were paid in full by the owners and that thereby the demands of the public and the power of the taxing officers were alike exhausted. This being true, the double assessment and the taxes charged under it were illegal and void. They impose no liability on the land or its owner and confer no rights on the county or the township. They had no right to take, and they have no right to hold, the money so paid.”

That case differs from the instant case in this, that the tax paid by plaintiff was not paid “under the influence of the unauthorized and illegal acts of the taxing ofiicers,” who, though they might have been blamed for acceding to plaintiff’s demands that he be assessed, were guilty at most of a mere irreg[258]*258ularity, due to plaintiff’s insistent demands that he be assessed and against which the plaintiff by his voluntary payment has forfeited his right to relief.

We are of the opinion that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover his voluntary payments which were due to his mistake both in fact and in law. In discussing this principle generally, the court, in Johnson v. Hernig, 53 Pa. Superior Ct. 179, 183, says: “There is the additional well-settled principle which is applicable to the case under the plaintiff’s own'testimony, namely, that one who voluntarily pays money with full knowledge, or means of knowledge, of all the facts, without any fraud having been practiced upon him, cannot recover it back by reason of the payment having been made in ignorance of law: Bobst v. Gring, 32 Pa. Superior Ct. 541; Bomgardner v. Blatt, 35 Pa. Superior Ct. 361. Many of the cases bearing upon the question are reviewed by Judge Henderson in the last-cited case. It is pertinent to refer particularly to this language of Justice Thompson in Natcher v. Natcher, 47 Pa. 496: ‘A moment’s reflection will induce the inquiry, how can money voluntarily paid be recovered back? Upon what can the implied promise to pay back be rested, against a free and voluntary parting with the money, without any reservation that it is ever to be returned? The latter excludes the former. That act overthrows all presumptions inconsistent with it, and, hence, the rule that money voluntarily paid, that is, paid without fraud or constraint, can never be recovered back.’ ”

It can hardly be contended here, as in the last-cited case, that payment was not that of a debt justly due the defendant. The plaintiff insisted that he be assessed and volunteered to pay what he owed the county. He was not deceived, defrauded or coerced into paying over his money. It is manifest that his conduct was not controlled by anything the county assessors or other officers said or did.

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Union Insurance v. City of Allegheny
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Gould v. McFall
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Clapp v. Township of Pinegrove
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Schoenfeld v. City of Bradford
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Bobst v. Gring
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Johnson v. Hernig
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Durdon v. Gaskill
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Christman v. Siegfried
5 Watts & Serg. 400 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1843)
Bomgardner v. Blatt
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Olewine v. Messmore
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Bluebook (online)
11 Pa. D. & C. 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclure-v-greene-county-pactcomplgreene-1928.