Staley v. Board of County Com'rs of Muskogee County

1919 OK 78, 179 P. 465, 72 Okla. 147, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 334
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 11, 1919
Docket10278
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1919 OK 78 (Staley v. Board of County Com'rs of Muskogee County) 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
Staley v. Board of County Com'rs of Muskogee County, 1919 OK 78, 179 P. 465, 72 Okla. 147, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 334 (Okla. 1919).

Opinion

SHARP, J.

During the years 1916 and 1917, G. Porter Spaulding was assessor, and J. A. Staley deputy assessor, of Muskogee county, ■ Okla. While such deputy assessor, anfl for the years named, Staley made ar *148 bitrary assessments againt thé property owners in said county who bad failed to list their property for taxes for tbe current year, and caused penalties tberefor of $1 each to be added upon tbe tax rolls. By reason of such arbitrary assessments, there was collected by tbe county treasurer for tbe years named tbe sum of $5,780.50 in penalties. Of this amount all but $7 was for tbe year 1917. Of tbe amount collected,. $2,312 was for penalties for failure to assess personal property, tbe balance of $5,468.50 being for assessments made against real estate. Thereafter Staley duly presented bis claim for tbe full amount of tbe penalties authorized for making tbe arbitrary assessments to the board of county commissioners, which claim tbe board disallowed. On appeal to tbe district court judgment was entered in Staley’s behalf in tbe sum of $2,312, tbe amount of the penalties for delinquent personal property assessments, and in favor of tbe board of county commissioners for tbe balance of tbe claim. From tbe judgment both Staley and tbe commissioners bring error.

Staley rests bis claim upon section 1 of chapter 193 of the Session Larws of 1915, which section is amendatory of section 6 of chapter 152 of tbe Session Laws of 1911. Section 6, as amended, and under which tbe assessments for both years were made, requires that tbe county assessor shall, on tbe 15th day of January of each year, proceed to take a list of all tbe taxable property in the county, and assess the value thereof as of January 1st, by posting notices in three or more conspicuous places in each city or voting precinct, at least 10 days prior to the date tbe assessor will meet tbe taxpayers to list their property, and that tbe assess^ shall remain at each city or voting precinct one day for each 60 voters or major fraction thereof, in each such city or voting precinct. If any taxpayer shall fail to meet the assessor and list bis property on the date advertised in bis voting precinct, he may meet him in another towniffiip or voting precinct and list same. If any taxpayer, by reason of sickness, or any other unavoidable circumstances, shall not be able to meet the assessor on the date advertised, he may render a written list of all his personal property, including a legal description of bis real estate, if any, and shall subscribe and swear to the oath required by each taxpayer as to its correctness. After the county assessor shall have visited each city or voting precinct in compliance with the act, he shall give notice by publication in some newspaper of general circulation in the county, and, if there be no newspaper published in such county, then by posting notices in each voting precinct, that be will be in bis office at the county seat tbe next 20 days for the purpose of assessing those who have not assessed their property for the current year. At 'the expiration of 20 days those who have failed to assess their property for the current year shall be declared delinquent, and a penalty of $1 for such failure shall be added to his or her (ax and entered on the tax books, and collected by the county treasurer, and, when collected, “shall be paid' to the deputy assessor, or his department, who assessed said delinquent property,” Provided, that no assessor shall be authorized to proceed by giving notice, as therein provided, until the board of county commissioners of such county shall have authorized such procedure by resolution duly passed in regular or special session, which notice shall be published at least once in some newspaper of general circulation in the county.

On the part of Staley, it is contended the trial court erred in holding that no judgment could be rendered for statutory penalties which . accrued and were collected on real estate on the ground (urged by the commissioners) that “there was no proper authori‘zation for the charging of the penalties,” and for the alleged reason that the assessments were not made as the law contemplated. Furthermore, it was claimed that, even though the assessment proceedings were irregular, the services having been rendered, and the penalties having been paid 'by the delinquent property owners to the county treasurer, the board of county commissioners could not avail itself of such irregularities in making the assessments as a defense, and consequently the court erred in not rendering judgment for the full amount of the claim presented. The board of county commissioners contend that the trial court erred in rendering judgment for the amount of the penalties accruing on the arbitrary assessments made against the delinquent owners of personal property, and in not affording an opportunity to prove “a corrupt and unlawful agreement between claimant and his superior officer.”

The notices required of the county assessor by the amended statute were given, and appear in every way to be regular. There was also introduced in evidence resolutions of the board of county commissioners, passed, respectively, on January 4, 1916, and January 2, 1917, authorizing the giving of the notice No attack is made on the validity of the *149 statute, nor is it urged that its provisions are ambiguous and susceptible of a construction which would enable tne county t'1 escape liability for the penalties collected by the county treasurer. Nor is it seriously insisted that the proceedings were not had under the amended statute, if, indeed, they could be had under any other. Indeed, we find it hard to understand the precise grounds upon which the board of county commissioners deny liability, unless it be on account of some irregularity in the proceedings not called to our attention. No claim is urged that such irregularity, if any there be in fact, worked to the prejudice of the state, the county, or any legal subdivision thereof. In the state of ¡he record, and in the absence of evidence, it is unnecessary to determine what, if any, presumption should be indulged in favor of the regularity of the proceedings of the board, the county assessor, or his deputy, or to say whether or not, upon the face of the record, the proceedings were irregular, for the reason that such a defense is not available to the county com-missipner.s. The statute, fixing a penalty for failure to render property for taxation, provides that the penalties when collected shall be paid “to the deputy assessor or his department,” who assessed the delinquent property. The county treasurer is merely the agency through which the penalties are collected, and when collected they belong to the officer authorized by statute to receive them as a part of his compensation. The county is given no interest whatever in the penalties. In actions for money had and received, a defendant may show any fact that entitles him to retain the money on either legal or equitable grounds. If the defendant can establish no such right, it follows, of course, he has no valid defense. A public officer who has control of funds belonging to another officer cannot urge that the statute, if enforced, may work an injury to another, or, as here, that a particular deputy is given a preference over other deputies in a remunerative public employment. No complaint, so far as is shown by the record, has been made by the property owners who paid the penalties.

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Bluebook (online)
1919 OK 78, 179 P. 465, 72 Okla. 147, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/staley-v-board-of-county-comrs-of-muskogee-county-okla-1919.