Oliver v. Lindsay

125 S.W.2d 1097
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1939
DocketNo. 10506.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 1097 (Oliver v. Lindsay) 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
Oliver v. Lindsay, 125 S.W.2d 1097 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

■ MURRAY, Justice.

This suit was instituted by R. W. Lindsay, complaining of J. J. Oliver,, Tax Assessor and Collector of Hidalgo County, Texas, and Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company, Hartford, Connecticut, as surety on Oliver’s bond as tax collector and assessor. It appears that R. W. Lindsay being desirous of pdying and discharging the taxes levied and assessed against certain lands owned by him in Hidalgo County, acting by and through his agents, George L. Martin and M. F. (Pat) Lindsay, went to the office of the defendant, J. J. Oliver, tax collector and assessor in the court house in Edinburg, and there contacted R. S. Hibbetts, who was at the time a deputy tax collector, informed him that R. W. Lindsay desired to pay his taxes. Hibbetts invited Martin to come to another part of the court house, where they could find a table that was not occupied. This he did and in a room ■ in the court house which was not in fact ordinarily used by the tax collector and assessor, but which was in fact a part of the office of the Justice of the Peace, counfed out the sum of $4900 and delivered the same to Hibbetts and received from Hibbetts a certificate that all taxes had been paid upon the property owned by R. W. Lindsay, and Hibbetts further informed Martin that it would take some time to prepare the regular tax receipts and redemption receipts, but that as soon as they were prepared he would mail them to Martin. Hib-betts further informed the agents of R. W. Lindsay that the sum of $4900 was sufficient to pay all of the taxes then due against the property. Hibbetts had, on a former occasion, informed Martin that the total amount of taxes against the property was the sum of $5600, but that there were certain savings that could be made and that he would let him know later the exact amount of money it would take to clear up the taxes. Thereafter Hibbetts notified Martin that the sum of $4900 was sufficient to clean up all the taxes and that he should bring this sum of money to the court house in cash, if he wanted a tax certificate at once, for the reason that if he gave a check for this sum he could not- *1099 secure his tax certificate until the check had cleared the bank. Hibbetts received the $4900, as above stated, but apparently he never paid this money over to Oliver and failed to account for it in any way. Neither were the regular tax certificates ever issued, and R. W. Lindsay is here seeking to have said sum of $4900 credited to him as at least a part payment on all taxes which may be due by him on the property in Hidalgo County.

The case was tried before the court without the intervention of a jury and resulted in a judgment in favor of R. W. Lindsay against J. J. Oliver as tax assessor and collector, requiring him, in effect, to allow R. W. Lindsay a credit of $4900 on his taxes. Costs were adjudged against Oliver and the Indemnity Company. The judgment further provided that the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company should have a judgment over and against J. J. Oliver personally for any and all sums which- it might be required to pay in discharge of the judgment in favor of R. W. Lindsay. From this judgment J. J. Oliver has appealed.

This appeal presents two main contentions : First, that Oliver would not be liable for the money because it was paid to a deputy at a place other than the ■ office of the tax collector; and, second, that Oliver would not be responsible because the sum of $4900 was not sufficient to pay the taxes due, as it was necessary to have certain negotiations to secure certain savings before the sum of $4900 would be sufficient to liquidate the total amount due as taxes by Lindsay, and that therefore Hibbetts was the agent of Lindsay and not the deputy of Oliver when he received the money.

There seem to be no authorities directly in point in .this State on either proposition. Appellant cites the case of Davis v. Riley, Tex.Civ.App., 154 S.W. 314, holding in effect that a deputy-tax collector as a general proposition would not have authority to collect poll taxes at a place other than the county seat. There are many provisions of the statutes with reference to the payment of poll taxes which have no application to other taxes. Art. 2961, R.C.S.1925, deals with the mode of paying poll taxes. Art. 2962, Id., is with reference to paying poll taxes in large cities. Art. 2963, Id., Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 2963, contains provisions applicable where a poll tax is paid by an agent. Art. 2971, Id., provides for a deputy tax collector in a city of more than 10,000 inhabitants, not a county seat, who may collect poll taxes. Art. 198, Penal Code 1925, makes it a misdemeanor for a tax collector to issue a poll tax receipt after the 1st day of February in any year and bearing a date prior to the 1st day of February. All of these provisions of the statutes entered into the decision in the Davis v, Riley case as the payment of poll taxes was there involved. Furthermore the deputy did not purport to act in his official capacity. He received the money not simply in a part of the court house not occupied by the tax collector, but in a town not the county seat. The money when paid.was accompanied by a power of attorney to one Sims authorizing him to pay the poll taxes, thereby demonstrating beyond any doubt that the parties did not even think they were paying their poll taxes to the deputy but rather sending their money to Sims that he might pay their poll taxes for them. It, therefore, becomes apparent that that case is not in point here.

Art. 7255, R.C.S.1925, provides, in effect, that it shall be the duty- of the- tax collector or his deputy to make two trips over the county for the purpose of meeting the taxpayers and collecting taxes.

Art. 7256, Id., in effect, requires the tax collector to keep his office at the county seat and further provides that if the taxpayer fails to meet the collector or his deputy and pay his taxes, then it shall become the duty of the taxpayer to call at the office of the tax collector and pay his taxes. ' There is a further provision for maintaining a deputy tax collector in cities not the county seat that contain more than 7000 inhabitants and as a matter of fact the article as now amended (see Art. 7256, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St.) contains the following provision: “Provided further that in all counties having a population of more than seventy thousand (70,000), according to the last preceding Federal Census, and containing one or more cities or towns, other than the county seat, each of which has in excess of one thousand (1,000) inhabitants according to the last Federal Census, said Assessor and Collector of Taxes * * * may appoint a deputy * * * in «each such city or town * * *

It is appellant’s contention that it is the effect of the above statutes to make all payments made to the collector outside of his office in the county seat abso *1100 lutely void unless such payments are made to the collector while he is making a regular tour of the county or unless made to a deputy collector in a city of 7000 inhabitants or more, or made under other circumstances authorized by law. We can give no such meaning to the statute. It will be kept in mind that the collector is not required to keep his office in the court house of the county but only at the county seat. The law might be sufficient to put the taxpayer on notice that the collector’s office is required to be in the county seat, but would not put him on notice as to just where in the county seat his office would be located.

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146 S.W.2d 747 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.W.2d 1097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-lindsay-texapp-1939.